Welcome, Amanda!

Welcome, Amanda!

Confident Christianity Apologetics Ministry welcomes new Assistant To The Director, Amanda Boone!  Well, officially she’s an uncompensated intern, but the other title sounds really cool…

Amanda enjoys long walks through the office, taking time to just sit and plan how to organize my clutter, and can sing an intense worship tune on Sundays at church.

Confident Christianity is excited to bring on board a friend who is passionate about apologetics!     Amanda is currently attending Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary. Welcome, Amanda!

MJ

Christian Apologetics – Who Needs It?

Christian Apologetics – Who Needs It?

Mary Jo Participated in the Reasonable Faith Christian Apologetics Conference. Reasonable Faith is the ministry of William Lane Craig.

Listen to their conversation answering the question “Christian Apologetics: Who Needs It?” below.

Dr. Craig speaks on the importance of Christian apologetics and the defense of the faith. We welcome your comments in the Reasonable Faith forums: http://www.reasonablefaith.org/forums/

2012 Preview

2012 Preview

January 2nd
Oklahoma Baptist University
Guest Lecturer for J-Term Session
Shawnee, Oklahoma

January 9th
Oklahoma Baptist University
Guest Lecturer for J-Term Session
Shawnee, Oklahoma

January 10th-11th
“Defend The Faith 2012”
New Orleans Baptist Theological Seminary
New Orleans, Louisiana

January 16th
Oklahoma Baptist University
Guest Lecturer for J-Term Session
Shawnee, Oklahoma

January 20th
Homeschool Honors Society Meeting
Houston, Texas

January 21st
i31 Young Women’s Ministry
Southern Hills Baptist Church
Oklahoma City, Oklahoma

January 30th – February 1st
Baptist Convention of New Mexico
State Evangelism Conference

February 3rd-4th
SBTC Women’s Forum
Bellevue Baptist Church
Hurst, Texas

February 10th-12th
TBD
Texas

February 17th-19th
Youth “Collide” Weekend
Nassau Bay Baptist Church
Houston, Texas
Nate Jordan, Associate Pastor of Students

March 9th-10th
Apologetics Canada Conference
Surrey, B.C.

March 24th-27th
Michigan Baptists State Evangelism Conference

March 31st
FBC Bosque Farms
Bosque Farms, New Mexico

April – B&H Publishing Group: BOOK RELEASE!
“Come Let Us Reason” edited by Paul Copan & William Lane Craig

April 13th-14th
Greer-Heard Forum
Shermer-Habermas
New Orleans Baptist Theological Seminary
New Orleans, Louisiana

May 8th
CONFIDENT CHRISTIANITY ANNUAL FUND RAISER

June 8th-9th
Smart Faith Student Conference
Arizona

Kregel Publications: BOOK RELEASE!
Title Forthcoming
Author: Mary Jo Sharp

September 13th-15th
SBTC Women’s Leadership Team Meeting

September 28th-29th
W Conference – Keynote Speaker
Southern Seminary Baptist Theological Seminary
Louisville, Kentucky

October 1st-2nd
Baptist General Convention of Oklahoma
Missional Ministry Conference
Oklahoma City, Oklahoma

November 8th-10th
Lifeway Event
National Women’s Ministry Leadership Forum
Keynote Speaker
Nashville, Tennessee

November 14th-18th
ETS/EPS Annual Meeting
Milwaukee, Wisconsin

New Apologist Feature: Yaser Makram

New Apologist Feature: Yaser Makram

Today I am highlighting Christian apologetics blogger, Yaser Makram. I met Yaser during my second summer residence in Biola University’s apologetics program. He has a blog titled “Reasoned Defense” that you can check out here. To wet your appetite a little, here’s his latest post; the first in a series exploring God’s aseity. (If you are new to the term “aseity,” Yaser explains it at the start of the article).
God’s Aseity in John’s Prologue
By Yaser Makram
Aseity, from the Latin a se, means by itself. When spoken of God, it means, “The self-existence of God denotes that the ground of his being is in himself.”[1] Simply stated, God’s existence is found in himself. To examine the case for God’s aseity, it is necessary to offer some preliminary insight into the language of existence. This will be followed by arguing the case for God’s self-existence from John 1:1-3 utilizing the tools of grammatical insight.
Existence, God’s Aseity, and Man’s Contingency
What does it mean to say that something exists, let alone, God? Is it meaningless to say that God exists? What of ourselves; certainly, we do not doubt our own existence, do we? Consider the following statement: Geckos exist. (My son has a leopard gecko). At the minimum, it would mean that there is some property of being a gecko and this property of being belongs to something.[2] This belonging relation is known in metaphysics under the terms of exemplification, predication, or instancing, which simply means that some thing is exemplified, predicated, or instanced in something else. In the case of our gecko, “The claim that [geckos] exist is the claim that the essence of being a [gecko] (the what of being a [gecko]) is actually exemplified by or belongs to something (the that or fact of an individual [gecko] existing).”[3] Thus, our statement that “Geckos exist” means to refer to the essence or nature of being a gecko and this expresses reality or existence.

When referring to God, we, further, speak of God as being (Latin, ens). Being, simply, refers to something existing. “In Protestant Scholastic theology, ens is the most simple predicate. It indicates the coincidence of esse, the act of existing, with essentia, the whatness of the thing.”[4] How does attributes relate then to being? When speaking of the attributes of God, specifically, God’s aseity, the qualifier is made to how the attributes are predicted of God. Kevin Lewis offers some helpful insight:

(1) The attributes (attributa) are not accidents (accidentia) inhering in and separable from the divine substance but are attributa essentialia, i.e., the divine attributes are the essence of God himself. (2) Since God is not a composite being, the attributes are not parts of God but, in their identity with the divine essence, are also identical with each other. (3) Since there is nothing prior to God and since the divine essentia and divine existence (esse) are inseparable, the attributes are identical also with the existence of God, so that, e.g., in God being and being holy are identical. (4) The attributes are, nevertheless, truly and properly predicated of God. Thus, the attributes are not distinct from one another or from the divine essence realiter, really, as one thing is distinct from another, nor are they distinct merely rationaliter, rationally, in the reasoning of the finite subject only (ratio ratiocinans).[5]

Thus, when speaking of God’s aseity; that is, God’s self-existence, it is important to recognize that this attribute is predicted of God, not as the whatness or essence of God, which would refer to what God is in Himself[6]; but the thatness of God, which refers to the fact that something exists, namely God that can have the notion of existence predicted to Him. Lastly, there is no confusion between God’s being and being self-existing for they are the same.
John 1:1-3

In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God. He was in the beginning with God. All things were made through him, and without him was not any thing made that was made. ESV

The glorious introduction to John’s gospel is not easily matched to the high Christology John highlights. Further, the profundity of this text, when properly understood and examined will emphasize two major points: God’s necessary self-existence and man’s contingent existence. The prologue “In the beginning…”(Ἐν ἀρχῇ), refers back to Genesis, chapter one, which also reads, “In the beginning, God…” This reference, for John, is to build the corollary that the logos, like God, was (ἦν ὁ λόγος) from the beginning. The Greek word translated was (ἦν) is the imperfect form of the verb eimi (to be), which is used to indicate a continuous action in past time. Here John, is using eimi to declare that the λόγος existed prior to the first moment of creation. The logical implication is that if the λόγος existed prior to creation, He cannot himself have been created.[7] This is further reinforced by the phrase the Word was God (θεὸς ἦν ὁ λόγος). Here, “the absence of the Greek article before the word God…makes it clear that θεὸς is predicate, not subject, of the verb.”[8] Why is this important, Kevin Lewis adds, “In Greek, an article is used in a copulative sentence to distinguish the subject from the predicate. In John 1:1, the subject is “the Word” (ho logos), the qualitative anarthrous predicate is ‘God’ (theos), the copula is ‘was’ (en).”[9] Thus, the qualitative anarthrous predicate noun (theos) that precedes the verb (en) indicates that the λόγος “was as to His essence absolute deity.”[10] The conclusion of John 1:1 is that God, who precedes the creation, must have existence apart from and not dependent upon creation; that is, God is self-existent.
The notion of Ἐν ἀρχῇ is further emphasized in John 1:2; however, it is within verse three that the notion of creation’s contingency is introduced. The third verse of John’s introduction can be further broken into two smaller sections beginning with the understanding of πάντα (Greek for ‘all things’, neuter plural). Here, πάντα is without the definite article, which would denote the whole of all things, but as it is without the definite article, it means all things taken severally. This distinction is important because if taken as ta πάντα (with the definite article), this would imply the totality of creation, including God, but verse one already taught God’s self-existence; thus, πάντα must mean all things individually created, not including God. This is, again, reinforced with the statement that “through him all things were created (πάντα δι᾽ αὐτοῦ ἐγένετο), emphasizing the verb egeneto, the aorist form of ginomai, which means to originate or become denoting a contrast between all things and God, who simply was in the beginning and never came into being. Turning to the second half of verse three, William Lane Craig notes: “without him not one thing came into being” [καὶ χωρὶς αὐτοῦ ἐγένετο οὐδὲ ἕν. ὃ γέγονεν]. The verb is again egeneto, the clause stating that nothing came into being without or apart from (choris) the Logos, oude hen being merely more emphatic than ouden (“nothing”). The second clause of v. 3 is thus simply the negation of the contradictory of the first clause.”[11] The conclusion of verse three is that man, and creation altogether, is contingent; and where God existence always was, creation and man was not. The overall conclusion of John 1:1-3 is that without God’s necessary existence, man, not only has no existence, but has no identity. How does man find his identity? I’ll save that for a future post.
Footnotes:
[1] William Greenough Thayer Shedd and Alan W. Gomes, Dogmatic Theology, 3rd ed. (Phillipsburg, N.J.: P & R Pub., 2003), 276.
[2] James Porter Moreland and William Lane Craig, Philosophical Foundations for a Christian Worldview (Downers Grove, Ill.: InterVarsity Press, 2003), 191.
[3] Ibid.
[4] Kevin Lewis, Theology Proper: Part II (classroom lecture notes, Essential Christian Doctrines, Spring 2007), 5.
[5] Lewis, Theology, 6.
[6] This would relate to another of God’s attributes, namely, His simplicity, which would speak of his essence.
[7] Kevin Lewis, John 1:1-3 Excursus (classroom lecture notes, Essential Christian Doctrines, Fall 2006), 1.
[8] George Arthur Buttrick, The Interpreter’s Bible : The Holy Scriptures in the King James and Revised Standard Versions with General Articles and Introduction, Exegesis, Exposition for Each Book of the Bible, 12 vols. (New York: Abingdon-Cokesbury Press, 1951), 464.
[9] Lewis, John, 3.
[10] Kenneth Samuel Wuest, The New Testament; an Expanded Translation (Grand Rapids,: Eerdmans, 1961), 209.
[11] William Lane Craig, Question 210 Subject: Biblical Basis of God’s Unique Aseity [on line]; accessed 17 November 2011; available from http://www.reasonablefaith.org/site/News2?page=NewsArticle&id=8793; Internet.
EPS Annual Meeting 2011

EPS Annual Meeting 2011

I will be presenting: “Jesus & Pagan Mythology” Thursday Night, November 17th at the Evangelical Philosophical Society’s Annual Meeting in Berkeley, California. On Friday Night, November 18th, I’ll be presenting “Super Market Savior: Why Christ in a World Embracing Many Beliefs?” at the 5 Words Apologetics Student Conference, Calvary Chapel in Petaluma, California. The student conference will be taught by some of the best student communicators anywhere! Brett Kunkle & Alan Shlemon of Stand to Reason will be there as well as Doug Powell of Selfless Defense and Nathan Hanson of Jesus University. The EPS Apologetics Conference routinely features the very best in Christian thought.

Relevant Resources From Confident Christianity

Relevant Resources From Confident Christianity

Lectures & Interviews
(Click on a link)

Debates and Dialogues
(Click on a link)

Logic in an Age of Persuasive Imagery: the Loaded Question

Logic in an Age of Persuasive Imagery: the Loaded Question

“Have you stopped beating your wife?”

A loaded question occurs when someone asks you two questions, but one is hidden behind the other. The purpose of a loaded question is to make you assume the answer to a hidden question, without actually asking that hidden question.[1]fallacyfree2012In the example above, the hidden assumption is that the person has been beating his wife. While that’s not so hidden in this question, it still presents a problem because the question is asking for a “yes” or “no” answer. Both of these replies will incriminate the responder. If a “yes” answer is given, the person is admitting he used to beat his wife. If a “no” answer is given, the person is admitting he still beats his wife.How is this a problem for candidates in the elections? Candidates are asked all sorts of loaded questions by journalists and others who interview them and moderate their debates. For example, in the 2007 Republican debates, Senators John McCain and Mike Huckabee were asked this basic question, “Do you believe in evolution? Yes or no.”[2] At first, this may not appear to be a loaded question. However, if you know the history behind the question and the perceptions involved in the heated debate, this is an obviously loaded question. Let’s look at why.The issue has been superficially divided, for the most part, between those who believe the universe was created and those who believe the universe does not need a creator. Though the issue is wrongly divided in this way, it tends to get labeled and promoted as such, especially through the media. A person who has studied the question of evolution and the origins of the universe in some depth knows that there are non-religious scientists as well as religious scientists who argue, based in scientific evidence, for a creator of the universe.[3] There are also various views on evolution within the faith community. Yet the question assumes the perceptions of the issue: that ‘belief in science’ is what is actually at stake. So the assumed question is: what do you believe about the endeavor of science?Due to the simplistic labeling of the various positions on this argument, if Mike Huckabee or Senator McCain had simply answered “yes” or “no,” here’s how it would have come across because of the loaded question:“Yes” – I believe in science. (ala the movie Nacho Libre)NacoLibreScience“No” – I do not believe in science.

Loaded questions have much to do with perceptions. That is why Mike Huckabee stated that his moderator was asking the wrong question.[4] This is an example of what to do when you are faced with a loaded question. You should question the question!MJ [1] Adapted from Hans and Nathaniel Bluedorn. The Fallacy Detective: Thirty Six Lesson on How to Recognize Bad Reasoning. (Muscatine, IA: Christian Logic, 2002, 2003), 120.[2] McCain was asked the question one-on-one. The moderator then asked for a show of hands of who “doesn’t believe in evolution.” Mike Huckabee, in a later debate, was asked to explain why he raised his hand to signify he “didn’t believe in evolution” in a more complex version of the same basic question.[3] Paul Davies, John O’Keefe, Fred Hoyle, Alan Sandage, Arno Penzias, Arthur Eddington and others.[4] He actually stated it was an “unfair question,” which I would not have said. I would have said it was the “wrong question.”

Confident Christianity Apologetics Conference

Confident Christianity Apologetics Conference

J.P. Moreland, Craig Hazen, Clay Jones, Mary Jo Sharp, Michael Keas, Melissa Cain Travis….and more!

The Apologetics ministry of Confident Christianity, Biola University, and FBC Euless to brings you the Confident Christianity Conference: Proclaiming the Certainty of Christ in an Age of Unbelief. The goal of the conference is to strengthen and equip Christians so that they will be better able to engage in discussions with people of no faith or of a different faith. In order to accomplish this, they have brought together an impressive team of expert speakers and workshop leaders who will present compelling evidence for the truths of Christianity in a way that is Biblically grounded and culturally relevant.See the event announcement and more information about the conference.

November. 4 – 5, 2011

Time: Friday 7:30 – 9:30 pm
Saturday 9:00 am – 4:00 pm

Location: First Baptist Church, Euless
1000 Airport Fwy
Euless, Texas 76039 (Dallas/Fort Worth)

Cost: General Admission $35
Student Discount $15 (High School, College or Seminary)

Download the poster here!