Mary Jo’s Book Down To The Wire!

Mary Jo’s Book Down To The Wire!

Fund Raising experts tell us that we need to be specific about our needs. Well, we need your support both in prayer and in donations. Mary Jo’s book is due to Kregel Publications January 2011. She is needing to focus in on writing it and having others edit. In order to focus, we need to raise quite a bit in support to cover the ministry needs over the next 3 months.

We are confident that you have seen how this ministry is essential and how it is impacting so many. Sometimes, it is simply getting the message out there at the appointed time.

Can you help us with a donation? $1,000? $500? $100? $25?

Click HERE to donate. (Your donation is tax deductible)

Roger

P.S. – Mary Jo is considering another debate for June 2011. Please commit this request to prayer.

SAT’s

SAT’s

Hey Students – Are you ready for your SAT’s? No, not those…I’m talking about STUDENT APOLOGETICS TRAINING!

*First Annual Student Apologetic Day Camp across the street from NASA!

*$75 covers your meals and camp fees (Deposit of $25 due by June 9th * See forms below)

(5 Full Scholarships are available on a competitive basis – See below for details)

Sponsored by:
Reasonable Faith Houston Chapter
Confident Christianity Apologetics Ministry

Hosted by:
Gloria Dei Lutheran Church

Presenters & Plenary Speaker:
Mary Jo Sharp, MA in Christian Apologetics, Biola University
Paul Shockley, Philosophy (doctoral candidate), Texas A&M University
Scott Swiggard, Doctoral Candidate in Leadership, Capella University
Chris Bolyard, MS in Educational Administration, University of Houston-CL
Roger Sharp, MA in Christian Education, Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary

Topics:
Conversational Apologetics
God & Creation: Evolution, Theistic Evolution, Old Earth, Young Earth
How To Deal With Doubt
Sin – What is it?
Greg Koukl’s “Tactics”
Social Media & Apologetics
The Problem of Pleasure
Cultural Apologetics: Connecting Truth to Culture
Islam
Various Worldview Topics

Can’t come for the entire camp? That’s ok………..come when you can. Feel free to bring your skeptical friend along. This camp is designed to tackle the tough questions of the Christian worldview. Come learn from those who deal with these topics on a daily basis.

Questions?
asharpfamily@aol.com
713-417-5733 cell (ask for Roger)

REGISTER HERE:

Camp Options
Pre-Register (All three days) $25.00 Wednesday Only $30.00 Thursday Only $30.00 Friday Only $30.00 Any Two Days Of Camp $60.00 Entire Camp (All three days) $75.00 Sponsor-A-Camper $75.00

REGISTRATION FORM

SCHOLARSHIP FORM

MORE INFO ON FACEBOOK

Roger

Arabfest in Dearborn, Michigan 2009

Arabfest in Dearborn, Michigan 2009

Greetings!  Some of you by now have heard about the incident at the Dearborn Arabfest with David Wood and Nabeel Qureshi of www.answeringmuslims.com and myself (camerawoman). If not, here’s is a brief description of the events or you can read the article in The Texan here.

At the festival, there was a booth entitled “Islam: You Got Questions, We Got Answers” that was handing out a pamphlet with the title, “Islam’s War on Terror.” Nabeel wanted to ask a question about the pamphlet with reference to Surah 9:29 in the Qur’an and video tape the response to put on their blog. So we went to the booth and asked the question. The first reaction from the booth was to ask us to turn off the cameras. After Nabeel made a comment about their unwillingness to answer on video and questioned if this was deception, the gentleman with whom he was speaking agreed to be filmed. Shortly thereafter, the security guards for the festival (not Dearborn policemen) showed up at the booth and a woman associated with the security guards told me I had to turn off the camera several times. When I did not turn off the camera, she then proceeded to hit the camera, closing the LCD display window. Then she put her hand on the front of the camera. She asked me if I was no longer recording. I showed her on the display that it was not recording, but she did not believe me. So I turned the camera off.

Our encounter with the security guards did not end here. We had a much worse encounter later on, after verifying with police and security that we were well within our rights to videotape a response to the question. This time there was more hitting of our cameras, plus threats. David and Nabeel have not posted this video as of yet.

The encounter can be viewed in parts at David and Nabeel’s blog, www.answeringmuslims.com.
Scroll down to VideoBlog #3 for the first part.

You can also view a Muslim response to VideoBlog #3 at thefotfoundation.
Title, “Arabfest Invasion 2009 – Dearborn, USA”

Thanks,
MJ

Book Review: In Search of A Confident Faith

Book Review: In Search of A Confident Faith

In Search of A Confident FaithIn Search of a Confident Faith: Overcoming Barriers to Trusting in God
Authors: J.P. Moreland and Klaus Issler
Intervarsity Press
Review: Mary Jo Sharp

In Search of a Confident Faith is an excellent comprehensive apologetic for establishing trust in God “for real.” I wanted to review this book due to my own interest in Christians becoming confident in their faith. The book reaffirms the Christian faith as one of propositional knowledge confirmed through personal experience; but does so at a very accessible level. Moreland and Issler address many helpful points concerning the influence of Western culture in creating doubt in Christians’ faith. First, the authors address the misuse of the term “faith” in today’s culture as a “blind leap” or as in place of reason. The term historically entailed a much richer meaning of trust and confidence, which crucially required the proper exercise of reason, evidence, and knowledge. Second, they describe the essential role of knowledge in the Christian faith; through a look at the Biblical view of knowledge, through breaking down the concept of knowledge, and through addressing our plausibility structures (explained more thoroughly later). Third, the authors attend to intellectual and emotional doubts: both through logical arguments and then through practical steps in handling these doubts. Fourth, Moreland and Issler handle doubt caused by low expectations of God’s intervention into a believer’s life and make practical suggestions for increasing trust in God. Their writing systematically and carefully treats each area without losing interest or bogging down in terminology.Of particular interest is the section on plausibility structures, which the authors define as a set of background assumptions that establish a tone for what people think, how they feel, and how they act. Plausibility structures form our default beliefs and determine the things we are embarrassed to believe. According to Moreland and Issler, “Our current Western cultural plausibility structure elevates science and scorns and mocks religion, especially Christian teaching.” (page 46) The result is a tendency for Christians to doubt the supernatural worldview of the Bible. Those Christians who experience this doubt may not even realize their assumptions about knowledge are based on influence from this plausibility structure.

The Western cultural plausibility structure is broken down by analyzing commonly accepted background assumptions involved, including: 1) “It is smarter to doubt things than to believe them. Smart people are skeptical.” 2) “Religion is a matter of private, personal feelings and should be kept out of debates—political and/or moral—in the public square.” 3) “Science is the only way to know reality with confidence….science has made belief in God unnecessary.” 4) “We can only know things through our five senses.” (page 48) Plus, the authors provide steps to appraise and refute doubts caused by this plausibility structure, including a thorough questioning of the validity of the doubt itself. For example, is it really true that “it is smarter to doubt things than to believe them”? The authors suggest this kind of thinking is “intellectually irresponsible because our lives flourish with truths but flounder with falsehoods.” (page 51) For an example, the correct medicine for an ailment will help a person get well, but the wrong medicine (or taking no medicine at all due to skepticism) could have devastating effects.

Moreland and Issler then move onto dealing with specific intellectual doubts and emotional wounds, including childhood coping strategies that keep us from moving into a relationship of trust in God. The section on treating emotional wounds is reminiscent of Neil T. Anderson’s approach in “Victory Over the Darkness.” The source of the coping strategy is targeted (i.e. an abusive parent, failure to live up to parent expectations, etc.) and then a biblical truth is put in its place. And by including the source and treatment of emotional doubt, the authors have produced a comprehensive apologetic that is refreshing and transforming.
In part two, the authors investigate possible ways of increasing expectations of our faith in God. First, they explain why believers should expect God to intervene in their lives: Jesus promised to intervene in their lives. Second, they offer the example of Jesus’ faith and how he lived his life fully in God’s Kingdom through reliance on the Holy Spirit and reliance on God. Third, the authors give an explanation of some of the indicators of a life lived with a supernatural worldview. They explain that much of the doubt believers experience is caused by the apparent lack of God’s activity in their lives. So the solution to this particular doubt is to give more witness of the supernatural activity of God in our individual lives. If more Christians would give this witness, their testimony would build up other believers’ trust in God; their “God-confidence.”
This section of the book is strung together with candid personal stories by both authors. Not only do Moreland and Issler offer stories, but they also share their own struggles with and failings in spiritual transformation. Their personal touch in this section gives the book a “realness” lacking in some apologetic literature. The reader will not find merely another discourse in theology or another lecture in philosophy; but will find these authors are sitting down with the reader to share their own journey to the truth about world in which we live. In keeping with the personal feel of the book, the conclusion to part two offers active steps to grow in reliance on God; including a brief but extremely helpful discussion on the difficult subject of discerning God’s Will. Christians who read this book will definitely be edified and encouraged.

MJ