Come Let Us Reason is the third book in a series on modern Christian apologetics that began with the popular Passionate Conviction and Contending with Christianity’s Critics. The nineteen essays here raise classical philosophical questions in fresh ways, address contemporary challenges for the church, and will deepen the thinking of the next generation of apologists. Packed with dynamic topical discussions and informed by the latest scholarship, the book’s major sections are:
• Apologetics, Culture, and the Kingdom of God • The God Question • The Gospels and the Historical Jesus • Ancient Israel and Other Religions • Christian Uniqueness and the World’s Religions Contributors include J. P. Moreland (“Four Degrees of Postmodernism”), William Lane Craig (“Objections So Bad That I Couldn’t Have Made Them Up”), Gary R. Habermas (“How to Respond When God Gives You the Silent Treatment”), Craig Keener (“Gospel Truth: The Historical Reliability of the Gospels”), and Paul Copan (“Does the Old Testament Endorse Slavery?”). Also included will be my essay (“Does the Story of Jesus Mimic Pagan Mysteries Stories?”). You can PREORDER this book due for publication April 2012!
Day of Discovery will be airing “What Jesus Said About Following Him,” a program that I participated in. The program will air Sunday, August 7, 2011.
A brief description of the program follows:
Along the shoreline of the Sea of Galilee, Jesus called His disciples to “take up your cross and follow Me.” After almost 2,000 years, there is still hesitancy among many to accept that same invitation to become a follower of Jesus. What kind of commitment was Jesus asking for? How is Jesus different from other religious leaders?
Gain insights from biblical scholars who have researched the life and teachings of Jesus. Examine the evidence for making a commitment and decide whether you have reason to believe what Jesus said about following Him.
Day of Discovery can be seen on ion TV Sundays at 7:30 a.m. Eastern and Pacific, and 6:30 a.m. Central and Mountain time. A listing of local station air times can be found by visiting the Web site at www.dod.org and following the “Where to Watch” link in the left column. Additionally, the program is available to view at no cost via our Web site, as soon as it airs.
The Southern Baptists of Texas (SBTC) is committed to proclaiming the certainty of forgiveness and life in Christ in an age of unbelief. We are excited to be working with the apologetics ministry of Confident Christianity, Biola University, NAMB, and FBC Euless to bring you the Confident Christianity Conference. The goal of the conference is to strengthen and equip Christians so that they will be better able to evangelize those who have no faith or are of another faith. In order to accomplish this, we 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.
FBC Euless is under 2 hours from most of North Texas and Southern Oklahoma! Calendar this much needed equipping event and load up a few vans, cars or even a bus!
This morning I was honored to conduct the song of the same title though a much older version than the popular Chris Tomlin version (which I also enjoy). You may recognize the melody by the artist Enya or from older hymnals from the late 1800’s. It has and always will be one of Mary Jo’s favorite melodies both musically and textually.
Today is Father’s Day. My wife sang, my daughter played oboe. A perfect gift.
Day of Discovery recently completed a 2-part series entitled, “What Jesus Said About Resurrection.” I was interviewed mainly for my research of the pagan myths as you will hear in the video. Others giving perspectives include Gary Habermas, Darrell Bock, Michael Licona, and many more. You can catch Part 1 in its entirety on the Day of Discovery website. Part 2 will be available beginning tomorrow, April 22nd. You can receive a DVD copy via the website with a donation of any amount. It is a great resource to have available!
C.S. Lewis in Mere Christianity wrote “If you have once accepted Christianity, then some of its main doctrines shall be deliberately held before your mind for some time everyday. That is why daily praying and religious reading and churchgoing are necessary parts of the Christian life. We have to be continually reminded of what we believe. Neither this belief, nor any other will automatically remain alive in the mind. It must be fed. As a matter of fact, if you examine a hundred people who had lost their faith in Christianity, I wonder how many of them would turn out to have been reasoned out of it by honest argument? Do not most people simply drift away?”
Several years into my life as a Christian, I began to doubt what I believed about God. I wondered how I knew that God was real and why I thought the Bible was the Word of God. Fueling my doubts were experiences with Christians who did not demonstrate much love, grace, and mercy, nor seemingly any concern for the unity of the believers in Christ. I thought “if I don’t see God through the lives of the people who believe in God, how do I even know that God exists?” At the time, I was teaching band in the public schools, which did not leave much time or energy for studying what I believed. I also had never been confronted with the need for reasoning my beliefs. This mix of hurt and lack of knowledge came together to create “the perfect storm” for my Christian beliefs. Rather than turning only to the arguments that would support my doubt, I went looking for answers to the doubt I harbored. If God is real, I figured I should find really good answers in support of his existence. As I read arguments for and against his existence, the reliability of the New Testament texts, and the evidence for the resurrection, I found that the best answers pointed towards the reality of God. These findings brought me to a place where I could no longer say “I have no good reason or evidence to believe in God.” I still had questions, but I could not get around God as part of reality. Now let me be clear. I realized I couldn’t just believe in God because I wanted God to be true. Actually, I did not know if I even wanted God to be true, because of my painful experiences with members of the church. I wanted answers. I wanted to know what was actually true so I could live my life better in accordance with reality; no matter what I found. It was certainly possible for me to turn away from my former beliefs and focus on building a case against God. There is a lot of material available for doing as much. However, I did not see that as a responsible reaction to my situation. I had to be careful that my doubt was not simply fueled by hurt or anger with people. So I read the arguments on both sides of the issue. I then read the refutations of those arguments and the refutations of the refutations. This may seem like overkill, but for me it was necessary so that I could honestly look people in the eye and say, “I believe in God, because….” It took a few years to come back to trust that God is real. It also took a lot of study. Perhaps this situation could have been avoided if 1) I was originally committed to learning about my beliefs, and 2) the Church was committed to rigorously train congregants about their beliefs and doctrines. Here we return to C.S. Lewis’ quote that once we have individually grappled with why we believe God is real and our reasoning for the faith we have in God, we must continue to think on these matters, as well as on our doctrines. Part of faith in God includes a lifelong commitment to learning about him (Proverbs 4:6-7, Romans 12:2, Eph. 4:11-15). Notice also how Lewis points out the reason we must think on these matters is that neither belief in God, nor any other belief, will remain alive in our minds if we do not think on these matters. That was the aspect of my Christianity that I had almost completely neglected: thinking on the doctrines of God. I guess I figured, “I’m saved. So I’m okay.” Yet, this was just not true. I wasn’t okay and I didn’t even realize it. I was not being responsible with what I professed to believe. I had not spent adequate time learning my beliefs to gain an understanding of why I believed. If we, as Christians, are going to say we have the truth, then to be responsible with that belief we need to actively pursue an understanding of our profession. We must be ready to make a defense to anyone who asks us for a reason for the hope that is in us.[1] MJ
This post can also be read on The Point Radio blog. I will be blogging over there now as well as here at Confident Christianity. Some other bloggers include Brett Kunkle, Sean McDowell, Jonathan Morrow, Randall Niles, and more!
A little about ThePoint: In association with BreakPoint.org and the Chuck Colson Center for Christian Worldview, The Point’s primary mission is to “engage real life in real time from a Christian worldview.”
[1]The Holy Bible : English Standard Version. Wheaton : Standard Bible Society, 2001, S. 1 Pe 3:15
Responding with Reason and Precision Houston, Texas with J.P. Moreland, Craig Hazen, Mike Licona, Mary Jo Sharp, Louis Markos, Micah Parker, Scott Swiggard and more!
April 1 – 2, 2011
Friday 7:00 pm – 9:30 pm Saturday 8:30 am – 4:30 pm Cost: $40 (includes lunch on Saturday!)REGISTER NOW!
Gloria Dei Lutheran Church 18220 Upper Bay Road Houston, TX 77058
Conference Topics & Speakers Include:
Defending Your Faith Kickoff with J.P. Moreland, Craig Hazen, and more
The A, B, Cs…Ds & Es of Defending the Gospels with Mike Licona
Did Jesus Really Rise from the Dead? with Craig Hazen
An Open Dialog with an Atheist with MaryJo Sharp
Gods Existence, Fine-Tuning, Kalam, & the Moral Argument with J. P. Moreland
C.S. Lewis’ Most Influential Arguments with Louis Markos
A Dialog of “Unveiling the Veil” with Scott Swiggard, Chris Bolyard, & Jim Westerman
Mighty Warriors with Micah Parker
Conference Location:
Gloria Dei Lutheran Church (across the street from NASA) 18220 Upper Bay Road Houston, TX 77058
I am currently guest-lecturing for a university course on worldviews. The main thrust of the course is to give students an understanding that their view of the world will guide and direct their actions in this life. It is also to give them an awareness of what the various worldviews teach and to test those worldviews against reality: empirical facts, experiences, practical results, coherency, etc. However, this course is at a Christian university and so the final theme is the implication of the Christian worldview. One major concern we are addressing in this course is the current compartmentalization of the Christian faith from a Christian’s daily life. So I have been thinking about whether or not Christian universities are promoting and teaching Christianity as a philosophy (based in a real relationship with God) that informs, guides, and transforms lives or as merely a set of religious doctrines based on a text. If you are a student, or parent of a student, looking for a Christian university to attend, you may want to ask this question of the department in charge of teaching Christian doctrine (School of Theology, Religious Studies). How do your professors go about teaching Christian doctrines? Will my student learn the real life implications of these doctrines of the faith? Perhaps you will not use this concern as a determining factor for where you’d like to attend, but at least you will have a heads up on how the university approaches the teaching of the Christian faith. Now having said this, I want to be clear that I highly value an education that allows for questioning the reason behind belief in God. Students should feel free to investigate the validity of the Christian faith, even at the Christian university. Yet, there should be some balance in the university between skepticism and belief. To simply ask questions about the text and doctrines without any conclusions is not a more informed or thoughtful position than asking questions and coming to conclusions based in evidence and reason. As USC professor of philosophy, Dallas Willard, says, “One can be as dumb as a cabbage and still ask ‘why’.” If you want to be responsible for your beliefs or for your skepticism, you should take the burden of proof on yourself for your position. At the university level, we should also feel some responsibility towards aiding development of critical reasoning skills that can assess worldviews and provide students with resources and workable solutions to the reality of life that they will encounter; such as the very real problem of evil. We should not just be training them to specialize in a certain ‘job.’ We should make a concerted effort in the development of reasoning citizens who are responsible for their beliefs. Even of late, we have seen mistakes in philosophical reasoning by some of the greatest minds in certain specialized fields. Stephen Hawking, a brilliant theoretical physicist and cosmologist, made the statement on the first page of his new book, The Grand Design, “Philosophy is dead…scientists have become the bearers of the torch of discovery in our quest for knowledge.” Not only does he create a false dichotomy—attempting to separate the practice of science from the philosophy of science—but he has also made a self-refuting statement. He cannot use scientific methodology to discover if philosophy is dead or if scientists are the bearers of the torch of discovery. These are philosophical statements. So his statement of truth cannot stand up to its own standard of finding truth through science.* Though my example here is not meant to belittle or demean a great mind, it is meant to show that we can all make mistakes in our reasoning, which is why it is so important to develop and train reasoning abilities. In a day when many talk as though truth cannot be known (postmodernism), but live as though truth is known (pre-modernism and modernism), it is a critical time in our history to hold people accountable for beliefs and remind them that a view of the world that is viable must be livable. We are all living beings that interact with and impact one another with our worldviews. So what are we doing to help develop reasoning abilities and to stress the importance and impact of having a worldview? In this article, I have discussed the university’s responsibility, but in reality, it is each individual’s responsibility to develop the rational mind they have been given as the Imago Dei. See to it that no one takes you captive through hollow and deceptive philosophy, which depends on human tradition and the elemental spiritual forces of this world rather than on Christ. Col. 2:8MJ*Note: Hawking did not use the term, “truth,” in his statement. I believe this was purposeful. I think he specifically avoided the term in this statement so as not to imply any definition of truth such as “that which corresponds with reality.” So he chose “knowledge” instead. Knowledge doesn’t have to be true, it can also be false or partly true. I can only go this far with his statements, though, because I have yet to read the entire work.
I just returned from the annual Evangelical Theological Society and Evangelical Philosophical Society conference in Atlanta. I attended papers by William Lane Craig, Gary Habermas, JP Moreland, Alvin Plantinga, and Angus Menuge. I heard arguments against naturalism and materialism, saw the latest research on the Shroud of Turin, and heard a response to Graham Oppy on the argument from consciousness. I also attended a session at the Society of Biblical Literature on “Is Yahweh a Moral Monster?” This discussion was outstanding. It included New Zealander, Matthew Flannagan, Canadian, Randal Rauser, also, Paul Copan and Richard Hess. Paul’s new book, “Is God a Moral Monster?” on this subject will be released December 1, 2010, but can be pre-ordered at Amazon.com.
While I was attending the annual meeting for ETS/EPS, I also gave a presentation at the 9th annual EPS apologetics conference,
“Set Forth Your Case,” at Johnson Ferry Baptist Church. Johnson Ferry’s pastor, Bryant Wright, is the new president of the Southern Baptist Convention. It is so exciting to see the new president of the SBC hosting an apologetics conference!
This event was well-attended with at least 1000 to 1100 participants. My session, “The Redefining of ‘Faith’ and How Christians Can Respond,” was also very well-attended. The chapel was packed full of people who were ready to interact with the material! One very interesting comment came when I asked “Who cares if our society redefines faith as a lack of critical thinking or as opposed to evidence and reason? And why does it matter?”
Several folks responded with answers, but a lady in the front row said something I had not heard from an audience member before: it was offensive to her as a medical doctor–as a professional–for people to denigrate her reasoning skills in this manner. Usually, the audience members discuss how it can stifle conversations before they even get started or they discuss the impact on the Church. I responded, in agreement with the doctor’s statement, that this is ad hominem. I further discussed how ad hominem attacks seek to divide rather than to thoughtfully consider the issue.
One sweet moment came after my session when a gentleman brought his family back to meet my husband and me. He wanted his son to ask me some particular questions he’d been struggling through. Roger and I talked with the family for a while and interacted with both of their sons’ questions. It was a great reminder of why we do these conferences: to touch lives.
Finally, after all the ETS/EPS activities had wrapped up, I had the privilege of speaking at Roswell Street Baptist Church to their youth and college group on “Asking the Right Questions.” They asked me some hard questions on the problem of evil, on science and religion, on talking to people who believe in “fate,” and on talking to people
who don’t seem to care about the question of God.
After our session, Roger and I worshiped with their “Connections” service. They had a phone number on the big screen during worship that congregates could use to text questions concerning the sermon. At the end of the service, about four text questions were answered and then the rest were answered in the Q&A room. What a great idea! Our thanks go out to Roswell Street for hosting us on Sunday. We had a great experience there.
It was a wonderful week of learning, seeing old friends, making new friends, and encouraging the life of the mind! I hope to see even more of you in San Francisco at the annual conference next year.
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?