Apologetics

Dr. Greg Bahnsen

Ready To Reason by Dr. Greg Bahnsen

Is it Necessary? A surge of pious agreement overcame me the first time I heard someone confidently assert that “The Word of God no more needs defense than does a lion in a cage. Just let the lion loose, and it will take care of itself!” There seemed something very right about that sentiment. It [...]

Dr. Greg Bahnsen

Revelation, Speculation, and Science by Dr. Greg Bahnsen

It is one of those embarrassing historical ironies that modern science could not have arisen except in the atmosphere of a Christian world-and-life view. Nevertheless, the scientific community today persists in playing the prodigal by assuming an antagonistic stance against the Christianity of divine revelation. Hypnotized by Darwin’s evolutionary scheme and enchanted with the products [...]

Dr. Greg Bahnsen

Evangelism and Apologetics by Dr. Greg Bahnsen

The very reason why Christians are put in the position of giving a reasoned account of the hope that is in them is that not all men have faith. Because there is a world to be evangelized (men who are unconverted), there is the need for the believer to defend his faith: Evangelism naturally brings [...]

Dr. Greg Bahnsen

Presuppositional Procedure by Dr. Greg Bahnsen

Here then is how the presuppositional (transcendental) method of defending the faith would proceed once the preliminary discussions and clarifications have taken place with the unbeliever-and the two outlooks now come head to head.1 The unbeliever says that he knows that miracles are impossible, that a personal almighty God does not exist, that ethical principles [...]

Dr. Greg Bahnsen

Evidential Apologetics: The Right Way by Dr. Greg Bahnsen

In popular misconception today, the choice of an apologetical method facing a Bible-believing Christian is between arguing presuppositionally or appealing to evidences from history and nature in support of Christianity. But that is entirely wrong. Presuppositional apologetics endorses and indeed encourages the use of evidences—but not evidences offered in the “traditional” manner as an appeal [...]

Dr. Greg Bahnsen

Beware of Philosophy! by Dr. Greg Bahnsen

Newport Christian High School has something virtually unique among the various private, Christian schools around the country. It is an extraordinary feature of its required curriculum—a prerequisite for high school graduation which few other schools enforce. NCHS is unique in that it offers a philosophy course for its high school seniors. There was a time [...]

Dr. Greg Bahnsen

Where the Rubber Hits the Road by Dr. Greg Bahnsen

Christians in the ancient world knew what it was to have accusations and ridicule directed at them for their religious convictions and practices. The report of Jesus’s resurrection was taken as an idle tale (Luke 24:11), a lie (Matthew 28:13–15), an impossibility (Acts 26:8). For preaching it, believers were arrested by the Jews (Acts 4:2–3) [...]

Dr. Greg Bahnsen

Presuppositional Reasoning with False Faiths by Dr. Greg Bahnsen

Presuppositional apologetics as taught by Cornelius Van Til urges the Christian to argue with unbelievers in an “indirect” fashion, doing an internal analysis of the unbeliever’s worldview (his fundamental assumptions about reality, knowledge, and ethics) and comparing it to the worldview revealed in the Bible. Many students of apologetics have come to see the strength [...]

Dr. Greg Bahnsen

The Impropriety of Evidentially Arguing for the Resurrection by Dr. Greg Bahnsen

It is indubitable that the resurrection of Jesus Christ has paramount significance for the history of redemption and for Christian theology (cf. Romans 4:25; 1 Peter 1:3). It is also clear that this resurrection must be held by the biblical Christian as one which took place in calendar time and involved Jesus’s empirical body (cf. [...]

Apologetics by Benjiman B. Warfield

I. Significance of the Term SINCE Planck (1794) and Schleiermacher (1811), ‘apologetics’ has been the accepted name of one of the theological disciplines or departments of theological science. The term is derived from the Greek apologeisthai, which embodies as its central notion the idea of ‘defense.’ In its present application, however, it has somewhat shifted [...]

Epistemological Perspectives and Evangelical Apologetics by John M. Frame

I have sensed that in recent years the debate within evangelicalism over apologetic method has degenerated into a series of partisan shouting-matches. The different parties (“presuppositionalists,” “evidentialists,” Van Tillians,” “Montgomeryites,” Gerstnerites,” etc.) seem more and more to be talking past one another.  In such a situation, there ought to be some value in all of [...]

Cornelius Van Til, Ph.D

Why I Believe in God by Cornelius Van Til, Ph.D

You have noticed, haven’t you, that in recent times certain scientists like Dr. James Jeans and Sir Arthur Eddington, as well as some outstanding philosophers like Dr. C.E.M. Joad, have had a good deal to say about religion and God? Scientists Jeans and Eddington are ready to admit that there may be something to the [...]

Evangelism and Apologetics by Stephen C. Perks

And he gave some, apostles; and some, prophets; and some, evangelists; and some, pastors and teachers. (Eph. 4:11) And we entered into the house of Philip the evangelist. (Act. 21:8) But watch thou in all things, endure afflictions, do the work of an evangelist, make full proof of thy ministry. (2 Tim. 4:5) They that [...]