To Everyone an Answer: A Case for the Christian WorldviewFrancis J. Beckwith, William Lane Craig, J. P. Moreland InterVarsity Press, 2009. 8. 20. - 396페이지 In a society fascinated by spirituality but committed to religious pluralism, the Christian worldview faces sophisticated and aggressive opposition. A prior commitment to diversity, with its requisite openness and relativistic outlook, has meant for skeptics, critics and even many Christians that whatever Christianity is, it cannot be exclusively true or salvific. What is needed in this syncretistic era is an authoritative, comprehensive Christian response. Point by point, argument by argument, the Christian faith must be effectively presented and defended. To Everyone an Answer: A Case for the Christian Worldview offers such a response. Editors Francis J. Beckwith, William Lane Craig and J. P. Moreland have gathered together in this book essays covering all major aspects of apologetics, including:
Preeminent in their respective fields, the contributors to this volume offer a solid case for the Christian worldview and a coherent defense of the Christian faith. |
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... premises to conclusion. Reasoning may also involve a movement from question to answer. For example, one might inquire of a trusted colleague concerning the state of affairs in a foreign country. On the basis of trust in the person's ...
... premises to conclusions, is not the cause of the assent of faith. Nonetheless, such reasoning 'can accompany the assent of faith.' The reason they are parallel but one does not cause the other is that 'faith involves will (freedom) and ...
... premise is recast in only slightly different form: “Everything that begins to exist has a cause of its existence.” 3Capital letters are used here to emphasize the ultimacy of the cause in question. 4For concise introductory statements ...
... premise that the universe began to exist. Different arguments have also been offered in support of the claim that “whatever begins to exist has a cause.” This premise has been variously grounded in a metaphysical intuition, an induction ...
... premise for deducing that there is a timeless being that comes to exist in time without being caused to exist as such. We have the intuition, let us say, that everything that begins to exist as such has a cause. For the time being, we ...
목차
13 Physicalism Naturalism and the Nature of Human Persons | 224 |
11 Facing the Challenge of Postmodernism | 238 |
15 Legislating Morality | 254 |
16 Darwin Design and the Public Schools | 266 |
PART 5 Religious Challenges to Christian Faith | 287 |
17 Religious Pluralism and Christian Exclusivism | 291 |
18 Eastern Thought | 308 |
19 Mormonism | 324 |
77 | |
6 A Thomistic Cosmological Argument | 95 |
7 A Moral Argument | 108 |
8 The Ontological Argument | 124 |
PART 3 Christ and Miracles | 139 |
9 The Christology of Jesus Revisited | 145 |
10 Miracles | 160 |
11 The Case for Christs Resurrection | 180 |
PART 4 Philosophical and Cultural Challenges to Christian Faith | 199 |
12 The Problem of Evil | 203 |
20 Islam | 350 |
Conclusion | 372 |
About Norman L Geisler | 376 |
About the Contributors | 381 |
Index of Names | 385 |
Index of Subjects | 389 |
Scripture Index | 395 |
Untitled | 397 |