Jan 19

Links (1.19.2012)

Did Jesus Never Say Anything about Homosexuality? (by Alan, Stand to Reason)
Presuppositional Apologetics with Sye Ten Bruggencate (YouTube)
Classic Commentaries and Studies on Thessalonians (11 vols.) (Logos Community Pricing)
Weekly Apologetics Bonus Links (01/06 – 01/13) (Apologetics 315)

Jan 08

Quote: Christian Apologists Defend A Worldview

I am reading through Pushing the Antithesis by Greg L. Bahnsen (really, compiled by his students/friends after his death). The quote below embodies a vital idea to all apologists:

[A] worldview forms a network of presuppositions, an entire system of assumptions. This network is a complex web of numerous beliefs organized in an interlocking, interdependent, self-contained truth system.

Unfortunately, many evangelical Christians generally think in a piecemeal fashion, focusing on stray individual doctrines and facts rather than a full-scale, coordinate3d system of beliefs. They tend to view the Christian faith as a random assortment of free-standing doctrines rather than as a coherent system of interlocking truth claims. In fact, we see this problematic tendency in the more popular “evidentialist” method of apologetics which defends the faith by focusing on this or that doctrine – for instance, on the “resurrection argument” or the “creation argument.” We must recognize that the Christian faith is a complex system of mutually-supported, intertwined beliefs filling out a broader interdependent worldview.

You must defend the Christian faith as a package deal. (p. 43)

Our apologetic method can tend to be lop-sided when we overemphasize certain arguments (which in and of themselves are good arguments) at the expense of others. We must not forget that our apologetic method must reflect our theological beliefs. For evangelical believers we understand our christian worldview to be an all-encompassing worldview, totally different from the unbeliever’s worldview. At conversion we give ourselves, ALL of ourselves to Christ. This includes not only our beliefs about, for instance, the resurrection and creation, but we also the presuppositions which make such doctrines intelligible.

“You must defend the Christian faith as a package deal.” As apologists we are bound to not only stick our necks out for what we consider the “central” or “core” doctrines, but also for the worldview (the network of interlocking beliefs and presuppositions) which makes them possible and actual.

For example, a historical argument regarding the resurrection of Jesus Christ might be well constructed and sound for believers who are seeking to think in a way consistent with the worldview presented to us by God in Scripture. This argument, however, will not phase an atheist who questions the reliability of history, the accuracy of the transmission of ancient documents, the purpose and meaning of the resurrection asserted by the apologist, etc. These worldview issues lie underneath our historical argument and must be addressed alongside our argument if we are to have success in convincing our atheist friend that Jesus rose from the dead.

The goal of every apologist is (or should be) to provide a good defense of the Christian faith. The nature of the Christian faith demands that we defend not only the “big” doctrines, but the “little” or “supporting” doctrines, along with the biblical/theological presuppositions which comprise the biblical worldview. As evangelists we market the Christian faith as a “package deal,” a complete and total change, as apologists we must defend this “package deal.” We must defend the entire Christian worldview!

Apr 12

eBook: Van Till’s Presuppositionalism by Greg L. Bahnsen

Oh that my words were written!

Oh that they were inscribed in a book!

Today’s eBook: Van Till’s Presuppositionalism, by Greg L. Bahnsen

Van Till’s Presuppositionalism, by Greg L. Bahnsen.epub

Van Till’s Presuppositionalism, by Greg L. Bahnsen.mobi

Van Till’s Presuppositionalism, by Greg L. Bahnsen.pdf

Van Till’s Presuppositionalism, by Greg L. Bahnsen.txt

To download, right click and choose ‘save as’ or ‘save target as’ or ‘save link as”

*Amazon’s Kindle is able to display .mobi files.

Dec 20

In the News (Dec. 20, 2010)

12 Days of Logos

Great deals on Logos software! Today is the NICOT/NICNT

When has a Preacher Crossed the Line into Plagiarism in His Sermon?

Answers by D.A. Carson, Sandy Wilson, Collin Hansen

In the gay marriage debate, stop playing the hate card

“Clearly a determined effort is afoot, in cultural bastions controlled by the left, to anathematize traditional views of sexual morality, particularly opposition to same-sex marriage, as the expression of “hate” that cannot be tolerated in a decent civil society…Defenders of traditional marriage must be likened to racists, as purveyors of irrational fear and loathing.”

Apologist Interview: Lindsay Brooks

Brian Auten interviews Brooks, a staff apologist at apologetics.com

Audio from Saddleback Church’s 2nd annual Apologetics Weekend

Chris Wright: Jesus Before He Was Born,  Scott McKnight: The Radical Message of Jesus, Peter Kreeft: The Shocking Life of Jesus, Greg Koukl: Jesus’ Miraculous Death & Resurrection, Philip Yancey: The Jesus Left Behind – The Body of Christ

Atheists are not Neutral

“Christians who try to debate with the atheist on neutral ground have already lost the debate since they’ve already given up what they are trying to defend

Dec 15

In the News (Dec. 15, 2010)

Christian Megathemes: Believers who don’t know about Easter

6 Mega-themes which threaten the church today

George W. Bush interviewed by Focus on the Family

Ex-president talks about Billy Graham, prayer, meeting Jesus

US: Govt. sues school over denial of Muslim pilgrimage

Cause Mecca isn’t open during summer vacation…

Poland boasts the tallest statue of Jesus, towering 108 feet over Swiebodzin

Poland, Bastion of Religion, Sees Rise in Secularism

20 years of freedom shows a decline in Roman Catholicism and a rise in secularism

Free! Introduction to Apologetics Lectures (Presuppositional) by Jamin Hubner

14 lectures (mp3) on Apologetics from Jesus Bible Institute

UK:Secularists attack day of Bible readings on Radio 4

Atheists oppose the radio tribute on the KJV’s 400th birthday

Dec 08

In the News (Dec. 8, 2010)

AUDIO: Witnessing to Mormons – Backpack Radio

Luke Pierson and Jeff Durbin of Apologia Ministries

Discussion of the new 2011 NIV translation

Janet Mefferd and Denny Burk discuss the NIV 2011

When  Philosophy Trumps Theology and God’s Self-Authenticating Word

Another  Response to Dr. Max Herrera on Presuppositional Apologetics (Jamin Hubner)

Why Christians Go Postal Over Facebook, Jay-Z, Yoga, Avatar, and Culture in General

Pastor Mark Driscoll weighs in on Christian unity

Jul 30

Arminian “Presuppositionalism” Continued…

Jamin Hubner mentioned my blurb about Kerrigan Skelly’s video on presuppositional apologetics on Pros Apologian (thanks!). He offered some good comments that bear repeating:

First is the rejection of natural theology. The unbeliever has knowledge of God, but due to his depravity (the first point of Calvinism TULIP) he suppresses it. The classical arguments will never suffice for the same reason 66 books of evidence won’t suffice: he’s spiritually dead, and he needs to be shown his bias against God before gaining a proper orientation of life. Without the Calvinist/biblical teaching of depravity, one could adhere to classicalism as much as presuppositionalism regarding this central issue.

Second is the absolute sovereignty of God and Lordship of Christ coupled with sola scriptura. Classical apologetics is built from a Roman Catholic foundation that does not require that a believer (a) develop an apologetic method from Scripture or (b) begin with Scripture to engage in apologetics. Both are distinctive of presuppositional apologetics. In short, presuppositional Arminians (ie Kerrigan Skelly, Tim Chaffey, etc.) are simply unaware of their inconsistency, and need to come into grips with the fact that our theology gives rise to our apologetic methodology. If that can be admitted, it is clear that only presuppositional apologetics fits Reformed theology – that is, only biblical apologetics fits biblical theology.

Jul 29

An Arminian Presuppositionalist?

I’m watching this video of this guy who runs, among other websites, www.refutingcalvinism.com (which re-directs to a YouTube Channel). What is odd about this video is that he is teaching presuppositional apologetics (which is a distinctively Calvinistic apologetic). I’m about 1/4 of the way though and I though I would share it with you and ask for your thoughts. The guy’s name is Kerrigan Skelly, btw.

My thoughts are this:
1. Calvinism (and presuppositional apologetics) has a distinct understanding of man. Specific to the topic, man is under the noetic effects of sin, his mind and its processes are corrupted by the fall into sin (this would be part of the T, Total Depravity). Presuppositional apologetics consciously attempts to address man as such, pointing out the inconsistencies between how he lives and what he professes to believe. (Consistent) Arminians deny Total Depravity as taught by most Calvinists, usually granting that fallen and unregenerate man has some capacity to understand and accept the things of God completely and entirely on his own. I just heard of Mr Skelly so I’m not sure where he falls on this scale.

2. Presuppositional apologetics was pioneered by Calvinists. If you read anything by Cornelius Van Til you will have no doubt that he was true to the reformed faith as true could be. He taught at Westminster Seminary, headed their apologetics department, he constantly quoted Abraham Kuyper, Benjamin Warfield, Herman Bavinck, Louis Berkhof, Archibald Hodge, Charles Hodge, etc. And of course the Theologian himself, John Calvin. Van Til’s students Greg Bahnsen, John Frame, Rousas John Rushdoony, etc. How consistent can an Arminian be who attempts to utilize a distinctively Calvinistic apologetic? (Take this question as half polemic/half inquisitive)

I’ve never heard of Mr. Skelly before so any info would be cool if you know about him or his ministry (Pin Point Evangelism)