Podcast 50: Why Defend Your Faith? (Apologetics 1)

22/09/2016 34 min
Podcast 50: Why Defend Your Faith? (Apologetics 1)

Listen "Podcast 50: Why Defend Your Faith? (Apologetics 1)"

Episode Synopsis

Apologetics 1: Introduction
Have you ever heard of apologetics? This is the field where Christians seek to provide the reasons for why they believe what they believe. In a post-Christian society, it is increasingly important to understand the reasons for your faith. For example, why do you believe in God’s existence? Why do you think the bible is true? How do you know God raised Jesus from the dead? What about pain and suffering, modern science, or Christianity’s sexual ethics? In the next fifteen lectures, you’ll get answers to these important questions so you can build your own faith as well as get better at sharing it with others.
If you would like to take this class for credit, please contact the Atlanta Bible College so you can register and do the necessary work for a grade. Here now is lecture one: Introduction.
Notes:

The Biblical Mandate for Apologetics

1 Peter 3.14-16
apologetics has nothing to do with apologizing, it is simply giving a reasoned defense of the faith
two key guidelines: (1) gentleness, (2) respect
ἀπολογία: a speech of defense, the act of making a defense

as a speech: Acts 22.1
as written: 1 Corinthians 9.3
in court: 2 Timothy 4.16; Acts 25.16
defending the gospel: Philippians 1.7



“The task of apologetics is to show that the evidence that the New Testament calls people to commit their lives to is compelling evidence and worthy of our full commitment. That often involves a lot of work for the apologist. Sometimes we would rather duck the responsibility of doing our homework, of wrestling with the problems and answering the objections, and simply say to people, ‘Oh, you just have to take it all in faith.’ That’s the ultimate cop-out. That doesn’t honor Christ. We honor Christ by setting forth for people the cogency of the truth claims of Scripture, even as God himself does.[1]”
Objections:

Faith by definition excludes the possibility of certainty

“Sadly, in our day many Christians argue that we ought not to be engaged in attempts to ‘prove’ the truth claims of Christianity, that faith and proof are incompatible. ”[2]

blind faith vs. informed faith
what did Jesus do? did he ask people to just believe that he was the Messiah without offering any reasons for that belief? John 5.36; John 10.24-25, 37-38; 14.10-11
Later on Jesus’ resurrection became the single most important proof of his claim to be Messiah. Acts 17.30-31; Romans 1.1-4 In the book of Acts, Jesus’ resurrection was mainly argued for on the basis of eye-witness testimony. Acts 1.22; 2.32; 3.15; 10.39-42; 13.31
this is not to say we can have complete certainty, faith is still required, but it’s not a leap of blind faith

“The Bible never tells us to take a leap of faith into darkness and hope that there’s somebody out there. The Bible calls us to jump out of the darkness and into the light. That is not a blind leap.[3]”

only the holy spirit can illuminate someone’s heart to believe


much of apologetics is clearing out of the way barriers to belief

Bible is full of contradictions
Christians are all hypocrites
How can there be a God if there is so much pain and suffering?
Doesn’t God command genocide?
Hasn’t science disproved miracles?
What about evolution?
What about the Big Bang?


think of it like picking up rocks from the field before planting the seeds
besides, God has chosen to work with the spoken word. foolishness of preaching (1 Cor 1.21)