David Couchman
David Couchman is the Director of Focus and the producer of the 'God: new evidence' and 'God and the Big Bang' video series. More...

Phil Prior talking to David about Focus's vision

Digital Evangelism blog

Can we be confident in the truth of the Good News?

In this section:

books

The purpose of this whole section of the 'Facing the Challenge' web site is to show that we can be confident in the truth and reliability of the message of the Bible - there are good reasons for believing the Good News.

In recent years, the case for the reliability of the Bible's message has become stronger than ever. There is evidence, and this evidence can be persuasive, even if it is not absolute proof. (In fact, there are very few things for which we can have absolute proof, and the more important something is, the less likely we are to have absolute proof for it.)

The Bible says: 'If you are asked about your Christian hope, always be ready to explain it.' (1 Peter chapter 3 verse 15) The technical word for giving a defence of the Bible's message is 'apologetics'. This comes from the word 'apologia', which is the Greek for 'explain'. Apologetics does not have anything at all to do with apologising for our faith, but has everything to do with being able to give a reasoned explanation of why we believe it.

When we have questions and doubts about the Good News, or when we need to explain our faith to others, apologetics can help us to see that there is a reasonable basis for our faith. We can be confident that what we believe is not out of date or irrational in some way. It is perfectly reasonable for thinking people today to be followers of Christ.

Books:

Here are some good general books on apologetics:

Does God Believe in Atheists?

Does God Believe in Atheists?

John Blanchard, Evangelical Press

  • Traces the development of atheistic and agnostic thinking from the Greeks to the present.
  • Pinpoints the influence of key thinkers such as Kant, Nietzsche, Heidegger, Camus, Sartre and Bertrand Russell, and shows how their teaching has shaped modern atheistic and agnostic ideas.
  • Traces the rise of Darwinian evolutionism and uncovers the weaknesses in claims made by its contemporary exponents such as Richard Dawkins and Peter Atkins
  • Exposes the errors of secular humanism, materialism, relativism, determinism and existentialism.
  • Highlights the fundamental flaws in major world religions and cults
  • Shows why true science and true religion are not enemies but friends
  • Examines the critical issue of how an all-powerful God of love can allow suffering and evil in the world.

Dr. Nick Needham, of Highland Theological College, Scotland, says of this book:

No self-respecting atheist should be without it

Order from the UK
Order from the USA

Why Believe?

Why Believe?
Reason and Mystery as Pointers to God

C Stephen Evans, IVP 1996
Subtitled: Reason and Mystery as Pointers to God. Evans explores some of the rational reasons for faith in God, including order in creation, moral order (our sense of right and wrong), and the existence of persons. He also deals with questions such as whether Jesus was really God, miracles, and why God allows suffering.
C Stephen Evans is professor of philosophy at Calvin College, Grand Rapids.
Order from the UK
Order from the USA

Handbook of Christian Apologetics

Handbook of Christian Apologetics

Peter Kreeft & Ronald Tacelli
USA: InterVarsity Press 1994
UK: Monarch Publications 1995
Billed as 'Hundreds of Answers to Crucial Questions', this lives up to its billing, with sections on

  • The nature, power and limitations of apologetics, and the relationship between faith and reason.
  • Twenty arguments for the existence of God, and a discussion of the nature of God
  • God and nature - four problems of cosmology; the problem of evil.
  • The person and work of Christ - His divinity, the resurrection, and the question whether the Bible is myth or history.
  • Life after death; heaven; hell; salvation.
  • Christianity and other religions; Christianity and postmodernism (the nature of objective truth).

Peter Kreeft is professor of philosophy at Boston College, and a well known author. Ronald Tacelli is associate professor of philosophy at Boston College.
Order from the USA

The New Evidence that Demands a Verdict

The New Evidence That Demands a Verdict

(Evidence I & II Fully Updated in One Volume To Answer Questions Challenging Christians in the 21st Century)
Josh McDowell, Thomas Nelson 1999
'Evidence That Demands a Verdict' volumes 1 & 2 were Christian classics. 'The New Evidence..' is Fully Updated in One Volume to Answer Questions Challenging Christians in the 21st Century' This revised edition contains some helpful new material on apologetics in the light of postmodernism and the 'death of truth'.
Order from the USA
Go here for a more detailed review

The case for Faith

The Case for Faith
A Journalist investigates the toughest objections to Christianity

Lee Strobel
Zondervan 2000
ISBN 0-310-2349-7
Through a series of interviews with leading thinkers who are followers of Christ, Lee Strobel investigates some of the greatest stumbling-blocks to faith: suffering, miracles, evolution, and hell. He tackles the objections people raise to faith, such as 'God isn't worthy of worship if he kills innocent children', 'It's offensive to claim Jesus is the only way to God', and 'Church history is littered with oppression and violence.' An excellent book.
Order from the UK
Order from the USA

Amazon store