Postmodern Apologetics provides an introduction to contemporary French thinkers who argue for the coherence and viability of Christian faith and religious experience with phenomenological and hermeneutical tools. It treats both French philosophers and appropriations of their thought in the North American context.
This, then, is the first book to address that vital task. In these pages some of evangelicalism's most stimulating thinkers consider three possible apologetic responses to postmodernity.
This is an edifying work that builds us up in the hope and love of the gospel.
This book provides an introduction to the emerging field of continental philosophy of religion by treating the thought of its most important representatives, including its appropriations by several thinkers in the United States.
But the lesson here is not merely that people display varying degrees of good and evil but that no one can avoid the best and worst features that comprise humanity. John Calvin once wrote that “nearly all the wisdom we possess, ...
This is an edifying work that builds us up in the hope and love of the gospel.
Johnston, 55. 106. Barna Group, American Christians Do Not Believe that Satan or the Holy Spirit Exist, last modified April 10, 2009, accessed December 5, 2013, ... Scott M. Gibson (Grand Rapids, MI: Baker Books, 2004), 82. 108.
Truth? Can we know it? Noted scholar John Feinberg counters modern and postmodern skepticism, arguing that truth is both real and knowable.
As Christian philosopher Nicholas Wolterstorff succinctly states it, If I believe of something that it is a duck, that is true of it if and only if it is a duck. And if that is indeed true of it, it is not true of it relative to some ...
More than a guidebook to the postmodernity debate, Paul Lakeland's lively and novel volume clarifies the critical impulses behind the cultural, intellectual, and scientific expressions of postmodern thought.
The purpose of this study is to incorporate the thought and apologetic impulse of John Calvin, Blaise Pascal and Francis Schaeffer into a Christian apologetics suited for an audience steeped in postmodernity.