What is presuppositional apologetics and how does it compare to other apologetic approaches?
The goal of presuppositional apologetics, like all other
apologetic methods is to provide a rational basis for Christian faith. It does so by defending Christianity against
the counter claims of non-religious world views such as atheism or secular humanism
and against the claims of other religions.
It also is used to attack (intellectually, we must always be winsome in
an apologetic encounter) the claims of other world views and to show not only
that Christian faith is reasonable, but that it is sure and that all other
world views and religions are absolutely false (it is much more suited to this
latter task than other apologetic methods).
Presuppositional apologetics takes its name from the
recognition that all arguments (apologetic or otherwise) are rooted in
presuppositions, or things that are already believed. Presuppositional apologetics recognizes that
God’s inspired Word is the only reliable and trustworthy standard of truth, and
this is the presupposition that gives this school of thought its name.
For
the presuppositional apologist all of his arguments will be firmly rooted in
Scriptural truth, and he will not grant “neutral” ground to his partner in the apologetic
encounter, because there really is no such thing for as neutral intellectual
territory. The presupppositionalist
recognizes that to grant “neutral ground” and then argue for the existence of
God is to argue based on his partner in the apologetic encounter’s false presupposition, namely that human
(specifically his/her own) reason is the arbiter of what is true and
false. Rather the presuppositional
apologist roots his/her arguments in the only sure source of truth, the
revealed Word of God.
Another
key distinctive of presuppositional apologetics is that it argues for the
certainty of the Christian world view, and for the impossibility of all
other world views and religious systems.
Other apologetic methods seek to show that Christianity is reasonable and
probable (they would say so probable that other views are unreasonable), but
there is a serious flaw in this methodology.
Even if it is shown that Christianity is reasonable and highly probable
that leaves room for other world views to be reasonable and true (however
improbable) and for Christianity to be unreasonable and untrue.
The
arguments that the presuppositional apologist makes are, in simple terms, one
step arguments. Presuppositional
apologetics argues for the certainty of the existence of the God of the Bible,
the Christian God. In contrast classic
apologetics seeks to show that the existence of a god is highly probable and
that of all of the theistic views Christianity is the most likely. Other schools of apologetics such as
evidentialism and the cumulative case theory approach would claim that they too
use a one step approach, but functionally their arguments, although not as
strictly ordered as the classic approach, do divide into arguments primarily
for the existence for a god and arguments for the Christian God.
Not
only is presuppositionalism unique in its single step approach, but the nature
of the arguments that it offers is also unique.
While virtually all other approaches to apologetics focus on evidential
arguments of one form or another, presuppositional apologetics focuses on
transcendental arguments. A
transcendental argument is not made up of a chain of evidence, but rather makes
a holistic case that all meaning and thought presupposes, or relies on the God
of the bible, by showing the that unbelievers are unable to think, argue,
acquire knowledge or even live apart from the God of the Bible. A transcendental argument may take several
different forms, it may be to show that only the God of the bible can account
for the laws of logic, and make debate possible, that only the God of the bible
can explain the innate sense of right and wrong every person has, or the
natural appreciation of beauty that is native to all people, but at its base, a
transcendental argument shows that only the Christian worldview provides a
livable framework for human existence.
(This does not mean that there is no role for the use of evidence in
presuppositional apologetics, this is a common misconception.) This in many ways
is the key distinctive of the presuppositional approach.
I believe that presuppositional apologetics is not only
the most effective approach to the apologetic task, but also the most God
honoring. I believe this for a number of reasons.
First, although the other approaches are not called
presuppositional, they are all governed by presuppositional thinking. By granting “neutral” ground to the
unbeliever and then arguing for the existence of God or of the God of the
bible, they have effectively allowed the presuppositions of the unbeliever to
lay the foundation of the apologetic encounter.
And the presupposition that they will stipulate (often without realizing
it) is invariably man centered and usually boils down to some form of the
enlightenment belief that that their own reasoning is the sole arbiter of
truth. This is what is called the
magisterial use of reasoning and is an affront to God. One of the things we can know with certainty
is that the unbeliever is a fool, since the fool in his heart says there is no
God (Psalm 14:1/53:1), so why should we allow an unbeliever to set the terms of
the apologetic encounter.
And what is worse, to approach the unbeliever as if he
has no knowledge of God and needs convinced, is to deny the clear teaching of
scripture on the matter. Roman’s 1
clearly teaches that unbelievers have a knowledge of God (although not enough
knowledge to save), and that they willfully suppress this truth in
unrighteousness (Rom 1:18-19). Creation
communicates to them (some of) the attributes and existence of God. To approach apologetics as if the unbeliever
has no knowledge of God is to functionally deny the inerrancy and authority of
scripture.
A
second key consideration for me is that presuppositionalism is the only
approach to apologetics that rests squarely on sure truth. Only the revealed word of God is 100%
trustworthy and sure. The noetic effects
of the Fall (the total corruption of our thought process) render both our
reasoning ability and our ability to interpret evidence untrustworthy. And because presuppositional apologetics
rests solely on the Word of God as its foundation, it can do what other
apologetic methods cannot, show that the Christian world view is correct and
all other world views are false with certainty. Certainty is a precise term which in this
case doesn’t just mean overwhelmingly likely, but that the contrary is
impossible, and it is simply not good enough to show that Christianity is very
likely, and pretty reasonable, it must be shown to be the only way to explain
creation and human experience.
Another
key strength of presuppositional apologetics is how effective it is not just at
proving the Christian world view, but by proving contrary world views are
demonstrably false. Other apologetic
approaches show the reasonableness of Christianity, but rarely show the folly
of other world views. By employing
transcendental arguments, presuppositional apologetics is able to show that all
other world views are unable to account for creation and the human condition and
thus fail the “test of livability”. This is particularly important because the
apologist’s ultimate goal is not merely to win debates, but to win souls. The ultimate goal in any apologetic encounter
is to bring the unbeliever to saving faith (although it very rarely happens)
and approaches that do not show the un-livability of non-Christian world views
are ill suited for that task.
Not only do I believe that
presuppositional apologetics is the best apologetic approach, I believe that
the two most commonly leveled criticisms of it are baseless and without merit.
The
first of these is that presuppositional arguments are invalid because they are
circular. People who make this criticism
tend to characterize the arguments of presuppositional apologetics as “since
God thus God”, but this is so simplistic that it borders on being
slanderous. Perhaps the biggest problem
with this claim is that all apologetic approaches are dependent on the apologists’
controlling presuppositions. Just as the
presuppositionalist presupposes that the Bible is the arbiter of truth, the
evidentialist bases his arguments on the belief that evidence (empiricism)
determines truth and the apologist who appeals to reason presupposes that human
reason is the standard of truth. The
only difference is that the presuppositionalist recognizes and discloses his
controlling beliefs. Thus if the
arguments of presuppositional apologetics are circular, the arguments of all
approaches are also circular. Moreover,
the reasoning of a presuppositional apologist is not circular, it is linear in
a way that the other approaches are not.
For the presuppositionalist God’s reasoning (found in scripture) is the
basis for faith, which is the basis for human reasoning, and out of this
reasoning flows presuppositional arguments for the Christian world view. Most importantly, surrendering Christian
presuppositions (based solely on the Bible), to argue for the truth of
Christianity is to surrender the very thing that is being argued for, the Lordship
of Christ (and the authority of Scripture).
The
second common criticism of presuppositional apologetics is that because it assumes
the Bible and a Christian world view and does not start from a “neutral”
position, there is not any common ground on which to engage the
unbeliever. This is patently false. There are two key points of commonality
between unbelievers and believers. The
first is their exposure to creation, Psalm 19 states that “the heavens declare
the Glory of God and the expanse displays the work of His hands” while Romans 1
makes clear that because what can be known about God is displayed through
nature and that unbeliever suppress this knowledge in unrighteousness. Everyone, even the most hard-bitten atheist
knows the God of the Bible exists, and this allows for interaction on common
ground. As does the fact that bothbeliever and unbeliever alike are made in the image of God . The image of God is the basis for human
uniqueness and worth and provides ample common ground from which to launch an
apologetic encounter.
While
there are apologists of other methods who I respect and whom I love as brothers
in Christ, and I want to stress that apologetic approach is certainly not an
issue to divide over, non-presuppositional approaches are not merely second
best, they are wrong headed. Only an
apologetic grounded in the sure truth of the scripture is up to the task of
proving with certainty that only the God of the bible can account for creation
and human existence.
"Everyone, even the most hard-bitten atheist knows the God of the Bible exists"
ReplyDeleteno that's a complete and blatent lie, you just want to insult people so you feel good about your self
No that is actually a scriptural truth, and it has nothing to do with wanting to feel better about myself, it has to do with wanting to rightly equip other believers to think biblically about apologetics.
DeletePsalm 19:1-3 "The heavens declare the glory of God, and the sky above proclaims his handiwork. Day to day pours out speech, and night to night reveals knowledge. There is no speech, nor are there words,whose voice is not heard."
Romans 1:18-21 "For the wrath of God is revealed from heaven against all ungodliness and unrighteousness of men, who by their unrighteousness suppress the truth. For what can be known about God is plain to them, because God has shown it to them. For his invisible attributes, namely, his eternal power and divine nature, have been clearly perceived, ever since the creation of the world, in the things that have been made. So they are without excuse. For although they knew God, they did not honor him as God or give thanks to him, but they became futile in their thinking, and their foolish hearts were darkened."
That is the bad news, the good news is this Romans 10:5-13 "For Moses writes about the righteousness that is based on the law, that the person who does the commandments shall live by them. But the righteousness based on faith says, “Do not say in your heart, ‘Who will ascend into heaven?’ ” (that is, to bring Christ down) “or ‘Who will descend into the abyss?’ ” (that is, to bring Christ up from the dead). But what does it say? “The word is near you, in your mouth and in your heart” (that is, the word of faith that we proclaim)because, if you confess with your mouth that Jesus is Lord and believe in your heart that God raised him from the dead, you will be saved. For with the heart one believes and is justified, and with the mouth one confesses and is saved. For the Scripture says, “Everyone who believes in him will not be put to shame.” For there is no distinction between Jew and Greek; for the same Lord is Lord of all, bestowing his riches on all who call on him. For everyone who calls on the name of the Lord will be saved.”
If you repent (turn from)of your sins and place your faith in the atoning work of Jesus on the cross, your sins (past, present, and future)will be forgiven and you will be saved. If you persist in unbelief you will be judged according to your deeds, and one transgression is enough to separate you from God for all eternity.
I would challenge you to click this link and truly examine your self.
http://www.livingwaters.com/helps/HellsBestKeptSecret.pdf