Monday, June 24, 2013

Apologetics Q&A pt 2: A Biblical Perspective




So what does the Bible say about Apologetics anyway?

There are several important passages in scripture that shed considerable light on just what apologetics is and how it should be done.  The first thing that you should understand from Scripture is that apologetics is a biblical word.  It comes from the Greek word apologia which doesn’t mean an apology, but rather a defense (a verbal defense, in the legal sense) of something.  The word is used this way in several passages in the New Testament including Acts 22:1, 25:16 and 2 Tim 4:16 where Paul uses it to describe a legal defense in a judicial setting (or at least in the face of a mob bent on “justice”).  It is also used in the more general sense of defending the Gospel or defending the validity of Christian hope in 1 Corinthians 9:3, Philippians 1:7, and of course 1 Peter 3:15 that says we are always to be ready to make a defense for the hope that is in us.

            Now that you understand what the word means, there are several passages that are instructive for the practice of apologetics.  The first lesson that scripture teaches us is that those who deny God are not reasonable or rational, they are foolish.  Psalm 14:1 states “the fool has said in his heart there is no God.”  This does not mean that unbelievers are necessarily unintelligent or incapable of thinking correct thoughts, but essentially an unbeliever is a fool, completely devoid of true wisdom (which begins with the fear of the Lord).  Proverbs 26:4-5 teaches, how we should relate to unbelievers in an apologetic encounter; Never meet them on neutral ground of their choosing, stating “never answer a fool according to his folly…answer a fool as his folly deserves, that he not be wise in his own eyes.”  We must never allow an unbeliever’s presuppositions set the framework for an apologetic encounter, rather root all of your arguments (in the logical sense, never be angry in these encounters) in the truth of Scripture.

            And there is no reason to have to meet an unbeliever on supposedly neutral ground, scripture is clear that all men have a knowledge of God.  Romans 1:19 speaking of unbelievers states “that which is known about God is evident within them; for God made it evident to them.”   Likewise Psalm 19 teaches that “the heavens declare the glory of God and the expanse displays the work of His hands.”  There is no need to “prove” the existence of God because the unbeliever already knows, he merely suppresses the truth (Romans 1:18).  This suppression is never total, it is rather like trying to hold a beach ball under water, it is nearly impossible and despite their best efforts the beach ball of the knowledge of God will occasionally pop to the surface, so we should proceed confident that although they deny it, the unbeliever is keenly aware of the creator God.

            And an appeal to God as creator and sustainer of the world is often a prominent feature in apologetic encounters recorded in scripture.  In Acts 14:4-18 Paul addresses the crowd who is seeking to worship him as Hermes and Barnabas as Zeus, that they should turn to the living God “who made the heaven and the earth and the sea and all that is in them (15), and that He left a witness to all people by providing sustaining rains from heaven and regular harvests that sustain men.   Creation is a key touch point in any apologetic encounter.

            Perhaps the most widely discussed passage in reference to apologetics is Paul’s Aeropagus  speech recorded in Acts chapter 17, and it is very instructive.  The first thing to note is that Paul addresses their culture (and by extension their world view).  He begins his speech by noting that the city is filled with the objects of pagan worship, and he uses an altar to an “unknown god” as a starting point for his discourse.  He does not contextualize his message though; he expressly claims to have knowledge that the Athenians do not, stating “that which you worship in ignorance, this I proclaim to you.”  And as we have seen previously, he next proclaims the God of the bible as the creator God (26).  He emphasizes both the nearness and transcendence of God (27-29).  He also declares the coming judgment of God and calls on his hearers to repent (30), which is very instructive for apologetics.  We must never forget that our aim in an apologetic encounter is not to be right, but to bring the unbeliever to faith so that they do not face the wrath of God on judgment day, and to this end he proclaims the resurrection of Jesus and Jesus as eschatological judge (31-32), and looks to the resurrection of Christ as the authentication of his message.  And it is worth noting that he doesn’t argue for the resurrection, he simply proclaims it as fact.

            Another clear teaching of scripture is that apologetics must be decisive and comprehensive.   2Corinthians 10:5-6 states “We are destroying speculations and every lofty thing raised up against the knowledge of God, and we are taking every thought captive to the obedience of Christ”.  Every means every, there is no attack on the truth of the gospel that is beyond the scope of apologetics, and Christians are always to have an apologetic at the ready as 1 Peter 3:15 states; “, always being ready to make a defense [apologia] to everyone who asks you to give an account for the hope that is in you.”  Yet we must always be gentle and winsome sharing this message “with gentleness and reverence.”

            There is more to apologetics than merely addressing the objections of unbelievers.  Luke 1:1-4, the preamble of the letter, sheds some light on an often overlooked function of apologetics, to strengthen the faith of the believer.  Luke wrote Acts so that Theophilus might know the exact truth about the things he had been taught.  Apologetics is not just to counter the arguments of unbelievers, but also to strengthen the faith of Christians. 

            While this is not an exhaustive discussion of all that the Bible has to say about apologetics, these passages are an excellent foundation to help you begin to build a truly biblical apologetic approach.

Wednesday, June 19, 2013

Apologetics Q&A pt. 1 - A Historical Perspective




Apologetics is one of the most misunderstood and misused terms in the modern evangelical church.  Too often it has come to mean having a contentious disagreement with an unbeliever (especially a professing atheist) and clobbering them in the argument.  But that is not apologetics!  That is simply trying to sanctify obnoxious behavior.  So what is apologetics?  In short, it is believers giving an answerfor the hope that is within them.  But the long answer is far more complicated, and to that end the Blue Ridge Pulpit will begin a series answering some common questions about the history and practice of apologetics.  My hope it will be a blessing to you and more importantly you will come away with the knowledge that apologetics is a Christian imperative and that the goal of every apologetic encounter, is not a won argument, but a repentant sinner won to the cause of Christ.

What were some of the major apologetic issues that Christians have faced throughout church history? 

From the earliest days of the church there has been a need to give an answer for the hope we have to a wide variety of challengers of the truth of the Gospel and the Christian faith.  Apologetics is not a new phenomenon of Christianity, but has always been a part of the Christian experience.

We read about many of the earliest challenges to the gospel and the answers that Christians offered in the very pages of scripture.  One of the earliest challenges came from the Jewish community who claimed that Christianity was a blasphemous perversion that worshiped a man rather than God.  Reasoning from the scripture (which were just the Old Testament books at that time) as Phillip did with the Ethiopian eunuch in Acts 8, Christians were able to demonstrate that Jesus was actually the promised divine messiah.
Another early challenge came from the Roman government.  Their concern was not so much about the truth claims of Christianity, but rather that because the church viewed Jesus as Lord and King, that they were subversive and disloyal to the Roman Government.  The defense of the faith then took the form of proving that Christians could be good earthly subjects and citizen.

The early church also had to answer with the Greek philosophical teaching that the spiritual was superior to the physical, and the Gnostic teaching that matter (the physical realm) was inherently evil and that only the spiritual was good.  This was done by showing through scripture that the resurrection would be physical (Dan 12) and that God pronounced the material world very good after it was created (Gen 1).  Gnostics also claimed that the God of the Testament was not the same as the God of the New Testament, that Jesus merely had the appearance of a physical being, but was truly a spirit (denial of the incarnation), and that the resurrection would only be a spiritual resurrection, but not a physical one.   These issues had to be answered by the church and were answered decisively by using the scriptures.

In many ways the era of the church fathers was a golden age of apologetics, in fact some of the second century church fathers were called collectively “the apologists” and much of what we understand as orthodox beliefs were first expressed in their defenses of the faith. One of the key issues they dealt with was the bodily resurrection of Jesus.  Some claimed that there was no  resurrection, while others (Gnostics) argued that the resurrection of Christ was merely spiritual rather than bodily.   

In addition to this key area, Justin Martyr argued for the superiority of Christianity to Judaism in his “Dialogue with Trypho”; Irenaeus argued for the humanity and divinity of Christ, that God is the God of both the Law and the Gospel, for ex-nihilo (from nothing) creation and for the integrity and exclusivity of the four canonical Gospel accounts (there were many false gospel accounts circulating in the 2nd century); Tertullian defended Christianity against the challenges of the Pagan religions and argued for the natural inclination of man toward God; while Clement of Rome answered the challenges of secular (Greek) philosophy and pointed out what truth they did contain was rooted in God’s revelation in nature or in the Hebrew Scriptures.

The later church father Augustine was also an active apologist.  He defended the trinity against various heretical views, argued for a linear view of history, answered the problem of evil, and made a teleological argument for the existence of God, saying that since the universe exhibits the characteristics of having been designed, it must have a designer.  He also was one of the first Christians to delve into the study of epistemology (the study of the basis of knowledge).

There were few challenges to the Christian world view during the middle ages, but that does not mean that important apologetic developments ceased. Anselm of Canterbury made the presuppositional statement that faith preceded reason, argued powerfully for the incarnation of Christ in his master work Cur Deus Homo, and advanced the ontological argument for the existence of God which is unique in that it is an argument that relies solely on thought rather than on evidence and can be briefly summarized as because man can conceive of a perfect God and because existence is a condition of perfection thus God must exist.  Thomas Aquinas was also active in the middle ages as a Christian thinker and apologist (although we would not affirm all of his thinking which was largely Roman Catholic).  He developed and advanced both the cosmological argument for God (essentially that there cannot be an infinite regress of causes, that there must be an uncaused cause for creation and that the uncaused Cause is God) and the teleological argument discussed previously.  He also asserted that all we can know of God cannot be found in nature and that scripture must form part of our basis of the knowledge of God. 

The period of the reformation also saw much activity in the realm of apologetics.  Obviously the main apologetic thrust of the Reformation period was the refutation of the errors of Roman Catholicism, however there were other issues, such as Calvin’s argument that special revelation and natural revelation work in concert in the heart of believers, an idea called the comprehensiveness of revelation, essentially that all facts are evidences for God.
The modern era brought many new challenges to Christianity.  Growing out of the enlightenment, deists rejected the God the bible in favor of a god who was a divine clockmaker who had no interaction with the world, this challenge was ably answered by apologists such as Joseph Butler and William Palley.  Another modern attack on Christianity came in the form of the radical skepticism of David Hume which claimed that nothing was knowable with certainty. This view was answered by Christian philosopher Thomas Reid who formulated “Common Sense Philosophy” (although not an apologist in the strictest sense).

In the post modern era in which we live, there have been a number of new apologetic challenges put to the church.  Perhaps the greatest is the post modern assault on certainty.  Essentially saying that all truth claims are invalid and thus equally valid.  As a corollary to this is the threat of religious pluralism, which essentially says all religions are equally valid.  This is an area of where much apologetic work still needs to be done, evaluating and refuting the world views of all of the various religions.  This post modern era has also brought the challenges of the new atheist movement, which not only denies the existence of God, but makes radical truth claims about the impossibility of God and is virulently anti-Christian.  
 
Challenges to the Faith have always been with us and will continue to be articulated by the enemies of the gospel until the Lord Returns.  As believers we should be keenly aware that while our times may be unique in the particular attacks on the gospel that come at us, we stand in a long line of believers that have had to give an answer for the hope that is in us.

Up Next: What does the bible say about apologetics?