Prioritize your to-do list and get started!

checklistMy friend Julie Holly of The Holly Real Estate Group recently posted, 

“The secret of getting ahead is getting started.” -Agatha Christie

But, what if you don’t know where to start?

Suggestion:  Organize your to-do list in order of priority.

Here is a suggested priority list:
1. God. 2. Spouse. 3. Children. 4. Work. 5. Learn. 6. Self. 7. Extended family. 8. Friends. 9. Church. 10. Community.

Amend this list to match your priorities.  You might move 6 further down the list for urgent needs.  Hope that helps you get started!

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Christmas 2012 in Review: He Came to Us

He-Came-to-Us1Over at Christian Apologetics Alliance I had the pleasure of blogging my church’s Christmas sermon series, called “He Came to Us”.  There were four sermons in the series preached by Jim Applegate at Redeemer in Modesto, each sermon taking one Gospel’s approach to Jesus’ birth.

12/2: He Came to Us: In our brokenness. Matthew.
12/9: He Came to Us: To all of us. Mark.
12/16: He Came to Us: Knowing we are skeptics. Luke.
12/23: He Came to Us: For all eternity. John.

Week one:  Matthew

JESUS’ BIRTH SHOWS “GOD HELPS THOSE WHO HELP THEMSELVES” IS A LIE.

“He Came to Us: In our brokenness.”  Jim explains that Jesus came from a broken genealogy, was conceived by an unwed mother and “born in a barn”.  The original nativity scene stunk of animal droppings, and it wasn’t long before babies died because the king wanted to kill Jesus.  Jim says this shows Jesus steps into our broken families, politically incorrect, messy lives, knowing things will get worse before they get better.  Santa keeps a naughty and nice list and only gives gifts to nice kids, but Jesus comes to us before we are nice, dies for us and and erases the list–only then setting out to fix us.  Our lives do not need to look like a Hallmark card, or even be merely functional, for Jesus to accept us.
 
Week two:  Mark
“He Came to Us: To all of us.”  Jim talks about clues supporting the conclusion that Mark was writing to outsiders.  Mark uses the Greek translation of the Old Testament, and translates cultural differences, because Jesus did not only come for insiders (Jews) but for outsiders as well (everyone else).  Jesus came for outsiders so that we can ALL discover and understand (not just blindly accept), and ALL delight (find true satisfaction, not just deal with surface issues).
 
Week three:  Luke
“He Came to Us: Knowing we are skeptics.”  Jim shows that Luke used eyewitness accounts in writing down the facts so that we can have certainty, not just blindly accept.  He explains that both Zechariah and Mary were skeptical and couldn’t believe at first, but that God gave them the answers and evidence they needed.  He points out two main reasons we are skeptical:  we are pridefully overly protective of old wounds, or we are overly needy of filling that God-shaped hole and are chasing after alternatives by which we are easily duped.  Luke includes the fulfillment of Old Testament prophecies because God doesn’t expect us to believe any old person who shows up claiming to be him.  Resting in the certainty provided in the case Luke makes, we don’t have to protect ourselves from questions.
 
Week four:  John

A CHRISTMAS CAROL VERSUS THE GOSPEL

“He Came to Us: For all eternity.”  Jim compares the moral of A Christmas Carol to the Gospel.  Uncle Scrooge goes from greedy worldliness to the moral superiority of religion, skipping right past the point of Christmas:  That Jesus comes to us, not we to him.  The world and our own moral superiority will fail us, but John affirms that Jesus is Lord over our past, present, and future.

In conclusion:  Jesus came to all of us in our brokenness, knowing we are skeptics, and dying once to demonstrate his acceptance for all eternity.
 
When considered in the light of Carson Weitnauer’s 6 Easy Ways to Add Apologetics to Your Sermon, Jim’s sermon series does a good job of touching all 6 ways, explained in more detail if you click on the links to each sermon above.  It is so encouraging to be a member of a church family that speaks to both heart and mind.  This is a gift I’d like to thank God for giving us this Christmas, which was made possible by the gift of his son.  If you are a pastor or elder, I pray you consider giving this gift to your church, if you are not already.  If you are a member of a church whose pastor/elder employs any of Carson’s 6 Ways, would you please comment to this article and tell me all about it?
Happy New Year!
***
This post also appeared on Examiner.com.
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Poll: What grounds objective moral truth?

Unknown-1Choose one option from this poll:

  • God wills the good in accordance with his loving nature.
  • The good is a construct of God, man or nature.
  • Nothing, there are only constructs which do not obligate.

In other words:

What grounds objective moral truth (or “human rights”)?

A.  The good is a construct of God, man or nature—the good is created (made up).
B.  God wills the good in accordance with his loving nature—the good is discovered.
C.  Nothing, there are only constructs which do not obligate—there is no good (neither).

created/discovered/neither — easy to memorize

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The true meaning of Christmas

Christmas, whatever its true date, is when God became one of us, so that when the time came, he could demonstrate, by dying for us, that he loves us despite our works, whether they are good or sin–…demonstrate that his unconditional love motivates choosing good works over sin, rather than the other way around: good works motivating unconditional love (which would be a contradiction). This took a while to sink in for his original disciples (hence, Paul), and most the world–even many claiming to be Christians–still don’t get it…even though Christ did not arrive, live, or die unannounced. He is the summing up of the Old Testament, all of which foreshadowed his coming…and his return. The world thinks this is crazy, and it is. But it’s crazy good.

In fact, Christmas is the only reason ‘good’ can possibly describe anything in reality. In order for goodness to be “true” it must describe a being that IS goodness. If there is no God who actually demonstrates that he always is and does Golden Rule love (which is what he did by becoming one of us and switching perspectives on the cross)–then there is no always-good being in reality to which “good” can correspond (be true). God did that, because his goodness is real.

That’s the true meaning of Christmas.

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Tasty-Easy Chicken Dinner-in-a-Hurry Casserole

I don’t put cheese on the tots, but tots on the cheese…

This is a variation of a recipe I found a long time ago that calls for hamburger instead of chicken, mushroom soup instead of celery soup, and doesn’t make you cook the tots first, so they end up mushy (and uses onion soup mix–I don’t use any spices at all in this, and it’s delicious).  Crispy is muy, muy importante, so DO cook the tots first, thaw the chicken in the microwave while the tots cook, and get a lot done while you’re waiting to throw everything into the casserole dish and shove it in the oven in a mad rush.  Our family loves how juicy this leaves the chicken, and how delicious the whole thing is without even adding any spices.  Thaw and crisp stuff the night before if you need to have this done fast the next day.  [You don’t even have to bake it, really–you can throw it all in a pot if you’re going for REALLY fast…just make sure you cook the chicken in a little oil, once the tots are almost crispy, and before you toss in everything else.  Cook the chicken and crisp the tots the night before, for LIGHTNING fast.]

Super easy as-is, with no night-before prep-work…

1 bag frozen chicken breasts, thawed (boneless, skinless)
1 bag frozen mixed veggies (corn, peas, carrots, green beans)
1 can cream of celery soup
1 lb. shredded cheddar
1 bag CRISPY-BAKED (not a brand; do it) tater tots

Add the above ingredients into a casserole dish in the order listed.  You don’t have to cut up the chicken, but you can if you have time.  I don’t.

Bake uncovered @ 350 degrees Fahrenheit for 30 minutes.

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7 Steps to Social Signals Success

Are you sending mixed social messages, or no messages on your social media accounts like Facebook, Twitter and Google+?  Search engines pay attention to the social signals you are sending—but, more importantly, so do your fans and followers.  You do have fans and followers, right?  If not, these 7 steps will help attract and keep them, as well as ensuring you are sending the right signals.

7 Steps to Social Signals Success

1.  Link your Facebook and Twitter accounts together, so that posting to one is also posting to the other, both are receiving attention and neither are being neglected.  Whatever is updated on Facebook automatically tweets to Twitter (make this happen here), and whatever you tweet on Twitter automatically updates to Facebook (make that happen here).

(continue reading)

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Groothuis’ "Christian Apologetics" ch.15: The Moral Argument

Chapter 15 of Groothuis’ Christian Apologetics is on the Moral Argument, although it only briefly covers it in one of its sections.  It covers much more ground as a nice introduction to Ethics, without going into specific theories (consequentialism, et cetera).
 
Two Red Herrings
 
1.  Atheists can be moral without believing in God.  (Answer:  Their morals correspond to nothing without God.)
 
2.  Nontheists use moral terms without referring to God.  (Answer: Above.)
 
Where Dr. Groothuis says “The moral argument…instead addresses the justification of moral claims” (332)–I disagree and think he was right when he said it “addresses the metaphysical foundation of goodness” (331)–aka, the referent (332).  Justification/epistemology and metaphysics/ontology are to each other as oughts are to ises, values to facts, and so on.  What needs to be justified in Ethics are particular theories (like the Golden Rule).  What the Moral Argument does is deal with the metaphysical grounding, or referent (what real being the Golden Rule describes or corresponds to), not the justification of a particular theory.
 
Ethical Relativism
 
Ethical relativism “claims that moral judgments are dependent on contingent social and historical arrangements.” (332)  Cultural relativism “teaches that we should follow the moral principles of our culture.” (332) The judgments of our culture are only normative and binding in our own culture, not in another (and vice versa).  leads to: [Individual relativism:  “Moral judgments and obligations are based entirely on an individual’s personal preference.” (333)  “If there is no objective moral standard, it is left to the individual to decide what is right and wrong.” (339)] leads to: [Nihilism:  “the denial of objective value of any kind: moral, aesthetic, intellectual and so on.  Nihilism asserts moral meaninglessness.” (342-3)]

 
Dependency thesis:  “morality inherently depends on cultural factors and no other factors.” (333)
 
“Differing phonetic, syntactic and semantic elements [between languages] do not render judgments like ‘The earth is round’ relative to culture.  Therefore, if varying nonmoral linguistic affirmations can successfully capture objective reality, so can varying moral affirmations capture–or fail to capture–objective realities.” (334)
 
Diversity thesis:  “morality will differ from culture to culture.” (334)
 
1.  Disagreement does not mean there are no right answers.
2.  There is cross-cultural agreement on fundamental human values.
 
Which culture decides morality?
 
Reformer’s dilemma:  “moral reformers should be condemned as cultural and moral deviants…deemed immoral when judged by the extant standards of their societies.” (337)
 
Progress, tolerance and relativism.
 
“All we can claim is that cultures change with respect to their moral evaluations” (338) –since they are only normative for that culture.
 
Inconsistent:  NEVER be intolerant, ABSOLUTELY absolutism is wrong, EVERYONE should be tolerant, ALWAYS be tolerant.
 
Moral horror:  NEVER be intolerant is placed higher than NEVER torture, NEVER rape, NEVER mutilate genitalia.
 
Leads to individual relativism, which leads to nihilism, which is unlivable.
 
The Argument from Damnation
 
Some acts are so desperately wicked, they demand a punishment greater than the world has to offer.  It calls out for supernatural justice against a backdrop of unconditional goodness.
 
Atheism and the denial of objective moral value:
 
“Morality thus reduces to physical and biological factors simply because this is all that exists.  There is no independent sphere for moral realities that transcend the merely physical and cultural.” (349)
 
Russell, Ruse, Nietzsche, Sartre (agreeing with Dostoevsky, a Christian, that “If God didn’t exist, everything would be possible”), Leff are discussed to support the above quote.
 
These are not tied back to cultural/individual relativism for some reason:  Descriptivism merely describes the sovereign-made laws people follow, personalism sets up the individual as sovereign, and majoritarianism sets up the majority as sovereign–but “the majority opinion should set the law” (353) would have to be the first law that has to be taken as granted, outside the majority system.  All possible sources of evaluations are subject to “the cosmic ‘sez who'” (354) objection.  I remember this from Tim Keller’s “The Reason for God”.  Leff cries out to a God he denies.
 

From Goodness to God (The Moral Argument) Argument against pantheistic (nihilistic) view–and for theistic view:

(I shrunk three arguments together…)

1a.  If pantheism is true, then there are no objective moral values, either because (a) it overtly denies them, or (b) it vainly attempts to affirm and deny them on the basis of the two-level view of truth.
1b.  Either God exists (as the “final evaluator”) or nihilism is true (all evaluations arbitrary).
1c.  If a personal God does not exist, then objective moral values do not exist.
2.  (Nihilism is false because…) There are objective moral values (established above).
3.  Therefore, pantheism is false (a personal God exists).

My thoughts on the moral argument.

At first it looks as if Dr. Groothuis is setting up a voluntaristic view of God.  That is the view of strict Divine Command Theory–whatever God says, goes.  He “creates” the good.  But–in reality–he was just setting up for the Euthyphro Dilemma, and then resolves it with essentialism–that God commands in accordance with his character.

Euthyphro dilemma:  “(1) If something is good because God wills it good, God could will anything (even murder), and it would be, ipso facto, good.  But this is absurd.  (2) If God’s will is not the source of good, goodness lies outside God’s being and this robs him of his moral supremacy (an essential attribute of deity).” (356)

Resolution:  “God’s moral will is based on God’s changeless nature. …Objective moral values, according to the Bible, are not created… Just as God does not create himself. … To hearken back to Leff, to say that God’s moral utterances are ‘performative’ does not mean that God brings something into being at a particular time that did not exist previously–…he is speaking according to the eternal nature of his being.” (356)

Are moral values brute facts?

Atheistic moral realism:  Objective moral values are brute facts not related to God.

 
1.  Truth is that which corresponds to reality.  To what being do an atheist’s moral facts correspond?
2.  Hastings Rashdall:  “Only if we believe in the existence of a Mind for which the true moral ideal is already in some sense real, a mind which is the source of whatever is true in our own moral judgments, can we rationally think of the moral ideal as no less real than the world itself. … A moral ideal can exist only in a Mind from which all Reality is derived.  Our moral ideal can only claim objective validity in so far as it can rationally be regarded as the revelation of a moral ideal eternally existing in the mind of God.” (358-9)
3.  On atheism, there is no overall design that applies to humans.  The brute facts are ex nihilo
4.  How can moral values be brute facts about people–before people–on materialism?  [My thoughts:  It’s kind of like photosynthesis, before photosynthesis…it wasn’t true until photosynthesis happened…and if photosynthesis had never happened, it never would have been true.  But there isn’t even an always-good (non-divine) human to which moral facts can be true.]
5.  Says who? (not obligated) (I feel it is the joy and satisfaction that motivates us…not just God saying so.)
6.  There are no real rights, no real “high” view of human nature.
7.  If moral truths are true in every possible world (“necessary”), there must be a (necessary) being to which they are true in every possible world (see 1 and 2).
 
The God-Haunted Conscience
 
“Our consciences reveal both a transcendent goodness and our own violation of this goodness through our pettiness, theft, cruelty, dishonesty, lust and a hundred other minor and major infractions.  C.S. Lewis ends his moral argument for God in Mere Christianity by alerting the reader that Christianity has nothing to say to people ‘who do not know they have done anything to repent of and who do not feel that they need any forgiveness.’ // ‘It is after you have realized that there is a Moral Law and a Power behind the law, and that you have broken that law and put yourself wrong with that Power–it is after all this, and not a moment sooner, that Christianity begins to talk.'” (363)

(discussion index)
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Groothuis’ "Christian Apologetics" ch. 14: Evidence for Intelligent Design

Rounding out the chs11-14 series dealing with God’s roll in creation, the goal of this chapter of Groothuis’ Christian Apologetics is to give a positive case for Intelligent Design, as well as answering objections to it.  The section “ID and the Nature of the Designer” reminds me of the “Pantheism and Design” section from chapter 12, so I’ll refer back to that.  Also, the section on origin/operation science reminds me of macro-/microevolution from chapter 13, so I mention them together.  There is more relevant info. in ch.13’s introduction explaining why those aren’t the only two times I will be referring back to chapters 11-13.

Evidence for Intelligent Design


True quote:  “Darwinists often brush aside criticisms by claiming that even if their theory betrays some weaknesses (which, of course, will be worked out in time) it wins by default, since no other theory has replaced it.  Thus, in order to discredit Darwinism (1) Darwinism must be brought into question by the evidence, and (2) another scientific model must be put in its place.  The second condition is not necessary to bring Darwinism into question, however, because this condition biases the case for Darwinism unfairly.  In a court of law an attorney must merely exonerate his client in order for the client to be cleared of a crime.  The attorney does not, in addition, need to find the real culprit.  …Nagel rejects Darwinism…even though he does not offer an alternative theory.” (pp.297-298)  However:  “…the case against Darwinism is strengthened considerably when an alternative better explains the evidence.  That is exactly what ID seeks to accomplish.” (p. 298)


Richard Dawkins (saw this in the God and Evolution book)–admits biology is “the study of living things that give the appearance of having been designed for a purpose” (298).  Francis Crick:  “Biologists must constantly keep in mind that what they see was not designed, but rather evolved.”


Origin Science vs. Operation Science


Origin science deals with singularities that cannot be tested in a lab, instead using forensic/historic reasoning based on presently available evidence:  beginning of the universe, life, species… Macroevolution (“arrival” in ch.13) and Intelligent Design are origin science.


–There should be evidence to support claims about the visibility of design in nature.


Operation science deals with ongoing processes of nature that are repeatable and observable:  chemical reactions, embryology…  Microevolution (“survival” in ch.13) is operation science.


“Intelligent design proponents do not claim that a Designer contravenes the ongoing processes of nature in such a way as to make the study of regularities impossible, as theistic evolutionist Kenneth Miller has charged.  Rather, ID argues that key features of the regularly functioning natural world are best explained by the influence of design at some state in the past.” (300)


Five Objections to Intelligent Design


1.  Heads I win; tails you lose.


It’s a combination of #2/#4 below (one prong–ID is masked religion, not science), with evidence against ID (contradictory prong–because if ID is merely a religious belief, and religious beliefs are truly in a different NOMA, there can be no evidence against it–science cannot defeat non-science).  NOMA is not mentioned in this area of the book.


2.  Methodological/philosophical naturalism/materialism (see ch.13) only–design is a science-stopper.


This is the first prong above, as well as the 4th point below (a bit redundant).  Instead of begging the question by demanding science give materialistic explanations, we should be open to following wherever the evidence leads and demand science give the ‘best’ explanations (“for natural phenomena through empirical observation and rational theorizing”).


The science-stopper objection fails for at least 4 reasons, which I’m turning into letters:

a.  Western science proceeded very well with a theistic metaphysic before Darwin.
b.  ID does not interfere with the ongoing operations of nature (operation science)–but see 3 below (Behe).
c.  Christian ID affirms a rational, orderly God, not a chaotic, capricious one.
d.  The design inference is used outside biology.  “The search for intelligent causes–or the design inference–is alive and well in many areas of science outside biology, such as archaeology, cryptography and the search for extraterrestrial life (SETI).  Intelligent design extends this design inference into biology.” (p. 302)  This harkens back to ch.12’s mention of some of the other places intelligence is not considered a religious conclusion: “[Dembski’s] method of detecting intelligent causes is already accepted in several areas of science, namely, archaeology, forensic science, intellectual property law, insurance claims investigation, cryptography, random number generation and the search for extra terrestrial intelligence (SETI).  Intelligent design (ID) simply employs these methods of detecting or falsifying design and applies them to the natural sciences as well.” (p. 244–from chapter 12)

3.  Intelligent causes are not testable and cannot make predictions.


The “not testable” objection was already answered in the origin/operation science section.  The “predictions objection” is answered by realizing that the singularities of origin science cannot be predicted, though I’m not absolutely positive a secular scientist would take that as granted.  I’m pretty sure they want a natural explanation of the conditions which, in every possible world, would produce a universe.  But…can that be tested?  And, if it can’t be tested–how can you be sure the predictions it makes are true?  So…perhaps Dr. Groothuis was right in the first place–origin science cannot make predictions.  It is only about “explaining past events historically according to the best evidence and reasoning available.” (p. 303)


Still–“ID does make certain testable empirical claims and predictions, and seeks out certain kinds of evidence.”  (So…it sounds like the methods of origin science are not so distinct from operations science…there can be overlap, right?)


Those who don’t believe in common ancestry (not Michael Behe–why not? –does that change 2b?) predict:

a) the evidence for it in the fossil records will be lacking
b) basic kinds of life are not subject to indefinite change
c) human behavior cannot be explained by the behavior of lower animals
d) vestigial organs will be found to be not-so (Dembski predicted in 1998 that junk DNA would be shown to be not-junk, and see ch.13).

I would like to know more about Behe’s position and if it changes anything said in this chapter about origin vs. operation.  Does the charge that “God monkeys with the regularities” apply to Behe’s position?  What sort of “testable empirical claims and predictions” and what evidence does Behe seek out?  Does Behe’s view escape the charges brought against TE? It would seem Dr. Groothuis does at least agree with Behe on “irreducible complexity” below.


4.  ID proponents appeal to religious, not scientific, authorities.


“Thomas Nagel, David Berlinksi and others who have questioned Darwinism or considered the possibility of design appeal to no religious authority to advance their critique.” (303)  The same is true of those in the ID movement, regardless of their particular religion or lack of religion.


There are no scientists, supernaturalists or naturalists, exempt from worldview bias.


It doesn’t matter the worldview of the person who makes the claim–what matters is if there is evidence to back it up.


5.  Darwinism is well-established, so ID is moot.

“…scientific criticisms of Darwinism have persisted ever since Darwin published his theory in 1859.  Darwinism has never held the unquestioned allegiance of the entire scientific community, as do the theories of heliocentrism and plate tectonics today.” (304)

Plate tectonics overthrew cylindrical column theory of mountain formation in four decades.  There are many other examples of accepted theories being overthrown by better theories.


From my notes on Norris’ Epistemology, Postscript I:


1. Phlogiston and the luminiferous ether are out for different reasons:
a. phlogiston never referred to anything, and was replaced by Lavoisier’s oxygen-based theory of combustion
b. the luminiferous ether referred to what is now more adequately called the electro-magnetic field
2. Aristotle’s concept of bodies falling to find their ‘natural place’ is replaced by gravity
3. Mass, molecule, atom and electron–all have undergone some rethinking.


Michael Behe and Molecular Machines


1.  Molecular machines evidence specified complexity (Dembski’s contingent, complex, specified from ch.12).

2.  Specified complexity can’t be explained by chance or necessity (natural law)–or combo.
3.  Intelligent agency explains specified complexity.
4.  Intelligent agency explains molecular machines.

Behe argues that certain molecular machines could not have gradually evolved, because if you took away one of their interworking parts, they would stop working.  This is a kind of specified complexity called “irreducible complexity”–as opposed to “cumulative complexity” (like a city that won’t stop functioning if you destroy one house).  


a.  Darwinian mechanisms can account for cumulative, but not irreducible, complexity (…but humans build houses and cities…so cumulative complexity is neither evidence of purely natural causes, nor evidence of intelligent causes…right?).  “Natural selection can only choose systems that are already working.” (306)  

b.  Not mentioned until page 311, the co-option theory of systems being gradually assembled by co-opting tools from other systems for new purposes–doesn’t answer irreducible complexity, because before co-opting the tool, the irreducibly complex system can’t function in order to adopt it.  Kenneth Miller argues that the evidence that the same tools are found in different systems is evidence for Darwinism and against irreducible complexity, but “Behe never claimed that each part of an irreducible complex system must have no other function elsewhere in the living world.” (311–and see homology section from chapter 13)

The mousetrap as an example of irreducible complexity is explained.


The bacterial flagellum as an example of irreducible complexity is explained and compared to an outboard motor.


Darwin’s famous quote is presented as either allowing a possible refutation (a key characteristic of a falsifiable theory), or as insulation from criticism that trades on question-begging that merely assumes a naturalistic explanation without providing a credible alternative (not falsifiable).  “Possibility is not the same as credibility.” (309)  Intelligent design at least ‘allows’ for such a possibility.  It is falsifiable.  Dr. Groothuis says falsifiability’s importance is a matter of debate in the philosophy of science–I wasn’t aware of that.  “Nevertheless, a heavily empirical science such as biology should be open to the possibility of counter-evidence overturning a well-received theory, as long as that evidence fits into a plausible alternative model.” (310-311)  BUT instead you get quotes like this:  “We should reject, as a matter of principle, the substitution of intelligent design for the dialogue of chance and necessity; but we must concede that there are presently no detailed Darwinian accounts of the evolution of any biochemical system, only a variety of wishful speculations.” (310) !!!  That is from Franklin Harold’s The Way of the Cell.


The only alternative is instantaneous equilibrium at the molecular level.  In No Free Lunch, Dembski showed the odds of that “fall below the ‘universal probability bound'” (311) and so are virtually impossible to overcome.  Behe breaks the rule of methodological naturalism (see ch.13), but, to be consistent, if methodological naturalism is to be applied to design inference in biology, it should be applied to design inference in all other areas, including archaeology, forensic science, intellectual property law, insurance claims investigation, cryptography, the search for extraterrestrial life (SETI), and random number generation–and all intelligent beings should be considered supernatural. 

DNA:  A Language Indicating Design

1.  DNA contains genetic assembly instructions in the form of language.
2.  This genetic information is an example of specified complexity (contingent, complex, specified).
3.  Specified complexity can’t be explained by chance or necessity (natural law)–or combo.
4.  Intelligent agency explains specified complexity.
5.  Intelligent agency explains the language contained in DNA.



This reminds me of this really cool video I saw a while back:  Science Matters:  Biology as Literature:  Learning to Read the Molecular Book of Life.  The language parts are in 8:45-12:55.

DNA is like the Rosetta Stone.  It bears the marks of intelligence.

“…like machines invented by humans to deal efficiently with the macroscopic world, these protein assemblies contain highly coordinated moving parts.” (Bruce Alberts, critic of ID) (313)

“…machine code of the genes is uncannily computer-like.  Apart from differences in jargon, the pages of a molecular biology journal might be interchanged with those of a computer engineering journal.” (Richard Dawkins, River Out of Eden) (316)

“DNA is like a computer program, but far, far more advanced than any software we’ve ever created.” (Bill Gates, The Road Ahead) (316)

“Neither Dawkins nor Gates…infer that a computer could be explained on the basis of chance and natural law.  Yet they…claim that genetic information, in its specified complexity, does not require an intelligent cause to explain it.” (316)

The design inference is not an argument from ignorance, but is based on 1) what we know about DNA’s complexity, and 2) what we know about design detection.

“On the other hand, naturalist attempts to explain the information-rich, information-bearing aspects of DNA must appeal to unknown and unverified natural processes–a kind of naturalism (chance and/or necessity) of the gaps.” (316)

Abiogenesis
(Life from non-life)
(or…information from non-information)

Natural selection cannot act on nonliving matter, since it cannot reproduce itself.  (Can’t remember what all Dawkins said about this in “The Selfish Gene”.)

Urey and Miller’s attempt to show that life (amino acids) could develop from non-life (methane, ammonia, hydrogen, water) in a natural environment:
a. assumes that the earth’s atmosphere lacked oxygen
b. is now widely rejected
c. an amino acid is a million miles away from a protein
d. should have been listed as an “icon of evolution” in the last chapter

The “RNA world theory” presupposes, instead of explaining the origin of, biological information–or “how the base pairs in a hypothetical self-replicating RNA molecule might be ordered in the right sequence to allow for replication.” (318)

“If information cannot be reduced to material components, then material components cannot explain the existence of information.” (319)  George C. Williams: “While we can speak of physical objects as having ‘mass and charge and length and width,’ information cannot be so described.  ‘Likewise, matter doesn’t have bytes.’  This leads him to conclude that ‘matter and information [are] two separate domains of existence…’  Gitt draws out the implication as a theorem:  ‘There is no known law of nature, no known process and no known sequence of events which can cause information to originate by itself in matter.'” (315)

Here is my thinking on this right now.  Only an intelligence can form a word, but when we find words too small for humans to write–it isn’t an intelligence forming the words?  And they aren’t just random, nonsense words.  They are words that make all living things–many parts of which are irreducibly complex.

If DNA is required in order to build an organism, but an organism’s existence is required in order for DNA to be ‘about’ something–which came first?  If building plans are required to build a skyscraper, but the skyscraper itself has to at least be a real idea in order for plans about it to be drawn up so that  the actual skyscraper can be constructed–which came first, the drawn up plans (DNA)…or the idea behind them?  DNA cannot be reverse-enginered plans an organism stores about itself after the fact, because the organism wouldn’t exist without DNA.  So it seems like all this information must have started out as an idea.  No matter how simple the organism.

Murray Eden (MIT mathematician) argued the emergence of life from non-life is statistically impossible.  20 amino acids and not enough time to assemble them by chance.

The chance thesis has been abandoned.  Some speculate life originated by natural law(s), but a) no known law explains specified complexity, b) Polanyi showed DNA can only occur via “contingent conventions that specify meaning, not the simple repetitions wrought by laws” (320)  Languages and codes do not occur by chemical reactions, in other words–they require authors.

Rather than affirming ID, Yockey thinks of life as an axiom–but ancient earth was prebiotic.

Life from Space

Rather than affirming a supernatural creator, Crick believed in directed panspermia–that life was seeded on earth by aliens.  But a) aliens don’t have time to become advanced and travel here from as far away as they are, if they exist, b) are not aliens “alive” — all living matter requires explanation.

In undirected panspermia, a guiding intelligence is lacking and the odds are even less in life’s favor.

Biomimicry:  Nature as Model for Technology

Check out all the great photos you will find when you click on the word “Biomimicry” directly above.  

1.  Scientists are mimicking natural mechanisms to improve human design plans.
2.  Mechanisms superior to human design plans must be plans that are superior in design.
3.  Such mechanisms are designed or they would not be candidates for imitation by technologies.

Seems like 2 and 3 are identical.

An Old Objection:  Design Flaws

The argument is that if we can improve on nature, it is not optimal, and is not designed, but evolved.
a) Gould’s orchid has a retooled mechanism for getting pollen from insects.  Why shouldn’t God work in patters?  Gould’s objection is merely aesthetic.
b) Gould’s panda’s thumb is not fully opposable.  He uses this as scientific evidence against what he perceives as non-science, despite crafting the NOMA, thereby granting ID legitimacy.  He presumes to know what is the best design/function.  Many apparently suboptimal systems are actually optimal, and Dr. Groothuis chalks up the rest as resulting from the Fall–I prefer to stick with his other answers.

ID and the Nature of the Designer

Aliens are ruled out because life can’t develop and travel that far, that fast, new species cannot emerge from one species, and aliens themselves need explanation (if they exist).

Pantheism is ruled out because its God is impersonal (not a person?  not a designer) and monistic (no creator-created duality).  From ch.12:  Pantheism fails to explain design, because 1) the knower is not the known, 2) the universe is not a necessary being, 3) designing is done by a person, and 4) no rational argument can explain the presumably ineffable.

Polytheism is ruled out by the Razor.

Panentheism (God/universe are co-eternal and the universe is part of God) is ruled out by ex nihilo arguments.

Deism is ruled out by the arguments for Christian Theism.

The nature of the Designer is personal, creative, and distinct from what is designed.

(discussion index)
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Groothuis’ "Christian Apologetics" ch. 13: Origins, Design and Darwinism

Chapters 11 thru 14 of Groothuis’ Christian Apologetics are very much related.  I am tempted to write a blog post mentioning all 4 of them together, but I already did chapter 11 (pp. 233-234) and chapter 12, and I just created an index that treats each chapter individually and … maybe I’m a tad o.c.d., but–I’d like to maintain the pattern.  However, I will likely refer to the other two chapters in one or more of my next two posts, as well as drawing upon my previous Facebook notes of “God and Evolution” edited by Jay Richards.

So…to chapter 13!  Origins, Design and Darwinism

I should mention up front that before reading these chapters, I leaned more towards theistic evolution (of the BioLogos.org variety–after reading Dr. Francis Collins’ The Language of God), even after reading God and Evolution (likely due to the fact that the things that offended my reason in that latter book outweighed the things that struck a chord in the former book).  However, after reading these chapters in Dr. Groothuis’ book, I now firmly consider Intelligent Design a theory that can be weighed and explored seriously and not merely mocked and discounted as “creationism” in disguise.  I haven’t made up my mind yet, but Dr. Groothuis (or, the arguments he presented) shook up the foundations of my assumptions.  There were still some reason-offending errors similar to the book edited by Richards, but much, much fewer.


Granted–just because some of the arguments in a case are wrong does not mean one should discount all the right arguments–but, in a cumulative case, that’s something that does tend to happen.  That’s why we should be careful which arguments we include in the cumulative cases we make.  I’m not saying Dr. Groothuis wasn’t careful, for the record.

I’m also open to finding out that some of the evidence presented as pointing to design is explained quite well in a scientific or mathematical setting.  I want to index all that I come across and see what secular sources have said about it, Lord-willing, and how it measures up.  What I don’t get to in this life, I will get to in eternity.

Should it be taught in a secular classroom?

I would also like to outline what ‘should’ be taught in the secular classroom (if it is true), and what should not.  Young earth creationism should only be taught as a failed theory, as it offers and has been countered with scientific evidence.  Whatever implications a young-earth creationist or I.D.er thinks Darwinism has on Biblical interpretation and authority should not be taught in a secular classroom, and if it is taught in a Christian classroom, the Theistic Evolution perspective should be correctly represented in its strongest light–which it unfortunately isn’t, by Dr. Groothuis.  I will take the chapters piece by piece with this question in mind:  “Should this be taught in a secular classroom?”

“This movement consists of a variety of thinkers, of various religions or of none, who claim that nonhuman intelligent causes better explain certain aspects of nature than undirected, merely natural causes.” (p. 268)  Thinkers of no religion?  Whatever convinces these “None”s that “nonhuman intelligent causes” is a viable explanation–needs to be taught in a secular classroom!  

“In recent years a variety of thinkers have argued against Darwinism, yet without appealing to any religious sources.  These include prolific philosopher Mortimer Adler (1902-2001), Harvard-trained lawyer Norman MacBeth, British novelist and science writer Arthur Koestler (1905-1983), social critic and science writer Jeremy Rifkin, British science writers Francis Hitching, Gordon Rattray Taylor (1911-1981), and Richard Milton.  Very significantly because of his scientific standing, Australian geneticist Michael Denton systematically critiques the scientific inadequacy of Darwinism in Evolution:  A Theory in Crisis (1985).”  Add to that Thomas Nagel’s recent Mind and Cosmos: Why the Materialist Neo-Darwinian Conception of Nature Is Almost Certainly False.  Groothuis alludes to this:

“Signers of the Scientific Dissent From Darwinism hold doctorates in biological sciences, physics, chemistry, mathematics, medicine, computer science, and related disciplines from such institutions as Oxford, Cambridge, Harvard, Dartmouth, Rutgers, University of Chicago, Stanford and University of California at Berkeley.  Many are also professors or researchers at major universities and research institutions such as Cambridge, Princeton, MIT, UCLA, University of Pennsylvania, University of Georgia, Tulane, Moscow State University, Chitose Institute of Science & Technology in Japan, and Ben-Gurion University in Israel.” Dissent from Darwinism FAQ #7  This needs to be discussed in a secular classroom!

Dr. Groothuis writes (p. 271) as if being made in the image of God is not possible apart from Intelligent Design, but fails to interact with the Theistic Evolution position on this.  (By the way–when I say that, I always mean the Christian version.)  He also writes as if Theistic Evolutionists necessarily do not consider Adam and Eve to be literal people, again failing to interact with the actual TE view.  These are some of the problems I had with God and Evolution, as well.  Worse, however, is Dr. Groothuis’ unfairly suggesting that “theistic evolution seems closer to deism than Christian theism” (p. 272).  To me, this is similar to John G. West comparing TE to gnosticism in God and Evolution.  It is just like a young-earther calling an old-earther a deist, saying, “It seems inconsistent for evangelicals to believe that God supernaturally intervenes in history and the creation of life after the Big Bang, but that God fails to leave evidence of his design in the young earth itself.”  Dr. Groothuis says (p. 272 again) that Christians should not accept evolution because Darwin’s motives were to eliminate the need for a designer.  Is this not the genetic fallacy?  Is not a theory right or wrong regardless of the motive behind it?  Dr. Groothuis says, that according to TE, “God strangely decided to employ a system in which he would remain invisible,” (272)–again with the deism accusation, with no regard for the TE view that God’s interaction in history is NOT invisible.  He then quotes an atheist to back up his feeling that evolution is catastrophic to the biblical assertion of God being Creator, which is just frustrating.  Later, on page 276-277, Dr. Groothuis quotes Richard Dawkins to support his assertion that “If Darwinism is true, it is much less likely that Christianity is true.”  Of course atheists eat this up.  Never mind that the TE view, though it does not require a designer of life, does accept God as the sustainer of everything in space-time and as Creator of the universe.  And see my questions regarding human freedom and natural freedom in my Facebook notes on God and Evolution.

I wish Dr. Groothuis would have explained why he can say that young-earthers (Creationists) are too literal Biblically (p. 273), but TE’s are not literal enough–without resorting to the “image of God” and Adam and Eve straw men.  I like that he considers important that we should bring together the books of nature (works) and Scripture (words), since God is the author of both and they will therefore not contradict each other.  I’m just not convinced that Dr. Groothuis made the case that the Bible requires a “progressive creationism” or “day-age creationism”–do all I.D.ers accept his view?  And, finally, he does not interact with the TE view of the Fall (1, 2, 3).  Some TEists accept that Adam and Eve were a real couple (though, they did evolve) who experienced the first sin (the Fall) in space-time history–though not necessarily how it is recorded in Genesis.  There is a first time for everything, is there not?  So, anyone who argues against a literal first sin is wrong–it’s just logic.  Even if I completely abandon the TE view, I would love if proponents of I.D. would stop misrepresenting TE and only give the best reasons to reject it.  It makes me doubt how well-represented the science of Darwinism and I.D. can be in these chapters…hence the reason I am not saying I’ve all-out changed my view just yet.  I don’t want to apply the same thinking to the rest of the book, but I can definitely see a skeptic doing just that.  So, this is a crucial point to keep in mind, alongside my earlier comments on being careful what arguments we include in a cumulative case.

What is Darwinism?

Before genetics:  “Nature favors organisms that evolve adaptively and reproduce abundantly; it judges the unfit with sterility and death.  The fittest survive and reproduce.  Given enough time, this process of natural selection leads to the development of entirely new species, which appear through a gradual process of incremental change.  This is called ‘descent with modification’.” (p. 276)

“Later Darwinists, appealing to the genetic discoveries of Gregor Mendel (not a Darwinist), filled out Darwin’s theory by claiming that random genetic mutations supplied the means by which organisms changed into new species.  After random mutations occur, natural selection kicks in to conserve beneficial mutational changes in offspring.  This is called ‘the neo-Darwinian synthesis.'” (p. 276)  Genetic drift is mentioned but not explained, as it apparently isn’t a dominant view.

I mention Dr. Groothuis’ reference to Dawkins above.  He then says “Many textbooks present Darwinism as an alternative to a Christian account of nature.  Skeptics and atheists have employed Darwinism for well over a hundred years as a defeater of Christianity and theism, since they claim that undirected evolution replaces design.” (p. 276)  Which textbooks do this?  Does that mean evolution is wrong?  Again, it is just like a young-earther calling an old-earther a deist and saying, “Many textbooks present the Big Bang as an alternative to a Christian account of the origin of the universe.  Skeptics and atheists have employed the Big Bang as a defeater of Christianity and theism, since they claim that undirected universe origination replaces design.”

I do agree with Dr. Groothuis (p.277) that objections to Darwinism are attacked in the natural sciences, when in actuality, they should be weighed along-side the claims of Darwinism–and not straw men claims of Darwinism (like “Because Darwinism, therefore, no Creator”–no TEist would claim that, just as no old-earther would claim “Because Big Bang, therefore, no Creator”).

Basic Flaws of Darwinism

The only point made in this section that was not just made in the last section, is that Darwinism does not explain biology (as some claim).  Instead, most of biology preceded Darwinism, and several notable pioneers in biology rejected Darwin’s theory.  In 2005, Philip Kell, in The Scientist, calls Darwinism a “narrative gloss” (p. 278).

Philosophical Commitment to Materialism

Metaphysical naturalism:  “the philosophical claim that only material states exist; there is nothing immaterial, spiritual or supernatural.” (p. 278)

Methodological naturalism:  “the means of scientific inquiry given the presupposition of metaphysical naturalism. … A scientist claims that he or she is not ruling out God and the supernatural, but that science qua science should not attempt to study such things.  Therefore, only natural explanations are allowable; only materialistic explanations are christened ‘scientific.’ …It thereby issues a metaphysical veto against any empirical evidence for the immaterial–such as the soul, God or the supernatural–regardless of the evidence that may be available.” (pp. 278-279)

It is interesting that Christians are cool with the universe not being static, as long as the change is not purposeless–but materialists push out every hint that maybe there is intelligence behind what chance and necessity cannot explain (p.280).  It just feels to me like quoting John 1:1 to contrast the Christian’s Logos with the naturalist’s particles is strange…why was this not brought up in chapter 11? …it seems more fitting to be said by a young-earther, replacing particles with Big Bang.  Before that, there was nothing physical–not even particles.  There was no “before”.  So, it would seem particles and the Word are ‘both’ right.  There is matter, and there is God.

Icons of Evolution

The color of moths.  1) This is micro, not macro, evolution (see below), 2) the darker did not replace the lighter in the most densely polluted areas, 3) in less polluted areas, the darker were more frequent that expected, 4) when pollution decreased, the darker increased in the northern part of London, and decreased in the southern part, 5) the moths do not normally rest on tree trunks, but in pics were placed there by hand. (p. 281)

The finch beak variations.  1) This is micro, not macro, evolution, 2) the 200 year projection was unidirectional extrapolation with no setbacks (reversion to the norm), 3) there were setbacks, 4) allowing for longer periods of time also allows for more regression (devolution; setbacks/reversion). (p. 282)  See Luther Burbanks’ “Law of Reversion to the Average” (p. 284)…and, below–Giuseppe Sermonti.

Microevolution:  “small changes within species that produce no major structural change and no new organs.” (p. 283)  Survival.

Macroevolution:  “same as above, except the result is a new species.”  Iwo, speciation.  Arrival.

Haeckel’s fraudulent embryos.  Recapitulation, or the biogenic law:  Embryonic development echoes the evolutionary journey.  This was based on drawings!  “(1) They include only those classes and orders [of embryos] that come close to fitting Haeckel’s [evolutionary] theory; (2) they distort the embryos they purport to show; and (3) most seriously, they entirely omit earlier stages in which vertebrate embryos look very different.” (p. 285)

Darwin’s tree of life.  Darwin hoped the fossil record would eventually turn up an enormous number of intermediate varieties, but this has not been the case.  “While it seems true that single-celled organisms occupy the earliest strata of earth history, many organisms appear in great numbers with no traceable ancestors.  This is particularly true for what is known as ‘the Cambrian explosion’ or, more colloquially, ‘biology’s big bang.’  During this period, dated at between 500 and 600 million years ago, the fossil record shows that the major animal groups appeared abruptly and completely formed. ‘…with the number declining slightly thereafter due to extinctions.'” (p. 286)

Something that confuses me:  1) “…pre-Cambrian ancestors if they existed; yet none are forthcoming” and 2) “even more ancient small, soft-bodied fossils have been preserved in other settings” — these fossils are supposed to be more ancient than “ancestors to the Cambrian period”.  This seems inconsistent.  Are these small, soft-bodied fossils not “ancestors to the ancestors” to the Cambrian period? (p. 286)

What About Transitional Forms?

There aren’t any, so Darwinists have two ways out:

1) They did exist, but failed to fossilize because they were short-lived. (Garret Hardin)

a) How can it be known they were short-lived if there is no evidence of them? (question-beg) [Dr. Groothuis, how do you answer it once you charitably rephrase it so that it isn’t question-begging?]

b) Microevolution takes tens of millions of years and macroevolution takes hundreds of millions of years–that hardly seems short-lived.  [Isn’t the hypothesis here that there were many, many short-lived forms over that span of time?]

2) They appeared suddenly (in geological time) without a long history of incremental change. (Richard Goldschmidt’s saltation theory, Niles Eldredge and Stephen Jay Gould’s “puncutated equilibrium” — long periods of species stasis, combined with sudden emergence of new species).  (How are those two different?)

I would say the existence of the punctuated equilibrium theory is the clincher for me.  There wouldn’t be scientists who resort to this theory if there wasn’t any evidence supporting sudden emergence, and if the evidence was so overwhelmingly in Darwinism’s favor.

Posing a problem for both gradualists and saltationists:

a) “When genetic mutations are observed, they are almost always deleterious, not adaptive.  …There is no known case where a genetic mutation has resulted in an increase in genetic information for an organism.  But that is precisely what is needed for species to change into other species instead of remaining what they are.” (p. 289)

A co-clincher for me is information theory’s contribution to the whole question!  That comes up in the next chapter.

b) “Mutation results in small changes in the organism; it cannot create major changes in organisms.”  This is because:  “Mutations…modify what preexists, but they do so in disorder. …As soon as some disorder, even slight, appears in an organized being, sickness, then death follows.”

c) “Natural selection…has a stabilizing effect, bringing populations back to the norm needed for survival.” (Giuseppe Sermonti) (Also see above comments regarding the finch beak variations…reverting to the average, and all that–I’m curious why they are mentioned without referring to each other.)

d) Species that lose much through natural selection “are species with no future; they are not pioneers, but prisoners in nature’s penitentiary.”  (Emphasis on “much”.)

Returning to Icons of Evolution

Archaeopteryx.  “Every one of its supposedly reptilian features can be found in various species of undoubted birds.” (Francis Hitching)  1.  bone and feather = swan 2.  hoatzin and ostrich have claws on their wings 3. some ancient birds had teeth and no one argues they are intermediates 4. hoatzin has shallow breastbone and penguins don’t fly 5. it is now known Archaeopteryx’ bones were hollow like a bird’s 6. birds existed in the same fossil period. (p. 290)

Hunched ape-like creature following progressively less hunched creatures all led by an upright human.   Neither incrementalists nor punctuated equilibrium(ists) can explain “the near simultaneous emergence of” 1) bipedalism allowed by modifications in the pelvis and cerebellum, 2) better hand dexterity and fingers with better tactile sense, 3) phonation allowed by a modification of the pharynx, 4) speech allowed by a modification of the temporal lobes.  Such changes would seem to require planning, which is impossible with natural selection. (pp. 291-292)

Homology.  Similarity due to (or evidence of) common descent (“due to” question-begs)–since a Designer would never use similar structures for different purposes.  There are similarities in design across species, like the pattern in a porpoise’s flipper bones compared to that of a bat’s wing, though each functions differently.  Denton points out that homologous structures are arrived at by different routes.  And why shouldn’t God use patterns?  Human designers do–what moral or logical principle prevents it? (p. 293)

Vestigial organs and systems.  Many organs previously considered vestigial have been defrocked as such.  1) human coccyx, or tailbone, is not a remnant of a tail, but “a crucial ‘ point of contact with muscles that attach to the pelvic floor” 2) human appendix is “a ‘functioning component of the immune system, 3) pineal gland is not a degenerate eye but “an endocrine gland”, 4) thymus develops the immune system in early infancy, 5) thyroid is an endocrine gland secreting two important hormones.  (p. 295) Those still on the list may yet come off…and those that do not, like the eyes of some salamanders and fish…”Losing a function is not the same as evolving entirely new functions (or new species from previous species).” (p. 296)  Seems like the words in red should somehow go together.

Junk DNA.  Interestingly, Dr. Groothuis says this has already been debunked, before the ENCODE findings.  Kinda funny how Dawkins has changed his tune since those findings were published.  Dr. Groothuis quotes him saying, “Once again, creationists might spend some time speculating on why the Creator should bother to litter genomes with untranslated pseudogenes and junk tandem repeat DNA.” lol…  But, say there really was Junk DNA and it once had a function–wouldn’t the words in red kick in?  Guess it is a moot question.

Dr. Groothuis sums up the chapter by harkening back to the deism charge (how are TEists alone if they believe in the Trinity?!).  I am curious if Darwinist scientists would agree he sufficiently answers all the categories of evidence for Darwinism–I wonder how they would respond to his answers.  I want to revisit Dr. Collins’ The Language of God.  I have visions of an interview of rubber-meets-the-road questions including answers from Dr. Collins on the TE side and others on the I.D. side (Meyers? Dembski?).

This chapter tore down Darwinism.  The next chapter builds up a case for I.D..

(discussion index)
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Blog index for Douglas Groothuis’ "Christian Apologetics: A Comprehensive Case for Biblical Faith"

It occurred to me that an index for this discussion of Douglas Grouthuis’ Christian Apologetics might be useful.  I will update this as I cover more chapters.  We are studying it in my apologetics group at church, using the study guides available at Apologetics315.

Part One:  Apologetic Preliminaries


Chapter One:  Introduction:  Hope, Despair and Knowing Reality

Chapter Two:  The Biblical Basis for Apologetics
Chapter Three:  Apologetic Method:  Evaluating Worldviews
Chapter Four:  The Christian Worldview
Chapter Five:  Distortions of the Christian Worldview–Or the God I Don’t Believe In
Chapter Six:  Truth Defined and Defended
Chapter Seven:  Why Truth Matters Most:  Searching for Truth in Postmodern Times
Chapter Eight:  Faith, Risk and Rationality:  The Prudential Incentives to Christian Faith

Part Two:  The Case for Christian Theism


Chapter Nine:  In Defense of Theistic Arguments

Chapter Ten:  The Ontological Argument
Chapter Eleven:  Cosmological Arguments:  A Cause for the Cosmos
Chapter Twelve:  The Design Argument: Cosmic Fine-Tuning
Chapter Thirteen:  Origins, Design and Darwinism
Chapter Fourteen:  Evidence for Intelligent Design
Chapter Fifteen:  The Moral Argument
Chapter Sixteen:  The Argument from Religious Experience
Chapter Seventeen:  The Uniqueness of Humanity
Chapter Eighteen:  Deposed Royalty:  Pascal’s Anthropological Argument
Chapter Nineteen: Jesus of Nazareth (with some Strobel)
Chapter Twenty: The Claims, Credentials and Achievements of Jesus Christ
Chapter Twenty One: Defending the Incarnation
Chapter Twenty Two: The Resurrection of Jesus
Chapter Twenty Three: Religious Pluralism: Many Religions, One Truth
Chapter Twenty Four: The Challenge of Islam
Chapter Twenty Five: The Problem of Evil: Dead Ends and the Christian Answer

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