By: Dr.Paul Coulter
The
Dynamic of Apologetic Dialogue
Apologetics may happen at many different levels, from the highly
formal and intellectual (e.g. debates with leading atheist thinkers,
presentations in universities and parliaments) to the highly informal and less
strictly intellectual. Much of what follows in this section presumes the more
informal interactions that every believer should expect to engage in through
the normal process of life as described in 1 Peter 3. Apologist
Michael Ramsden has warned that [12]:
The temptation with apologetics is to offer
set answers to set questions. It can be useful to have a structure in mind when
dealing with certain issues. However, it is better to have an understanding of
how we can effectively engage with people at a conversational level… Apologetics
can become mechanistic. Although the truth of the Gospel remains constant, we
mustn’t think that by repeating things we have said to other people in the
past, we will automatically get the same response.
The aim of this section is to reflect on the dynamics of a
conversation with a nonbeliever.Based on 1
Peter 3:1316 and on personal
experience we can consider the constituent parts of this interaction:
A context
The context in which an apologetic interchange takes place is
vital to the dynamic of the conversation. This works at a number of levels:
a) The relationship between the two persons
– how well you know the other person and the nature of your relationship will
affect the way you interact and how direct and deep you feel you can be. The
dynamic will be very different if you are speaking with a close relative, a
lifelong friend, a neighbour, a casual acquaintance, a work colleague or a
person with whom you have just sparked off a conversation.
b) The immediate situation – depending on
the place, time and social setting you are in you may have greater or lesser
freedom to talk at length and at a more personal level. Consider the difference
between a crowded room or two people alone in a living room or the difference
between a party and a funeral.
c) The wider context – every interaction
happens within a wider social, cultural and historical context. Conversations may
be freer in an open liberal democracy compared to a closed society. Recent
events in the news may be the catalyst for a conversation and will likely
inform and shape the way it unfolds. Different cultures will appreciate and permit
different degrees of informality and directness. Where the social and cultural
gap is greater between the two parties
greater sensitivity will often be required.
You (the
‘apologist’)
A hope filled person who fears no one but Christ and is living out
their “good behaviour“ for all to see with a clear conscience. Your personal
story is the greatest defence of all – told with humility and sincerity it is
hard to argue with! You may feel that you are not the best person to be dealing
with this question or this person, but you are the person who is here right now
and you must trust that the situation is no coincidence and that God will use
you to bear witness to Christ in this moment. You should approach the
conversation with confidence in God but humility as regards your own ability
and your understanding of the other person. Peter Kreeft and Ronald Tacelli
give a necessary warning about the importance of the person of the ‘apologist’
in a dialogue when they say that: “an
argument in apologetics, when actually used in dialogue, is an extension of the
arguer. The arguer’s tone, sincerity, care, concern, listening and respect
matter as much as his or her logic – probably more.”[13]
A questioner
You need to consider who the person you are speaking with is. What
cultural and religious background do they come from? What experiences have they
had that might lie behind their question or colour their perspective on
Christianity? Where do they stand as regards the Christian faith (hostile,
indifferent, interested, challenged, formerly believed, believer, doubting)? It
is also worth considering at this stage what point in the gospel story they
stick at. It will usually be one of the following points:
o God
as Creator (does He exist?) / His character (is He really good and loving?)
o
Human sin (are we really that bad?) / need of God (can’t we live without God?)
o
Person of Jesus (did He exist and who was He?) and work of Jesus (why did He
die and did He really rise again?)
o
Point of conversion (are they willing and ready to repent and believe?)
o
Christian lacking assurance (are they confident in God’s salvation and assured
in His love?)
Kenneth Boa and Robert Bowman suggest that different approaches to
apologetics will be most valuable for people at different stages on this
journey towards faith. They write:
elements of the fideist approach are most
valuable at the extreme ends of the process of a person moving intellectually
from unbelief to faith. This is because fideism is strongest in dealing with
the personal or volitional dimension of apologetic questions. The Reformed
approach is strongest in exposing the irrationality of unbelief (vital early in
the process) and affirming the exclusivity of the Christian truth claims (vital
near the end of the process). The classical and evidential approaches are
strongest in defending specific truth claims that tend to be questioned in the
middle of the process.
The following table indicates how this is likely to work in
practice:
Stance Regarding Faith
|
Dominant Approach
|
Typical Questions/Objections
|
Possible Apologetic Arguments
|
Disinterested/Ignorant
|
Fideist
|
It doesn’t matter to me if God exists or
not
|
If God exist it matters (F)
|
Sceptical
|
Reformed Apologetics
|
God may be real to you, but he is not to me
|
Is Jesus real enough to you? (F)
You live every day as if God exists (R)
|
Confused
|
Classical Apologetics
|
How do you know there is a God?
|
Without God there is no meaning. (R)
No other worldviews make sense. (C)
There are many lines of evidence. (E)
|
Has specific objection
|
Evidential/Classical Apologetics
|
The stories in Bible are hard to believe.
Why must we believe in the God of the
Bible.
How do we know Jesus rose from the dead?
Wasn’t
Jesus a great prophet or a good man?
|
If God exist, nothing is too hard for Him
(C)
God fulfilled prophecy and did miracles.
(E)
The tomb was empty and people saw Jesus (E)
Great prophets and good men don’t claim
falsely to be God (C)
|
Feeling Challanged
|
Reformed Apologetics
|
Why is Christianity alone the truth?
|
God’s claim in the Bible are
exclusive-other Religions can not be true. (R)
|
Lingering doubts
|
Fideism
|
I’d like to believe, but I’m not sure
|
Read the Gospel and get to know Jesus (F)
|
NOTE – Letters in
brackets indicate the different apologetic approaches: (F)ideism, (R)eformed,
(C)lassical, (E)vidential.
A question
Make sure you have actually listened carefully to what they say
rather than assuming that they have said what you expected or wanted to hear.
We would do well to heed the wisdom of Proverbs 18:13: “he who
answers before listening – that is his folly and his shame.” To be effective in
the task of apologetics we must learn to be good listeners. You might also
consider what lies behind this question – why have they asked it? Is the
question:
• A
window into the person’s heart and mind, a cry for help and meaning arising
from personal pain and confusion?
• A
test to see if you really care and if you have thought through your faith?
• A
smokescreen intended to distract from the real issue that challenges them?
• A
snare to draw you into a pointless argument?
Wisdom and discernment will be needed to decide what lies behind a
question and therefore how you should answer. Consider, for example, the
question of how a good God could allow suffering. The way you respond will be
(or should be) very different depending on whether the person has just been bereaved
or received a bad diagnosis recently or if they are studying a course in
philosophy but have had no recent personal suffering.
An answer
Peter calls it a defence or a reason and he calls us to be
prepared. Christians ought to be thinking people. We must also be ready to
respond, or to come back to the person with an answer if we don’t know how to.
There are some excellent resources available to help us (see the recommended
reading). Of course it may be that we don’t initially respond to thequestion
with an ‘answer’. We may learn from Jesus’ example that often the best way to
respond initially is with another question. Asking questions can be a vital way
to:
o
Clarify the question they are asking (“Do you mean ...?”)
o
Probe their motivation in asking (“What causes you to think that?)
o
Encourage them to reflect on what they are asking (“I have often wondered that
too, and it makes me ask ... What do you think?”)
o
Gently expose inconsistencies in their arguments (“If that is the case, does
that not mean ...?”)
o
Show a genuine concern for them and understand where they are coming from (“Is
that something that you’ve personally experienced?”)
o
Demonstrate our humility in not acting like a professional question answerer
(“I’d love to hear what you think about that yourself first.”)
The aim is to engage in a conversation rather than an “argument”
(here using the word in the popular sense of a heated exchange rather than to
describe a logical case for a point) and the key difference between the two is
that in a conversation two people listen to one another whereas in an argument
they speak at (or over) one another. Conversations move towards greater
understanding, whereas arguments move towards greater alienation.
Christ
The one who is Lord! We should always aim to bring the
conversation back to him. Our aim should be to try to connect the discussion
into the gospel story. Remember also that the greatest apologetic evidence for
the gospel is the resurrection of Jesus Christ. In addition, remembering that
Christ is present in the apologetic encounter should keep us prayerful and
mindful of the underlying spiritual battle we engage in.
Conclusion
The intention of this article has been to introduce the Christian
reader to apologetics and in some way to demystify a topic that many Christians
find intimidating. I have deliberately not included detailed arguments for the
existence of God or about specific objections to the Christian faith, since my
intention has been to build a case for why every Christian should have an interest
in apologetics and how every Christian can begin to engage in apologetic
dialogue. For greater detail on the issues covered in this article and many
examples of specific arguments the reader is referred to the Recommended
resources that follow.
In conclusion I simply want to encourage you, the reader, to have
boldness in sharing your faith and engaging with the questions people ask. This
boldness is not drawn from arrogance but from a confidence in Christ as Lord
and a joy in the living hope He has won for us. For those who have a particular
love of intellectual arguments I encourage you to continue loving God with “all
your mind” but to be sure that you reflect on the personal stories that lie
behind the questions people ask and that you seek to live in and share God’s
grace in your attitude and words. Above all, let us continue to serve God with
a clear conscience so that our provocative lifestyles will provoke and interest
and provide a case that cannot be easily assailed. May our lives, actions and
words be shaped by the love and truth we have discovered in Christ Jesus. My
aim is to encourage and challenge you as Paul did the Colossians:
My
purpose is that they may be encouraged in heart and united in love, so that
they may have the full riches of complete understanding, in order that they may
know the mystery of God, namely, Christ, in whom are hidden all the treasures
of wisdom and knowledge. I tell you this so that no one may deceive you by fine
sounding arguments… So then, just as you received Christ Jesus as Lord,
continue to live in him, rooted and built up in him, strengthened in the faith
as you were taught, and overflowing with thankfulness. See to it that no one takes
you captive through hollow and deceptive philosophy, which depends on human
tradition and the basic principles of this world rather than on Christ. Colossians 2:24, 68
Recommended
resources
Books:
Introductory Level
Josh McDowell A Ready Defence: the best of Josh McDowell compiled
by Bob Wilson (Thomas Nelson, 1990)
Amy Orr Ewing But is it Real? Answering 10 common objections to
the Christian faith (IVP, 2008) Is the Bible Intolerant? Sexist? Oppressive?
Homophobic? Outdated? Irrelevant? (IVP, 2005)
Lee Strobel The Case for a Creator: a journalist investigates
scientific evidence that points toward God (Zondervan, 2004)
The Case for Christ: a journalist’s personal investigation of the
evidence for Jesus (Zondervan, 1998) The Case for Faith: a journalist
investigates the toughest objections to Christianity (Zondervan, 2000)
Books:
Intermediate Level
Timothy Keller The Reason for God: belief in an age of scepticism
(Dutton, 2008)
Peter Kreeft and Ronald Tacelli Pocket Handbook of Christian
Apologetics (IVP, 2003)
C.S. Lewis Mere Christianity (Harper Collins, 1952)
Miracles (Harper Collins, 1947)
The Problem of Pain (Harper Collins, 1940)
Francis Schaeffer Francis A. Schaeffer Trilogy: the three
essential books in one volume (Crossway, 1990) [Includes The God Who Is There
(1968), Escape From Reason (1968) and He Is There and He is Not Silent (1972)]
Ravi Zacharias
Beyond Opinion: living the faith we defend (Thomas Nelson, 2007)
Can Man Live Without God? (Word, 1994)
Books: Advanced
Level
William Lane Craig Reasonable Faith: Christian Truth and
Apologetics, 3 edition (Crossway, 2008)
Steven B. Cowan (editor) Five Views on Apologetics (Zondervan,
2000)
John C. Lennox God’s Undertaker: has science buried God? (Lion,
2007)
Online resources
The following websites contain a wide range of useful apologetics
resources:
www.bethinking.org (/)
– a site produced by UCCF in GB which contains many very useful resources
helpfully streamed according to introductory, intermediate and advanced levels.
www.bible.org
(http://www.bible.org/) – a collection of resources about the Bible of
different levels of quality, but includes serialised chapters of a book by
Kenneth D. Boa and Robert M Bowman starting at
http://bible.org/series/faithhasitsreasons
(http://bible.org/series/faithhasitsreasons).
www.carm.org
(http://www.carm.org/) – the website of the Christian Apologetics and Research
Ministry, which represents the work of one individual. Contains useful papers
on the nature and practice of apologetics as well as specific questions.
[12]http://www.bethinking.org/whatisapologetics/intermediate/thebiblicalmandateforapologetics.htm
(/whatisapologetics/intermediate/thebiblicalmandateforapologetics.htm)
(accessed 15/3/11)
[13]P. Kreeft & R. Tacelli Handbook of Christian Apologetics
(Monarch, 1994), p.23
[14]http://bible.org/seriespage/speakingtruthloveperspectivesapologetics
[15(http://bible.org/seriespage/speakingtruthloveperspectivesapologetics)(accessed
16/3/11)
Source: An Introduction to Christian Apologetics - bethinking.org
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