Wintery Knight posted this helpful conversation about faith and reason with one of the world's foremost Christian apologists.
You can get an MP3 of the lecture here. (33 MB) For more information on William Lane Craig: http://reasonablefaith.org
Wintery Knight helpfully offers a helpful guide to the conversation:
Questions from the interviewer: (40 minutes)
- What started you on his journey of studying faith and reason?
- How would you define the word “faith”?
- Are faith and reason compatible? How are they related?
- How can reasonable faith help us to avoid the two extremes of superstition and nihilism?
- Who makes the best arguments against the Christian faith?
- Why are angry atheists like Dawkins and Hitchens more well known than better-informed academic atheists?
- Does the Bible require Christians to give the unbeliever reasons for their faith?
- How does faith spur Christians to think carefully about the big questions in life?
- Should the American church prod churchgoers to develop their minds so they can engage the secular culture?
- When talking about Christianity intellectually, is there a risk of neglecting the experience of being a Christian?
- Which Christian apologist has shaped your thinking the most?
- Which Christian philosopher has shaped your thinking the most?
- Does the confidence that comes from apologetics undermine humility and reverence?
- If you had to sketch out a 5 minute case for Christianity, what would you present?
- Can non-Christians use their reason to arrive at truth?
- Are there cases where atheists must affirm irrational things in order to remain atheists?
- Can the universe have existed eternal, so that there is no need to explain who created it?
- Even if you persuade someone that Christianity is true, does that mean they will live it out?
There is also a long period of questions, many of them hostile, from the audience of students (55 minutes).
- Haven’t you said nasty things about some atheists? Aren’t you a meany?
- What do you make of the presuppositional approach to apologetics?
- Can a person stop being a Christian because of the chances that happen to them as they age?
- Why did God wait so long after humans appeared to reveal himself to people through Jesus?
- Can a person be saved by faith without have any intellectual assent to truth?
- How do you find time for regular things like marriage when you have to study and speak so much?
- How would you respond to Zeitgeist and parallels to Christianity in Greek/Roman mythology?
- Do Christians have to assume that the Bible is inerrant and inspired in order to evangelize?
- If the universe has a beginning, then why doesn’t God have a beginning?
- Can you name some philosophical resources on abstract objects, Platonism and nominalism?
- How can you know that Christianity more right than other religions?
- Should we respond to the problem of evil by saying that our moral notions are different from God’s?
- Define the A and B theories of time. Explain how they relate to the kalam cosmological argument.
- How can Christians claim that their view is true in the face of so many world religions?
- What is the role of emotions in Christian belief and thought?
- Can evolution be reconciled with Christian beliefs and the Bible?
- When witnessing person-to-person, should you balance apologetics with personal testimony?
- Is there a good analogy for the trinity that can help people to understand it? [Note: HE HAS ONE!]
- How can Christians reconcile God’s omniscience, God’s sovereignty and human free will?
Wintery Knight has more to say, including the following:
If you are looking for a good basic book on apologetics, then I would choose “Is God Just a Human Invention?” by Sean McDowell and Jonathan Morrow. And you can even be part of a reading group that Brian Auten of Apologetics 315 just announced, that I will be participating in. We will all be reading the book together, chapter by chapter, and lots of people will be available to answer your questions.
Note: See my previous post, William Lane Craig's Remarkable Wife
See also my previous posts on "faith and reason" here.