Mr. SmartyPants wrote:I have also been told that the case for faith by lee strobel was good
i need to get that too!
mitsuki lover wrote:One interesting factoid that might disturb some Evangelicals is the fact that
as he got older Lewis actually became more of an Anglo-Catholic in his beliefs.
Read his works carefully and he talks about the importance of Confession and
about going to hear Mass(in the Anglican sense)as well as mentioning Purgatory.
In fact read Letters To An American Lady,which is one of his most personal works,actually a post-humous work of his collective letters to an unnamed
American woman.In one letter he compares Purgatory to rinsing out your mouth
at the Dentist's.
Galant wrote:I'm curious though - what's your approach to Apologetics? Your purpose?
uc pseudonym wrote:On the subject of approaches to apologetics, here is a true story from an author I cannot remember that I have found helpful to keep in mind.
He was in college and went to a lecture by a Christian speaker. During the question period, a skeptical person asked a question that seriously worried him. But to his surprise the speaker easily handled it, quickly trapping his opponent into a logical corner and destroying the question. Pleased at this defense of faith, he was leaving the lecture when he overheard someone say, "He may be right, but I still hate his guts."
Our attitude has a lot to do with the actual efficacy of our apologetics. If you argue for the sake of "winning" against the other person, in the end you only prove who is smarter, not who is right. It is necessary to be able to defend your faith (and God knows we need more critical thinking) but if you go into every discussion intending to win your efforts will most likely amount to nothing.
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