Presuppositions of Faith (6 of 6): The Trinity
Following our discussion of the mystery involved in “the problem of evil,” we turn to a brief examination of the doctrine of the Trinity, and
Following our discussion of the mystery involved in “the problem of evil,” we turn to a brief examination of the doctrine of the Trinity, and
In previous articles, we have seen that denials of God’s existence and biblical miracles rest on unreasonable, blind-faith assumptions or presuppositions. But, what about claims
Along with the denial of God’s existence goes the denial of the reality of the miracles and extraordinary events in Scripture. Such “stories” are little
The simple question, “How do you know what you claim to know?” easily reveals unreasonable, blind-faith assumptions behind sophisticated arguments of atheism. Gracious use of
At first glance, the atheist’s claim that “God does not exist” appears to be little more than a simple statement about the reality of God.
“The floodwaters of secular thought and liberal theology overwhelmed the Church because the leaders did not understand the importance of combating a false set of
In Part One we observed that unbelievers cannot see the beauty of God’s holiness—that which forms the beauty of His every attribute—and therefore seek to
“I once was lost, but now am found; was blind, but now I see.” With these beautiful words, John Newton speaks of the marvelous change
Apart from God we can know nothing. He created mankind in His image, in personal relationship with Him, with the ability to know and understand
The closer you get to anything or anyone, the more you see their defects. Everything looks better from a distance. The divine blindness given to