Apologetics doubts
Date posted: 24 Feb 2025
Dear Editor,
Toby Pitchers argues persuasively for apologetics, and yet I have my doubts because of an important glitch. When Peter writes ‘Always be prepared to give an answer for the hope in you’, it is not at all intended as a rational argument, but as an explanation for suffering for doing what is right.
defending our faith
The ‘extraordinarily good’ evidence for the Exodus
Chris Sinkinson
As I often share in this regular column, the archaeological evidence for the Bible continues to grow. New discoveries and fresh interpretations give an ever-increasing pool of data to establish that the Bible is real history and not embellished legend or fiction.
But when is the evidence overwhelming? There will always be doubts, gaps and reasons why sceptics can dismiss the case if they choose. We can look at the account of Moses and the Exodus as a test case.
Don’t apologise for apologetics
In his 2013 book The End of Apologetics, Myron Penner provocatively asserts that ‘apologetics itself might be the single biggest threat to genuine Christian faith that we face today’.
Amongst other criticisms, Penner renounces Christianity’s intellectual defence (in Greek, ‘apologia’) as threatening to value reason over revelation and failing to communicate how the gospel’s truth attaches to a wider way of living. Significantly, this position is not confined to abstract academic debate, but articulates the wider conviction of many Christians today – inevitably shaping how the church converses with the wider culture.