- Fri, Feb 17, 2012
- Creation/Evolution
How much would we expect accidents to know about the accident of their beginnings?
I was listening to God in the Dock on audio, and was struck by this portion of an interview with C. S. Lewis.
I was listening to God in the Dock on audio, and was struck by this portion of an interview with C. S. Lewis.
World Magazine editor-in-chief Marvin Olasky recently named two co-books of the year, both of which refute theistic evolution: Should Christians Embrace Evolution? and God and Evolution.
Last year I led a group of men in a study of Francis Schaeffer’s classic Genesis in Space and Time, and Lee Strobel’s excellent The Case for a Creator. It is vital that we be aware of the importance of the biblical doctrine of creation. Also see the excellent chapter on creation in Doctrine, by Mark Driscoll and Gerry Breshears. Here are some significant thoughts from writer and thinker Al Mohler about the importance of this issue.
Over the years my reading has included several bestselling books by atheists, who relentlessly condemn Christianity. The subtitle to God is Not Great by Christopher Hitchens is "How Religion Poisons Everything." That's right: everything. (I guess that would include the life's work of Bach, among others.)
Despite some witch hunts and inquisitions, I'll take Christianity's track record against atheism's any day. (Lenin, Stalin, and Mao come to mind).
The atheists love to talk about how rotten Christianity makes people feel. If only Christianity weren't around, everything would be better.
Let me summarize the secular ...