
Why Christianity is Probably True
Building the Case for a Reasoned, Moral and Relevant Faith
Brian Harris(Author)
Authentic Media (Publisher)
Published on 11. September 2020
Book
Paperback/Softback
160 pages
978-1-78893-106-9 (ISBN)
Description
Does the Christian faith lack intellectual, moral and experiential credibility?
These are the three most common accusations made against the Christian faith today. Brian Harris examines each of these arguments in turn by outlining the issue, looking at evidence against the claim before evaluating the argument as a whole.
This book explores these questions in a rigorous but accessible way. It doesn't offer easy, solve-everything answers, but it does build a cumulative case based on reason, history and experience to suggest that God probably exists, and that the Christian understanding of God could well be valid.
Content Benefits: By offering a serious look at the evidence that counters the growing assumption that the Christian faith lacks intellectual, moral and experiential credibility, this book allows the reader to make an informed decision about Christianity.
Provides a counter argument to the claims made by the New Atheists
Tackles the accusations that Christianity is intellectually vacuous, morally suspect and experientially empty
Harris does not try to 'prove' beyond all doubt, but presents cumulative evidence to make a rational and informed decision
Builds a cumulative case for Christianity
Ideal for anyone who has doubts in their faith
Perfect for anyone who wants to know if Christianity is true
Suitable for anyone who wants to explain their faith to others
Ideal resource for anyone studying apologetics
Binding - Paperback
Pages - 160
Publisher - Paternoster
These are the three most common accusations made against the Christian faith today. Brian Harris examines each of these arguments in turn by outlining the issue, looking at evidence against the claim before evaluating the argument as a whole.
This book explores these questions in a rigorous but accessible way. It doesn't offer easy, solve-everything answers, but it does build a cumulative case based on reason, history and experience to suggest that God probably exists, and that the Christian understanding of God could well be valid.
Content Benefits: By offering a serious look at the evidence that counters the growing assumption that the Christian faith lacks intellectual, moral and experiential credibility, this book allows the reader to make an informed decision about Christianity.
Provides a counter argument to the claims made by the New Atheists
Tackles the accusations that Christianity is intellectually vacuous, morally suspect and experientially empty
Harris does not try to 'prove' beyond all doubt, but presents cumulative evidence to make a rational and informed decision
Builds a cumulative case for Christianity
Ideal for anyone who has doubts in their faith
Perfect for anyone who wants to know if Christianity is true
Suitable for anyone who wants to explain their faith to others
Ideal resource for anyone studying apologetics
Binding - Paperback
Pages - 160
Publisher - Paternoster
More details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
Milton Keynes
United Kingdom
Target group
Professional and scholarly
Product notice
Paperback (trade)
Dimensions
Height: 216 mm
Width: 140 mm
Thickness: 9 mm
Weight
210 gr
ISBN-13
978-1-78893-106-9 (9781788931069)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Person
Professor Brian Harris (BSocSc, BTh (Hons), MTh, PhD (Uni of Auckland)) is Principal of Vose Seminary, a Baptist theological college in Perth, WA. Brian has lived in both South Africa and New Zealand and has successfully been the senior pastor of three churches, each of which grew dramatically. His PhD interacts with the thought of Stanley Grenz and explores the nature and future of evangelical theology. In 2009, he commenced as senior pastor of Carey Baptist Church in conjunction with his role at Vose, giving him valuable practical pastoral insight. Brian is married to Rosemary, and has three children - Nick, Amy and Jett.