Revelation and Reason

Another book I’m looking forward to:

Revelation and Reason New Essays in Reformed Apologetics, Ed. K. Scott Oliphint & Lane G. Tipton (P&R, May 2007; ISBN#: 9-78087-55259-69), 360 pages.

Book Description:
The purpose of this collection of essays is to set in the foreground the necessity of exegetical and theological foundations for any Reformed, Christian apologetic. A Reformed apologetic is only Reformed to the extent that its tenets, principles, methodology, etc. are formed and re-formed by Scripture. It is our hope that this book will demonstrate the necessity of the truth of Scripture, and the implications of that truth, for apologetics. These essays are meant to spell out more clearly the need for, and the beauty of, an apologetic surrounded by the rich truths of the Reformed faith.

I’ve asked P&R to send me the TOC, but I haven’t received a response yet. If the TOC is what it was when listed online some time ago, here it is:

Introduction. K. Scott Oliphint and Lane G. Tipton

(1) Reformed Apologetics: Exegetical Considerations
  (a) Some Epistemological Reflections on I Cor. 2:6-13. Richard B. Gaffin
  (b) Resurrection, Proof, and Presuppositionalism: Acts 17:30-31. Lane G. Tipton
  (c) The Irrationality of Unbelief: An Exegetical Study. K. Scott Oliphint
  (d) The Case for Calvinistic Hermeneutics. Moises Silva
  (e) Paul’s Christological Interpretation of Creation and Presuppositional Apologetics. Lane G. Tipton

(2) Reformed Apologetics: Theological Foundations
  (a) Divine Aseity and Apologetics. John M. Frame
  (b) Consistently Reformed: The Inheritance and Legacy of Van Til’s Apologetic. Michael S. Horton
  (c) A Confessional Apologetic. Thom Notaro
  (d) Theologia Naturalis: A Reformed Tradition. Jeffrey K. Jue
  (e) The Eschatological Implications of Genesis 2:15 for Apologetics. Bill Dennison

(3) Reformed Apologetics: Methodological Implications
  (a) The Old New Reformed Epistemology. K. Scott Oliphint
  (b) The Fate of Apologetics in an Age of Normal Nihilism. Michael Payne
  (c) Turn! Turn! Turn! Reformed Apologetics and the Cultural Dimension. William Edgar
  (d) Van Til and Transcendental Argument. Don Collett

APPENDIX
Cornelius Van Til and the Reformation of Christian Apologetics. K. Scott Oliphint

Paradox in Christian Theology

A must read is Paradox in Christian Theology, James N. Anderson (Paternoster, 2007; ISBN#: 9-78184-22746-20), 328p.

John Frame says of this book “This book is a very well-informed, carefully argued, and cogent discussion of theological paradox, drawing on studies in the history of doctrine and philosophy. The book is clearly written and faithful to Christian orthodoxy. I hope that it is widely read and taken to heart.”

This publication is James’ Doctoral dissertation and the abstract so reads:

It is commonly claimed that certain tenets and doctrines of the Christian faith are paradoxical, that is, they give the appearance (at least) of logical inconsistency. In addition to alleged conceptual problems with classical theism, certain distinctively Christian doctrines — most notably, the doctrine of the Trinity and the doctrine of the Incarnation — have frequently been thought to suffer from serious internal logical difficulties. As such, questions are naturally raised about the rationality of Christian beliefs.

Since the earliest days of the church, sceptics have marshalled such considerations in defence of their stance of unbelief or outright disbelief with respect to the Christian faith. More remarkable, however, is the number of Christian thinkers who have concurred with their conclusions. Some have conceded not only the charge of paradoxicality but also the charge of irrationality, shrugging it off or even championing it as a virtue. Others have granted that certain doctrines are paradoxical, but reject the accusation of intellectual impropriety. These differing stances indicate that there are two key questions to be answered concerning paradox in Christian theology. (1) Are any essential Christian doctrines genuinely paradoxical? (2) Can a
person be rational in believing a paradoxical doctrine?

In the first part of the thesis I develop a case for answering (1) in the affirmative, arguing that the orthodox Christian doctrines of the Trinity and the Incarnation, as reflected in the creeds and confessions of the early church, are indeed paradoxical. This conclusion is supported by (i) the history of the early trinitarian and christological controversies and (ii) the failure of contemporary theologians and philosophers to identify interpretations of these doctrines which avoid paradox while preserving orthodoxy. I also consider a range of strategies for responding to the problem of theological paradox, concluding that each is inadequate on either philosophical or theological grounds (or both).

In the second part of the thesis I develop a case for answering (2) in the affirmative: even if certain Christian doctrines are paradoxical, Christians can nonetheless be rational in believing them. Building on Alvin Plantinga’s model for warranted Christian belief, I provide an account of how belief in Christian doctrines in general can be rational. I then set out a model for understanding paradoxical doctrines according to which belief in such doctrines will normally be rational for Christians (both intellectually sophisticated and unsophisticated believers). Finally, I
defend the model against a range of theological and philosophical objections. The thesis thus makes a novel contribution to studies in religious epistemology, with significant implications for biblical interpretation, systematic theology, and apologetics.

Here are the table of contents:

1 Introduction: The Problem of Paradox
  1.1 Paradox in Christian Theology
  1.2 Paradox Defined
  1.3 Outline of the Thesis
Part One: The Presence of Paradox
2 The Paradox of the Trinity
  2.1 Introduction
  2.2 Early Trinitarianism
   2.2.1 The Road to Nicea
   2.2.2 The Nicene Settlement
   2.2.3 The Post-Nicene Fathers
  2.3 Recent Trinitarianism
   2.3.1 Modalistic Interpretations
   2.3.2 Social Trinitarian Interpretations
   2.3.3 Relative Identity Interpretations
   2.3.4 Concessions to Paradox
  2.4 Conclusion
3 The Paradox of the Incarnation
  3.1 Introduction
  3.2 Early Christology
   3.2.1 The Road to Chalcedon
   3.2.2 The Chalcedonian Settlement
   3.2.3 Post-Chalcedonian Developments
  3.3 Recent Christology
   3.3.1 Kenotic Interpretations
   3.3.2 Dual-Psychology Interpretations
   3.3.3 Concessions to Paradox
  3.4 Conclusion
4 Responding to Paradox
  4.1 Introduction
  4.2 Theological Anti-Realism
  4.3 Anti-Deductivism
  4.4 Dialetheism
  4.5 Doctrinal Revisionism
  4.6 Semantic Minimalism
  4.7 Complementarity
  4.8 Conclusion
Part Two: The Propriety of Paradox
5 Warranted Christian Doctrines
  5.1 Introduction
  5.2 What is Warrant?
  5.3 Warranted Belief
   5.3.1 Internalism and Externalism
   5.3.2 Coherentism and Foundationalism
   5.3.3 Reliabilism and Proper Function
  5.4 Warranted Theistic Belief
  5.5 Warranted Christian Belief
  5.6 Revelation, Scripture, and Doctrine
   5.6.1 Four Perspectives on Christian Doctrine
   5.6.2 Evaluating the Four Perspectives
  5.7 Warranted Christian Doctrine
  5.8 Defeaters
6 A Model for the Rational Affirmation of Paradoxical Theology
  6.1 Introduction
  6.2 The Character of Paradox
   6.2.1 Apparent Contradiction
   6.2.2 Equivocation: Unarticulated and Articulated
   6.2.3 Paradox and the Doctrine of Analogy
  6.3 The Origin of Paradox
   6.3.1 The Doctrine of Divine Incomprehensibility
   6.3.2 Divine Incomprehensibility and Paradox
  6.4 The Rationality of Paradox
   6.4.1 Mystery Defined
   6.4.2 Defeaters Revisited: Defeater-Defeaters and Defeater-Insulators
   6.4.3 Mystery as Defeater-Defeater and Defeater-Insulator
   6.4.4 Warranted Belief in Paradoxical Christian Doctrines
  6.5 Conclusion
7 The Model Defended
  7.1 Introduction
  7.2 Biblical Concerns
   7.2.1 The Fount of Doctrinal Paradox: Creeds or Scripture?
   7.2.2 Logic as a Hermeneutical Tool
   7.2.3 Paradox as Defeater for Biblical Inspiration
  7.3 Theological Concerns
   7.3.1 The Practice of Systematic Theology
  7.3.2 Defining Orthodoxy and Excluding Heterodoxy
   7.3.3 Alternative Cognitive Design Plans
   7.3.4 The Apologetic Mirror Problem
  7.4 Philosophical Concerns
   7.4.1 Contradictions: Real and Apparent
   7.4.2 Consistency as Intellectual Virtue
   7.4.3 Alternative Notions of Rationality
   7.4.4 Intuitional Inertia
   7.4.5 Comprehension and Conception
  7.5 Conclusion
8 Conclusion: The Prospects of Paradox
  8.1 Implications
  8.2 Further Research
  8.3 Paradox: A Blessing in Disguise?
9 Bibliography

Currently this book can be ordered from this page, but should be on Amazon in the near future.

Interfaith Dialog

In light of yesterday’s blog entry, I’d like to point you to the Mormon Coffee Blog and Aaron’s entry Should Christians stay in manipulative interfaith relationships?.

See also Should We Dwell On Similarities?, by Bill McKeever.

I will be discussing some of this in my 2nd part on methodology in my Counterfeit Christianity class this weekend. I’ll post the outline of this on Monday.

A Biblical Approach to Christian Counterfeits

Since I had problems with posting (twice) the outline for Class 2, I have deleted the two previous posts (on this class) and I’m listing class 1 and 2 here.

Class 1 - Outline and Bibliography

Class 2 - Outline and Bibliography.

I apologize for the confusion. I have brought over the comments from the second post.

What Common Ground?

Anton Hein of the Relgion News Blog has pointed out this article in reference to my previous post LDS a cult? 350,000 DVDs try to shake Mormons’ faith in today’s Salt Lake Tribune.

It is no surprise (at least with those who evangelize the LDS) that there are disagreements about methodology. As a matter of fact, many threads have been created as of late on the Walter Martin Ministries blog.

John Morehead is one who takes exception with the video and the distribution of it. The reporter and John Morehead make the following comment “Instead of attacking LDS beliefs, he said, “we have to find common ground and recognize the positive in each side. We have to demonstrate compassion.”

My question to John is what common ground do we need to find with the LDS?

Jesus Christ/Joseph Smith

Want to learn about the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints and its founder Joseph Smith? You can watch the (new) Jesus Christ/Joseph Smith video online here. You can also order the DVD by going here.

Muhammad and Deuteronomy 18

For good or ill there is only one article in the latest Christian Research Journal on the issue of cults and/or world religions (there are news pieces but I’m not counting them). So, fyi:

“Muhammad and Deuteronomy 18: Who Is the Prophet ‘Like’ Moses?”, Dave Talley.
Christian Research Journal, Vol. 30 No. 1 (2007)

I suspect that sometime in the near futue, the article will become available online.

Countercult Apologetics Journal

Last January I posted online the new Countercult Apologetics Journal. This was supposed to be an annual publication, but when January of this year rolled around, I hadn’t put any work into it and it didn’t look like I was going to either.

Well, I believe a publication such as this is sorely need. So, if you are interested in submitting an article for the second edition, please Email me. I would prefer the articles come to me in a Word doc.

If you have other ideas for this publication, I’d be willing to listen.

Jehovah’s Witnesses

On March 18, Keith Walker with Evidence Ministries had the opportunity to teach on the Jehovah’s Witnesses at Concordia Lutheran Church in San Antonio Texas. Here is the audio.

See also:

Jehovah’s Witnesses: The Claims, Doctrinal Changes and Prophetic Speculation What Does the Record Show? Edmond C. Gruss (Xulon Press, 2001; ISBN#: 1-9312-3230-X).

Reasoning from the Scriptures with the Jehovah’s Witnesses. Ron Rhodes (Harvest House, 1993; ISBN#: 1-5650-7106-9).

Jehovah’s Witnesses Answered Subject by Subject. David Reed (Baker, 1996; ISBN#: 0-8010-5317-X).

Making Man the Measure of God, Kevin D. Kennedy. Southwestern Journal of Theology, Vol. 46, No. 2 (Spring 2004).

Jehovah’s Witnesses and Jesus Christ, Robert Bowman, Jr. (audio)

In The Name of Jehovah, Interfaith Evangelism Team of the North American Mission Board (DVD).

Buddhism

Dr. Charles Manske was guest on Issues Etc. to discuss Buddhism (3/20/07). Here is the audio link.

See also:

Sharing Your Faith with a Buddhist. Madasamy Thirumalai (Bethany House, 2003; ISBN#: 0-7642-2791-2).

A Brief Presuppositional Analysis of Buddhism, by Paul Manata. Countercult Apologetics Journal, Vol. 1, No. 1.

A Look at Buddhism, Nelson Jennings (audio).

« Previous entries