Table of Content
IntroductionIntroduces Mark_s story, the story of the church, and frames the questions answered in the book.PART 1 _ Evidential ChallengesChapter 1: The Challenge of Faith vs. ReasonProposes that everyone has a faith position, that the dichotomy between faith and reason is a myth, and that the best worldviews need to be coherent and viable from a historical, philosophical, and scientific standpoint. (Includes a lot of engagement in recent scholarship and atheism.)Chapter 2: The Challenge of God_s ExistenceExplores evidence for God_s existence taken from three major areas. These include moral law, origins of the universe, and the teleological argument. (Includes a lot of engagement in philosophy, physics, and cosmology.)Chapter 3: The Challenge of the BibleGives a defense of the legitimacy of the Bible, from a historical, archeological, and literary standpoint.Chapter 4: The Challenge of the Christ MythThis chapter answers the challenge of Jesus_s existence, deconstructs the Christ Myth, and argues for the legitimacy of the historical Jesus and his resurrection. What makes this chapter stand out is that it directly challenges the Christ Myth, interacting directly with those who have popularized this theory. This chapter will establish that the parallels are imagined and that Jesus is unique in history. This chapter offers a unique and liberating answer for Christians who encounter this popular challenge.PART 2 _ Moralistic ChallengesChapter 5: The Challenge of Evil and SufferingExplores the philosophical reasons behind the reality of evil and suffering in the world and attempts to reconcile the reality of evil and suffering with God_s existence. (Philosophical and practical.)Chapter 6: The Challenge of HellArgues for the legitimacy of the doctrine of hell. This chapter engages some of the more popular discussions on hell, including universalism. It also offers a biblical presentation of the doctrine of hell based on Scripture and the logic of justice.Chapter 7: The Challenge of SexThis chapter addresses the popular rejection of Christianity based on a modern cultural construct of sexual ethics, which asks if God is anti-sex. The chapter explores the biblical presentation of sex as a pleasure-filled, God-glorifying reality, and it challenges both the worship of sex and the suppression of it. (This chapter is one of the unique aspects of this book and will likely get people talking. The author calls for sex to play a central role in the lives of married people and discusses topics such as pornography, frequency, and orgasms. The content draws on scholarship, modern examples, and years of pastoral counseling and preaching on the topic.)Chapter 8: The Challenge of Christian HypocrisyExplores accusations that Christianity is _poison_ (Hitchens), judgmental, and exclusive and therefore should be dismissed. This chapter explores some of the classic justifications for rejecting Christianity (witch-burning, war) and shows them to be both exaggerated and antithetical to the spirit of Christianity.Chapter 9: The Challenge of ExclusivityThis chapter looks closely at the challenge of Christianity on the basis that it excludes other worldviews and religions, finding that such exclusion is logical and right. It is a winsome and funny chapter that explores the irony of the modern worldview, which wants to include everyone and say everyone is right!Chapter 10: The Challenge of JesusExplores the person and work of Jesus as a final chapter, which forces readers into the crisis of believing Jesus was who he said he was---or choosing to reject him. If he wasn_t who the prophets---and Jesus himself---said he was, then Christianity shouldn_t be believed. But if he did fulfill the prophecies and perform the miracles that are attributed to him, not to mention dying and rising again, then the reader should trust in Christ.