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Editors’ note: 
The Bible calls Christians to always be prepared to give an answer to those who ask for the reason of the hope within us (1 Peter 3:15). And so, from the very beginning of church history, Christians have publicly and privately labored to show the reasonableness of our faith against the objections of skeptics.
In the last century, Christians debating the relationship between reason and faith have divided into sometimes warring camps of classical, evidential, and presuppositional apologetics. If you’re wondering how these views relate, then this week’s series of five articles is for you. The Gospel Coalition welcomes apologists and pastors who will define, critique, and defend particular methods commonly used among Christians. But we don’t want to stop at method, as if apologetics were just meant for the lab. We also hope to provide resources to not only firm up your grasp of the debates, but also to put apologetics into practice in preaching and evangelism.

Preaching apologetically is tough business, and we shouldn’t just read books in order to get better at it. Part of getting better at is doing apologetics, not only the pulpit, but also with our neighbors and friends. Nevertheless, reading is a critical part. So here are five reading habits to help develop your apologetics in the pulpit.

First, familiarize yourself with how the Bible answers questions by reading, for instance, Ecclesiastes and the Gospels. This is the number one resource. Along with this develop a highly sophisticated systematic theology drawn from the Bible itself. The great danger of every apologetic enterprise is either to give away too much (and so compromise core doctrine) or shout from too far away so you’re not really heard but just preaching to the choir. Take note of how the Bible does it and copy studiously.

Second, familiarize yourself with how some of the great Christian leaders have answered questions by reading, for instance, Augustine’s The City of God or Jonathan Edwards’s The End for Which God Created the World. Read Spurgeon sermons—not all apologetics has to be heavy. Read how Billy Graham or D. L. Moody did it.

Third, familiarize yourself with what those who disagree actually write and think, not what other people say they think. That means reading some unnerving stuff, like Nietzsche, or Freud, or Voltaire; as well as some heavy stuff like Kant or Hume. It also means reading and listening to contemporary debates, like the New Atheists, or your friend down the road who doesn’t believe. You need to gain a sensibility towards those who don’t believe so when you answer their questions you have walked in their shoes.

Fourth, read the standard Christian apologetic works that everyone says you should read: C. S. Lewis, of course; more recently, Tim Keller; don’t forget Josh McDowell; Ravi Zacharias; use the resource of Tyndale House in Cambridge for historical critical and textual issues.

Fifth, read things that expose the imaginative world of those who don’t believe. Read H. G. Wells, read Isaac Asimov, read His Dark Materials. It is in the “heart” that the fool says there is no God. The heart includes the rational but also the emotive. Learn to not only speak the language of ratiocination but also the language of imagination.

Is there enough evidence for us to believe the Gospels?

In an age of faith deconstruction and skepticism about the Bible’s authority, it’s common to hear claims that the Gospels are unreliable propaganda. And if the Gospels are shown to be historically unreliable, the whole foundation of Christianity begins to crumble.
But the Gospels are historically reliable. And the evidence for this is vast.
To learn about the evidence for the historical reliability of the four Gospels, click below to access a FREE eBook of Can We Trust the Gospels? written by New Testament scholar Peter J. Williams.

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