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Should You Believe in God?
People increasingly demonstrate a disbelief in God. In a conversational style, apologist Scott Oliphint discusses why belief is still a preferable and more coherent position than unbelief and answers common objections to Christian belief.
"Should You Believe in God? by Scott Oliphint is a very capable and winsome statement of Christian theism. I commend it to you."--Douglas Wilson, Christ Church, Moscow, Idaho
When I first read Van Til's pamphlet "Why I Believe in God" as a college student, it turned my world upside down. It was quite unlike any philosophical discussion of God that I had ever seen. Since then, I have been seeking to follow in its light. Scott Oliphint's "Should You Believe in God?" is a kind of updated version of Van Til's pamphlet. Oliphint refers to more recent writers and philosophical controversies. But like Van Til's work it proposes answers to those issues that move far beyond the answers that are usually considered respectable. The book is, in other words, biblical and therefore Christian. As with Van Til, it calls us to re-examine our most fundamental assumptions, and to realign them with the Bible and with Christ.--John Frame, Professor of Systematic Theology and Philosophy, Reformed Theological Seminary, Florida
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