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TEN QUESTIONS |
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The ten questions, with which this book is concerned, are given in the following list: (1)
Is
the Christian description of the beginning of the universe consistent
with the scientific description? (2)
Does the universe exist primarily to serve as a home for us? (3)
What is the origin of the moral law written on each of our
hearts? (4)
Did life arise spontaneously from non-living matter? (5) Is
“survival-of-the-fittest” a rational basis for the concept of
biological evolution? (6) Are
Christians supposed to think about the basis for their beliefs? (7)
Is each of the known Greek manuscripts and manuscript fragments,
of a particular New (8)
Did the New Testament autographs
provide an accurate account of what a man named (9)
Who was Jesus? (10)
Were the autographs, for the book referred to as the Christian Bible,
inspired by God? A
few of the ten questions can never be answered with certainty based
purely on human understanding. In
those cases, however, so much evidence can be amassed in support of a
particular answer that a final step of faith is small and guided as
opposed to large and blind. Contrary to the teaching of Kierkegaard, faith and reason are
not separated by a huge, dark chasm with no way to get from one side to
the other except to take a giant, blind leap. (1) |
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