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Home > Apologetics > Page 11
Published October 10, 2014 by Matt Nelson

Mary: Once A Virgin, Always A Virgin?

As a follow-up to my previous post, Jesus Had Brothers?, I thought I would build on the same topic from a different angle. As we know, both Catholics and Protestants believe in…

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By Matt Nelson

Apologetics Mary

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Published October 6, 2014 by Matt Nelson

Does Pope Francis Dislike Apologetics?

What does Pope Francis’ think about apologetics? He has certainly condemned “proselytism” which is an aggressive form of transmitting the faith that directly contradicts St. Peter’s inspired words: “Always be prepared to make…

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Apologetics Pope

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Published August 18, 2014 by Matt Nelson

Can God Create A Rock So Heavy That Not Even He Can Lift It?

Many skeptics today claim that God is dead, buried by modern science and philosophy. But which God—or gods—have they buried?

In his published article Jesus And The Identity Of God, the eminent New Testament scholar and former Oxford chaplain, N.T. Wright, remembers how he would often meet with the new undergraduates to introduce himself and get acquainted. Naturally as chaplain he would inquire about their personal religious beliefs. Many were atheists. Wright recalls, “I developed a stock response: “Oh, that’s interesting; which god is it you don’t believe in?” Then after they stumbled out a few phrases in response the chaplain would reply, “Well, I’m not surprised you don’t believe in that god. I don’t believe in that god either.”

“What most people mean by ‘god’ in late-modern western culture”, writes Wright, “simply is not the mainstream Christian meaning.” Indeed this seems to be true; and not just among college undergraduates but even among some of the most prominent (and influential) atheists of today.

It should be an obvious fact that if an atheist really wants to defeat and discredit the notion of the Christian God, he has to address the Christian God; not some caricature of the real thing (not all atheists do this). The skeptic can take down as many distortions of the divine as he pleases; but if that’s all he’s taking out, then—whether he likes it or not—the God we are really defending will remain firmly standing without wound or blemish.

Christians, as a matter of orthodoxy, defend the Creator who is the self-existent, pure act of infinite being itself; and thus it is more precise to say, not that he exists, but that he is existence. But due to the finite limitations of human reason, it is more profitable (and more possible) for us to speak about what God is not; or to speak about this infinitely perfect Being by using analogy. Thus we might say that God who necessarily contains all perfections within himself is all-knowing, all-loving, all-present, and all-powerful (even though it is more precise to say that his infinite power is his infinite love which is his infinite knowledge, and so on).

All this is to say that God is the uncaused infinitely perfect act of being itself.

of the attributes that Christians believe God possesses is omnipotence. Omnipotent means “all-powerful.” Since we believe that God is all-powerful, atheists and agnostics will often throw up the following challenge:

“Since God is all-powerful could He create a rock (or whatever physical object they decide to insert here) that is too heavy for even Himself to lift?”

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Apologetics God

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Published May 14, 2014 by Matt Nelson

Three Reasons To Learn Apologetics: Part III

Reason #1: To defend the invisible, mysterious and miraculous in a culture where science is the ultimate authority for truth

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Apologetics and Evangelization

Apologetics Evangelization

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Published May 14, 2014 by Matt Nelson

Three Reasons To Learn Apologetics: Part II

Reason #1: To defend the invisible, mysterious and miraculous in a culture where science is the ultimate authority for truth

Reason #2: To strengthen family ties The groundbreaking Catholic apologist Karl Keating describes this hypothetical situation in his book, The Usual Suspects:

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Apologetics and Evangelization

Apologetics Evangelization

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Published May 14, 2014 by Matt Nelson

Three Reasons To Learn Apologetics: Part I

“No believer in Christ, no institution of the Church can avoid this supreme duty: to proclaim Christ to all peoples.” —St. John Paul II

All Catholics are called to evangelize. It is our supreme duty, says the Church’s newest canonized saint. To evangelize is to propose the truths of Christianity with love – not impose them. It is an invitation – not a confrontation. And it always begins with a clear and simple offer to accept Jesus Christ as who He claimed to be. That is step one. But anyone who has not been baptized or who is not practicing the Christian faith has made their decision for a reason. You, therefore, will be required to give an answer to the questions and objections to your proposal that will surely arise. Therefore, apologetics is the “handmaiden” of evangelization.

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Matthew Nelson

Welcome! I like to ponder what St. John Paul II called "the fundamental questions which pervade human life." Sometimes I write my thoughts down. This blog is where you'll find them.

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