Here is a book that I would like to see serious
minded Christians own, read, and study. I would like to see Sunday
school classes and other small groups work through this book
because the layout lends itself to that type of study. Richard
Ramsay, a PCA teaching elder with a variety of experiences and
ministries, has given us a primer on apologetics that is reader
friendly.
I had the privilege of reading the manuscript
prior to publication and told the publishers, “This would be a
must print book.” I realize that most Christians will not think
much about apologetics and defending the faith unless challenged
and taught to do so by pastors and teachers, but it is a crucial
topic. Peter says that we must be able to give a reason for why we
believe what we believe (I Peter 3:15), and we must be able to
help others whom we disciple to do the same.
While I have been using some other books as I work
to make kingdom disciples, this book will now be high on my
priority list. Although an obvious presuppositionalist in his
approach, Ramsay writes about a variety of apologetic methods that
are applicable to many different situations. I especially
appreciated his clear distinction between God-centered reasoning
and reasoning that is not.
The first part of the book deals with “Uncertainty
in Non-Christian Thought” and makes the case for doing apologetics
in that setting. Part two deals with “Certainty in Christian
Apologetics” and gives us a summary of fifteen men from Augustine
to John Frame to R.C. Sproul and how they dealt with apologetics.
As a primer type book, it is far from simplistic.
Each chapter concludes with good review questions
and a group exercise that enhances its use as a study book. It is
a good practical book that covers much material. Through and
through we are reminded that our final authority is God speaking
to us in His Word. He writes:
“The Christian alternative is to accept God as
the judge and source of truth. When you keep backing up a
Christian to his ‘final answer,’ it should be that ‘God says
so.’ It is true because God says so. How do I know God says so?
Because He says so! As a Christian, I cannot back up any further
than God Himself; I cannot elevate something above Him. If I
appeal to an authority superior to God, I have just contradicted
my own worldview and destroyed the foundation underneath me.”
This of course is in contrast, as Ramsay points
out, to the non-Christian who “essentially makes himself the judge
of what is true and false and right and wrong.”
Ramsay concludes the book with what he calls the
three most challenging questions for apologetics: Evolution, hell,
and the problem of evil. This book will help you to be better
equipped to know how to challenge non-Christians to rethink their
belief system, reminding us of Francis Schaeffer’s methodology.
— Charles Dunahoo