PRIORITIES IN PRESENTING THE FAITH
by Dr John WhitcombFROM SWORD & TROWEL 2006 No 3
How much do we need scientific evidence and intellectual arguments in Gospel witness?
This powerful yet highly readable article, typical of the author, captured the minds of many
preachers when first issued in 1984. From the co-author of The Genesis Flood, this
establishes the necessity of the Word and the power of the Spirit in conversion.
My personal experience with Christian apologetics began in February 1943,
when I was a student at Princeton University. It had not been my privilege to be raised
in a Christian home nor to attend a Bible-teaching church. But God, in His grace, used a
couple of Christian students at the university to invite me time and time again to attend
a weekly Bible class being taught by a Princeton alumnus and former missionary to
India.
The Gospel message was graciously presented, and after several months
of such teaching, I surrendered to the claims and the authority of the Lord Jesus Christ.
As far as I could tell there were no other Christians in the student hall
where I stayed at that time, but I had made several good friends, one of whom was a
sophisticated intellectual from a wealthy home. I was convinced that the conversion of
such a man could bring great changes in the student hall, so one day I invited him to
attend our Bible class.
My hopes were high, because I was prepared to convince him that no one
else could match this Bible teacher who had led me to the Lord. The conversation, as I
recall over the years, proceeded as follows: ‘Harry, here is a teacher who can really make
the message of the Bible clear and convincing. Why not come with me on Sunday
afternoon and see for yourself?’
‘The Bible?’ he replied. ‘Why should I take time to study a religious book
that is already nearly two thousand years out of date? You know yourself that there isn’t
a single science professor here at Princeton who takes the Bible seriously on the origin of
the world. The idea of creation by divine fiat is no longer held by intelligent people. I
really have no interest in the Bible.’
Stung by this flat rejection of God’s Word on the basis of a scientific
consensus, I retreated to my Christian friends. Were there any publications of a
scholarly nature, I asked, that could help my friend see the weaknesses of evolutionism
and thus the possibility of supernatural creation?
Except for a few small booklets, nothing came to hand; but armed with
these I approached Harry again. He was surprisingly gracious. ‘Thanks for going to all
the trouble of collecting these booklets for me. I really didn’t know anyone who could
write took Genesis literally any more. I’ll tell you what I’ll do. Some day, if I
ever have the time, I’ll look into it.’
That was it. A polite but final brush-off.
I was deeply dismayed at this and similar failures to convert my friends
to Christianity, and discussed the problem with my Bible teacher. ‘What’s wrong with
me? Is it my personality, or do I need more time to collect better arguments?’ Instead of
lecturing his new disciple on the intricacies of biblical apologetics, he very wisely invited
me to join him in a brief visitation programme in one of the other student halls where a
new student had five months earlier somewhat rashly filled in a survey card indicating
his interest in attending our Bible study class.
As the door swung open in response to our knock, pipe smoke poured
out into the hallway. ‘I’m John Whitcomb and this is the Bible teacher of the Princeton
Evangelical Fellowship. Is Tom Smith here?’ A trampling of feet and the crash of a table
lamp were heard as various figures fled in terror, leaving our victim to fend for himself
against these unwanted intruders.
‘The Princeton Evangelical Fellowship? Oh, yes, I guess I did sign a card
last fall; but I’m not interested in the Bible any more. I used to think it was true, but five
months of study here has been enough to convince me it is full of errors.’
‘I’m fascinated to hear you say that,’ my teacher quietly commented.
‘Tell me, what particular errors did you discover in the Bible that convinced you it is not
true?’ This was unexpected. Was a firm rebuff not sufficient to end this uncomfortable
conversation? Surely the general consensus of this great university was sufficient to
silence anyone who still believed the Bible to be true?
Tom thought for a moment and answered, ‘Jonah and the whale! There’s
your proof. No educated person today could believe for one moment that a whale could
have swallowed a man and then spat him out on the shore alive three days later!’
Here was the crisis for me. How could we handle this direct challenge to
the historicity of the book of Jonah? Perhaps we could find in
the university library some books on whales that would demonstrate their ability to
swallow men alive. Perhaps we could even find historical evidence of men who had
actually survived such an ordeal. That would convince him that the book of Jonah
is as infallible as the rest of the Bible!
Providentially, it was my teacher who answered him first. ‘Tom, I’m
frankly very thankful that it is the book of Jonah you seem to be struggling
with. There is no more fascinating book in the Old Testament than Jonah.
Some day, if we have time, I would like to discuss with you the entire message of
that book, which was alluded to by Christ Himself for a very important reason.
‘In the meantime, however, would you mind if I explained to you why I
have come to believe that the Bible is the Word of God and therefore true in all its
parts?’
Impressed with the irresistible graciousness and confidence of this man
who seemed to know from personal experience the God of Whom he spoke, Tom gave
his cautious consent.
‘Tom, I felt the way you do about God’s Word when I was a student here
thirty years ago. I thought I had all the answers I needed concerning life. But I was
wrong. In His infinite love, God reached down to me in my deep personal need and
showed me through the familiar words of His matchless Book that my root problem was
sin, deliberate alienation from God Himself.’
What he heard was not a scientific, historical, or philosophical defence of
Christianity, but a Gospel-saturated testimony directed prayerfully to his heart.
As I recall the conversation, Tom did raise some questions about
Christianity and the Bible. The questions were not totally ignored, but the answers were
always amplified by new perspectives on the Gospel and appeals for surrender to Christ.
It was this approach that ultimately led to a proud university student acknowledging the
lordship of Christ in his life.
All of this forced me to take a new look at some basic factors of Christian
apologetics that I had seriously neglected. I have come to believe that my initial
ignorance concerning these biblical principles also characterises many frustrated and
fruitless Christian workers today.
My problem was basically twofold. I had underestimated the depth of
man’s rebellion against God, and I was unaware of the absolutely crucial part which the
Word of God must have, through the convicting and illuminating work of the Holy
Spirit, in bringing sinful men to Christ.
It will be my purpose in this article to examine biblical revelation
concerning man’s spiritual inability, God’s method of reaching lost men, major proof
texts for rationalistic apologetics, and then in another article the part which Christian
evidences may have in our ministry of witnessing today.
In our efforts to make the Bible and Christianity attractive and
acceptable to men, we find ourselves immediately confronted with two stupendous ob
stacles: man’s fallen nature and the Satanic forces which surround him. Though these
facts should come as no great surprise to one who is even superficially acquainted with
Christianity, it is astonishing to me how few of the better known evangelical works on
Christian apologetics today give them serious consideration.
One is almost led to believe when reading such books that what we
really need to win intellectuals to Christ (in addition to the Gospel) is an
arsenal of carefully developed arguments against various false religious and
philosophical systems. We also seem to need an impressive array of evidences from, say,
archaeology and history, that the Bible and Christianity are true.[1]
But if we are to be truly honest with the biblical perspectives on this
question, we must admit that we have too often been guilty of building our systems of
apologetics upon other foundations than the one set forth in Scripture. Instead of giving
us the impression that men are eagerly waiting for proof that Christianity is true, we
find the Bible exposing men’s hearts as sealed shut against any and all human and purely
intellectual pressures for conversion.
The basic problem of the non-Christian is not merely academic and
intellectual, it is moral and spiritual. The Bible indicates that all
unbelievers (including so-called honest doubters) are enemies of God, under
divine judgement because of their deliberate distortion of all reality to fit into their own
spiritual frame of reference.
There is not the slightest desire in the natural man to seek Him, find
Him, and acknowledge Him for Who He is - ‘The wicked, through the
pride of his countenance, will not seek after God: God is not in all his thoughts’
(Psalm 10.4). On another occasion, the Holy Spirit informs us by the pen of
David that - ‘The Lord looked down from heaven upon the children of men, to see if
there were any that did understand, and seek God’ (Psalm 14.2). But what
did He see? ‘They are all gone aside, they are all together become filthy: there is none
that doeth good, no, not one’ (quoted in Romans 3.10-
12).
Not only does the unbeliever not seek and practise truth, he
consistently suppresses whatever truth he does receive: ‘For the wrath of God is re
vealed from heaven against all ungodliness and unrighteousness of men, who
hold [suppress] the truth in unrighteousness they are without
excuse’ (Romans 1.18-20).
In fact, the Scriptures make it clear that fallen men, so far from
being open to arguments about God’s claims upon them, are in a state of enmity against
Him, because ‘the carnal mind is enmity against God: for it is not subject to the law of
God, neither indeed can be’ (Romans 8.7).
Christian apologetics have been traditionally concerned with
giving rational answers to the challenges of unbelievers concerning God’s special
revelation in Scripture. But what kind of minds are we appealing to? To what extent
have sin and spiritual rebellion against God affected man’s rational capacities?
Ponder these statements: ‘And you hath he quickened, who were dead in
trespasses and sins; wherein in time past ye walked according to the course of this
world fulfilling the desires of the flesh and of the mind; and were by nature the
children of wrath, even as others’ (Ephesians 2.1-3). ‘Walk not as other
Gentiles walk, in the vanity of their mind, having the understanding darkened, being
alienated from the life of God through the ignorance that is in them, because of the
blindness of their heart’ (Ephesians 4.17-18).
But is the human ‘mind’ not capable of detaching itself from the
so-called ‘heart’ and drawing its own conclusions about God independently of the
downward direction of fallen nature? The answer is - no. Mark our Lord’s explanation
of the unbreakable relationship between the mind and the heart - ‘Out of the heart
proceed evil thoughts’ (Matthew 15.19; cf Mark 7.21). The
Scriptures offer us no hope of bringing about a fundamental change in a man’s thinking
about God apart from a profound change in his ‘heart’, the moral and spiritual centre of
his personal being.
In addition to the obstacle of the human ‘heart-mind’ being in utter
opposition to the truth of God, there is the obstacle of Satan, ‘the god of this
world’, and his demonic forces. This leads me to realise that when I speak
to an unbeliever about Christ, I am not really speaking to one person but to two or more
persons, all but one of whom is invisible.
The apostle Paul spoke of this fact several times. He explained that - ‘we
wrestle not against flesh and blood, but against principalities, against powers, against the
rulers of the darkness of this world, against spiritual wickedness in high places’
(Ephesians 6.12).
He knew that Christians formerly ‘walked according to the prince of
the power of the air, the spirit that now worketh in the children of disobedience’
(Ephesians 2.2). He recognised that - ‘if our gospel be hid, it is hid to them
that are lost: in whom the god of this world hath blinded the minds of them which
believe not, lest the light of the glorious gospel of Christ, who is the image of God,
should shine unto them’ (2 Corinthians 4.3-4).
In the parable of the sower, our Lord also spoke of this obstacle
to the reception of His Word when He identified the birds that devoured the seed -
‘When any one heareth the word of the kingdom, and understandeth it not, then
cometh the wicked one, and catcheth away that which was sown in his heart. This is he
which received seed by the way side’ (Matthew 13.19).
A system of Christian apologetics that underestimates the power
of Satan in the minds of unbelievers may not exactly be guilty of reviling angelic
majesties, as Jude warns us, but by ignoring the extent of Satan’s power, it is unable to
follow Michael’s example and to say effectively: ‘The Lord rebuke thee’ (Jude 9).
What we desperately
need today is an apologetic with power!
If the biblical picture of man’s enmity against God and control by Satan
is correct, then how can Christians ever persuade men to turn from sin and Satan to the
true and living God? The biblical answer, of course, is that they cannot.
The Scriptures do not say that it is difficult for the unbeliever to accept
spiritual truth. They say that it is impossible. ‘The natural man receiveth not the things
of the Spirit of God: for they are foolishness unto him: neither can he know them,
because they are spiritually discerned’ (1 Corinthians 2.14).
When our Lord once made a similar pronouncement concerning
an entire segment of society, ‘his disciples were exceedingly amazed, saying, Who then
can be saved?’ His answer provides for us the key to all truly effective
Christian apologetics today: ‘With men this is impossible; but with God all things are
possible’ (Matthew 19.25-26).
It seems quite obvious, then, that God never intended that Christians
should win the lost through purely philosophical and academic arguments, or even that
they should by this means remove the mental obstacles within unbelievers so that the
Word of God might penetrate their hearts.
If this had been God’s plan, the vast majority of Christians throughout
history would have been automatically disqualified from effective witness, for they
would have been unable to meet highly educated unbelievers on their own level in
intellectual debate. ‘For ye see your calling, brethren, how that not many wise men after
the flesh, not many mighty, not many noble, are called: but God hath chosen the foolish
things of the world to confound the wise that no flesh should glory in his presence’
(1 Corinthians 1.26-29).
The biblical method of winning men to Christ (including the
intellectuals of our day) is to lovingly, patiently and prayerfully present the true Gospel
‘according to the scriptures’ (1 Corinthians 15.3-4) from the context of a
godly life (1 Thessalonians 1.5; 2.3-12). Only the ‘quick, and
powerful’ Word of God can penetrate the unbeliever’s shield of defence
and pierce into his heart (Hebrews 4.12), and thus only God may receive
the glory for the genuine conversion of sinful men.
Once converted by God’s Holy Spirit, a man for the first time in his life
enjoys the proper perspective and frame of reference for analysing his intellectual
problems concerning Christian doctrines, even if he never finds the complete answers
this side of Heaven.
Paul’s own conversion is an instructive illustration of this divine
dynamic. Instead of presenting a list of questions to the Lord Jesus when he was
overwhelmed by His presence on the Damascus road, Saul of Tarsus simply cried out,
‘What shall I do, Lord?’ (Acts 22.10). With his spiritual blindness removed
by God - ‘straightway he preached Christ in the synagogues, that he is the Son of
God’ (Acts 9.20).
He ‘was not disobedient unto the heavenly vision’ (Acts
26.19) even though it must have required years for him to rethink everything that
he had previously learned about the Scriptures in the light of this transforming new
revelation. The book of Acts contains numerous examples of such
proclamations of God’s revealed message, resulting in conviction of sin by the Holy
Spirit and genuine conversion (Acts 2.36-38; 8.34-36; 10.42-48; 16.31-34).
Another important New Testament example of this approach to
Christian apologetics may be found in Paul’s admonition to the Corinthian church to
turn from worldly wisdom and from an unwarranted glorying in certain sign-gifts in
order that they might give themselves to the clear proclamation of God’s Word. He said:
‘But if all prophesy, and there come in one that believeth not, or one unlearned, he is
convinced of all, he is judged of all: and thus are the secrets of his heart made manifest;
and so falling down on his face he will worship God, and report that God is in you of a
truth’ (1 Corinthians 14.24-25).[2] It is perfectly
obvious from this remarkable passage that neither human wisdom nor empirical signs
were an adequate substitute for the clear proclamation of God’s Word.
However, if the Christian communicator constantly appeals to God’s
Word in order to establish its truth in the mind of the unbeliever, is he not guilty of
reasoning in a circle? If the unbeliever refuses to accept the Scriptures as divinely
inspired, should not the communicator temporarily abandon the Bible until he has
demonstrated its truth independently by appealing to the vast array of archaeological,
historical, scientific, and other facts that tend to confirm its claims?
The answer to this question is - no. If Christianity is merely one
circle of truth to be conditioned and defined by other circles of
truth, then it is not true at all, because the Scriptures boldly and consistently claim to be
God’s eternal, all-inclusive, unique, final, and absolutely authoritative Word. This is the
crucial foundation of true Christian apologetics.
When the Christian appeals to God’s Word he is appealing to the
only ultimate circle of truth concerning God and spiritual realities. This
circle is so vast and profound that it includes everything that exists, both within and
beyond the universe, both visible and invisible - including the unbeliever himself and
the very ‘god of this world’ who blinds him!
To turn off the light of God’s Word, as it were, in order to establish first a
‘common ground’ with the unbeliever is thus to abandon truth in order to grope
together with an unregenerate mind in the darkness that characterises this world-
system apart from God.
Revealed truth is self-authenticating and self-vindicating, like light. Peter
stated - ‘ye do well that ye take heed [to the Word of God], as unto a light
that shineth in a dark place, until the day dawn’ (2 Peter 1.19).
Imagine a man lost within the deep recesses of a dark
underground cavern in utter despair of ever finding his way out. If a friend had a general
idea of his location, how could he best come to his rescue? Should he rush into the cave,
careless of his pathway, and sit with him in the darkness, sharing with him the common
ground of being lost?
Would it not be much wiser to take along a powerful torch, marking his
path as he enters the cavern so that he could retrace his steps to the safety of the world
above? However, suppose that the lost man, in his utter despair, refused to believe that
his friend had a torch and that there was a way out? Should the would-be rescuer sit
there in the darkness and argue with him concerning the size, make, power, and
previous performance of his torch?
Since the lost man still has the capacity to recognise light when he sees it,
should not his friend immediately end the debate by inviting him to look at the
light as he switches on the torch?
Man’s amazing capacity to hear and to see in the physical realm did not
come about by chance. ‘The hearing ear, and the seeing eye, the Lord hath made even
both of them’ (Proverbs 20.12). Neither is man’s capacity to recognise
God’s truth a product of chance. Every human being has this capacity and will be judged
by the Creator on the basis of his use of it. John tells us that Christ is ‘the true Light,
which lighteth every man that cometh into the world’ (John 1.9). Thus,
man has an innate knowledge of his Creator. ‘That which may be known of God is
manifest in them; for God hath shewed it unto them’ (Romans 1.19).
When a man is therefore confronted with Christ, the Light of the
world, it is no help to him to humour him when he demands another light first. When a
Christian apologist turns off the light of his Lord and begins groping to find light from
the general consensus of scientific opinion, he has entered into a spiritual cavern from
which there is no escape.
What he must do is to keep the heart and mind of his unbelieving friend
exposed to God’s Word in one way or another, all the time praying that the Spirit of
God might bring conviction of sin and a willingness to trust the Saviour. If he does not
respond to God’s infallible Word, which is His special revelation, what
assurance do we gain from the Bible that he will respond to the witness of general
revelation, such as the various theistic proofs for God’s personal existence and
historical evidences for the truth of Christianity?
The Christian who adopts such a Bible-centred method must, however,
prepare himself for intense criticism, even from fellow Christians. To subordinate
rationalistic argumentation to the supremacy of Scripture is to cut across the grain of all
our natural inclinations and invites the accusation of obscurantism. ‘After all,’ we are
being told on every side, ‘with so many false religions, cults, and philosophies in the
world today, is it not the right and responsibility of an intelligent person to investigate
carefully the validity of Christianity in comparison with other possible alternatives
before making a final decision?’
Again, the answer is - no. Christianity is not simply one of several avail
able religious truth systems. Nor is our Lord Jesus Christ just one of several saviours we
may investigate at our leisure and on our own terms.
Furthermore, our intelligent investigator is far from being neutral and
unbiased in spiritual matters. He cannot sit in judgement with complete objectivity as
one religion after another passes in review, waiting to find one that is logically coherent,
historically and scientifically factual, and personally satisfying before adopting it as his
own.
Quite to the contrary, men are active enemies of the one true God of
revelation and redemption, in Whose image and likeness we have all been created, and
in Whom ‘we live, and move, and have our being’ (Acts 17.28). While it is
true that the divine image has been marred through the Fall, it is nevertheless very
much intact (Genesis 9.6; 1 Corinthians 11.7; James 3.9).
It is precisely because man does bear God’s image that he
inwardly knows Who this God is. That is why he runs away from God and
His Word and hides his face from Him (cf Genesis 3.10; Isaiah 53.3).
That is why he also hinders or suppresses the truth in unrighteousness
(Romans 1.18) and ‘hateth the light, neither cometh to the light’
(John 3.20).
Sinful men cannot innocently claim that God is an unknown
entity to them - ‘Because that, when they knew God, they glorified him not as God,
neither were thankful; but became vain in their imaginations, and their foolish heart was
darkened’ (Romans 1.21). These are the reasons why sinful men actually
have no right to demand ‘proper credentials’ when the Creator says to them: ‘Repent!
Believe My Word! Obey Me - now!’ When the Holy Spirit says to the human heart,
‘Believe on the Lord Jesus Christ,’ it is potential suicide to procrastinate, investigate or
debate. ‘Behold, now is the day of salvation’ (2 Corinthians 6.2).
‘God now commandeth all men every where to repent’ (Acts 17.30). God
may graciously prolong the appeal, but sinful man cannot presume upon this!
Let us look at the matter from a different perspective. If an unregenerate
man actually did have the right to demand full intellectual satisfaction concerning the
claims of God’s Word before accepting them, he would be the greatest of fools for
settling for anything less than a complete demonstration.
But in order to have such a demonstration he would have to examine
carefully all the pertinent facts and every possible alternative
before receiving Christ as his Lord. Of course, he would die long before he could arrive
at the place where he could make a decision on this basis. Such an approach to Christian
apologetics is not only unbiblical but it leads to logical absurdities!
To give an unbeliever the impression that he has a right to demand
answers to all the rational problems relating to the Bible and Christianity before he
repents of his sin and turns to Christ for forgiveness, is to set him up on a pedestal of
intellectual and spiritual pride from which he will never descend. What can
such endless debates actually accomplish in preparing such a person for ‘the day when
God shall judge the secrets of men by Jesus Christ according to my gospel’
(Romans 2.16)?
What can be said for such rationalistic apologetics when God has
commissioned us to present ‘all the counsel of God’ (cf: Matthew
28.18-20; Acts 20.27; 2 Timothy 2.2; 4.2)? And how do we respond to Paul’s
admonition to Timothy - ‘be gentle unto all men, apt to teach [ie: to teach
revealed truth], patient, in meekness instructing [ie: with Scripture]
those that oppose themselves; if God peradventure will give them repentance to the
acknowledging of the truth; and that they may recover themselves out of the snare of
the devil’ (2 Timothy 2.24-26)?
If the New Testament is our infallible guide in such matters, we must
conclude that the Christian who will be most effectively used by God in winning people
to Christ is not the one who knows the most about secular philosophy, psychology,
history, archaeology, or natural science (important though these disciplines may be in
their proper place in developing a comprehensive Christian world-and-life view). It will
be the Christian who knows most about God’s Word, and who humbly seeks God’s
daily strength and wisdom in obeying it.
The best Christian apologist is the best student of Scripture, who, to use
the Bible’s own terms to describe him, is ‘a workman that needeth not to be ashamed’,
because he is ‘rightly dividing the word of truth’ (2 Timothy 2.15).
He will be a man like Apollos - ‘mighty in the scriptures instructed in
the way of the Lord [who] spake and taught diligently the things of the
Lord,’ and thus by God’s Word ‘he mightily convinced’
unbelievers (Acts 18.24-28).
The writer finds himself in complete agreement with those who insist
that Christianity is supremely rational. This is not because the Christian understands
everything that God has revealed, for even the apostle Paul refused to make such a claim
(Romans 11.33; 1 Corinthians 13.9; see also 2 Peter 3.16).
The reason why one must insist on the essential rationality of God’s
inscripturated revelation is that God Himself is infinite reason. His thoughts can be
communicated to us effectively and in truth. The Bible is perspicuous (1 John
2.20, 27). However, man’s finiteness will prevent him from knowing God
exhaustively.
The Gospel may be foolishness ‘to them that perish’ (1 Corinthians
1.18), but it is not intrinsically foolish; it is perfect and infinite
wisdom (1 Corinthians 1.20-29). Thus, the Christian message is
ultimately rational. But this is very far from saying that the Christian message can
be communicated rationalistically to lost men.
The apostle Peter, by the Spirit of God, commanded each believer to ‘be
ready always to give an answer [Gk: apologian] to every man that asketh
you a reason of the hope that is in you’ (1 Peter 3.15). Does this mean that
the Christian must go outside the sphere of revelational truth to provide intellectual
and academic justification for his faith in God’s Word to the unbeliever? Could Peter
himself have fulfilled such a command in view of his very limited background?
Would the apostle Paul, who was widely known for his great learning
(Acts 26.24; cf: 22.3), have indulged in such pursuits for the
philosophically-minded Corinthians in view of his avowed determination ‘not to know
any thing among you, save Jesus Christ, and him crucified that your faith should not
stand in the wisdom of men, but in the power of God’ (1 Corinthians 2.2
and 5)? Hardly so.
One therefore suspects from the very outset that the very popular semi-
rationalistic interpretation of 1 Peter 3.15 is misguided.[3]
This suspicion is confirmed by an examination of the immediate context
of the passage. Peter was writing to persecuted Christians who were being terrorised by
their pagan neighbours. They were commanded, however, not to sink into despair, but
to recognise their truly ‘blessed’ situation.
Furthermore, they were neither to fear nor to be troubled. But why
should they adopt such an attitude? Was it because they knew they could out-
manoeuvre their enemies in intellectual debate? Definitely not. Early Christians did not
include many wise men according to the flesh among their number.
Their confidence was really based upon their spiritual resources in Christ
the Lord, Whom they were to sanctify in their hearts.
Furthermore, the words that follow Peter’s command to ‘be ready always
to give an answer’ are highly significant. This defence is to be made with
‘meekness and fear’ and with ‘a good conscience; that they may be
ashamed that falsely accuse your good conversation in Christ.’
Note carefully that these conditions have nothing to do with rationalistic
debate, for a basic assumption underlying such debate is that a correct answer is
effective regardless of the presence or absence of meekness, reverence or godliness in the
one giving the answer. But in a spiritual witness to the truth of God, these factors are
absolutely vital.
It is clear from this passage, then, that no spiritually effective answers can
be given to unregenerate people by Christians concerning the hope that is in them until
they have learned to sanctify the Lord God in their own hearts. But what
does this really mean?
The term sanctify in this context presupposes that
Christians are themselves sanctified or holy - set apart for God.
In the immediate context, then, Peter is saying that the believer must
confess his inability to convert men by mere human reasonings, and own God’s unique
and sovereign ability to do the converting. He must learn to pray that the God Who
knows the hearts of all men and Who knows how to penetrate those hearts with His own
Word, will present His Word, by His Spirit, to the hearers, and be glorified by the
results.
During the 1944 Ardennes campaign in Belgium, better known as the
Battle of the Bulge, the writer served as a ‘fire direction computer’ in a US field artillery
battalion. It was his job to sit with two other men in a basement behind the front lines
and to telephone directions to the artillerymen who handled the twelve 105mm guns.
The really dangerous job was entrusted to the forward observer, usually a
lieutenant. He had to position himself in a high place near enough to the front lines to
see enemy tanks approaching.
When the tanks came into view, a potential crisis emerged. He could
either panic or he could follow strict instructions. If he panicked and fled to the rear, the
tanks would proceed unchallenged, and the battle might be lost, including the forward
observer. Or, he might rush toward the tanks and start firing on them himself. That
would also prove disastrous to him, and to his military unit.
There was, however, a third alternative. That would be to ‘sanctify’ the
field artillery in his heart! In other words, he could follow instructions and phone the
‘fire direction computers’, giving them the number, size, location and apparent speed
and direction of movement of the enemy tanks, confessing thereby his inability to
handle them in his own strength, and the ability of the field artillery to do the job which
he could not do.
It hardly seems necessary to explain that once the artillery had located
those tanks, they were in desperate danger. As dozens of armour-piercing shells
whistled over the head of the forward observer and penetrated the tanks one by one,
exploding inside, he was giving his greatest apologetic to the challenge that
confronted him.
As God’s ‘forward observers’ in Satan’s world of demons and
fallen men, Christians must learn to call upon Christ their Lord. No other system has
ever really worked, nor ever shall.
What, then, is the ‘answer’ that each of us must be prepared to give to
everyone who asks us to give an account for the hope that is in us? The answer must be
basically God’s Word, not our own word. God’s thoughts are vastly higher than our
thoughts, and His words penetrate far deeper into men’s hearts than our words.
In every sincere soul-winning effort, the believer soon discovers that his
own words are dead, inactive and dull.
But - ‘the word of God is quick, and powerful, and sharper than any
twoedged sword, piercing even to the dividing asunder of soul and spirit, and of the
joints and marrow, and is a discerner of the thoughts and intents of the heart’
(Hebrews 4.12).
It was Christ the Lord Who set the apologetic example for all
believers when He thrice defeated Satan with accurate, appropriate quotations from the
Word of God, and with the formula - ‘It is written.’ In His great
confrontation with unbelieving Pharisees in John 8.12-59, our Lord
appealed constantly to basic spiritual realities, such as the witness of His
Father, rather than to sign-miracles. It is noteworthy that ‘as he spake these words, many
believed on him’ (v30).
Do modern Christians sometimes feel that they have, because of
archaeological, historical, scientific, and other discoveries that shed light on the
Scriptures, a superior apologetic to that of our Lord and His apostles, and of
the early church?
If so, they have not really sanctified the Lord God in their hearts, and
their answers to lost men can bring neither conviction nor conversion in the biblical
sense of those terms. God’s work must be done in God’s way if it is to receive God’s
approval (cf: 1 Corinthians 3.10-15).
Footnote [1] For example, John Warwick Montgomery boldly asserts: ‘Non-Christian positions must be destroyed factually and the
Christian religion established factually. Any lesser procedure is the abrogation of apologetic responsibility to a fallen world’ (Once Upon An A Priori,
in Jerusalem and Athens, edited by E R Geehan [Nutley, NJ: Presbyterian and Reformed Publishing Co, 1971], p 388).
Footnote [2] Bernard Ramm is obviously quite wrong to say - ‘If a man has a prejudice against the Gospel it is the function of
apologetics and evidences to remove that prejudice Apologetics and Christian evidences cut down these objections to enable the Gospel once again to
directly confront the consciousness of a man’ (Protestant Christian Evidences [Chicago: Moody Press, 1953], pp 15-16).
Footnote [3] Whereas pure rationalism in apologetics would claim that unbelievers can be argued directly into the kingdom, semi-
rationalism claims that - ‘The purpose of apologetics is always merely to clear away the intellectual obstructions so that the Scriptures and the Holy Spirit
may do their work’ (Edward John Carnell, How Every Christian Can Defend His Faith, in Moody Monthly, February 1950).
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