Creation & the Bible (Apologetics Course)

“I may not be a trained speaker, but I do have knowledge.”
                                                                       2 Corinthians 11:6, NIV

We can take a clue from one of the most influential and effective writers who ever lived—knowledge is important.

I’m generally a proponent of the big-thoughts-small-words school of thinking, but have recently been impressed by an apologetics ministry called Reasons To Believe. They offer apologetics courses, which you can read about here.  If you are interested in apologetics, please consider giving their courses a go.  I’m planning on taking their course entitled Creation and the Bible, which starts March 26, 2012.  You can read about their distance learning approach at the Reasons Institute web page.

Hope to see you in class!


The Golden Gate

This video ties archaeology and history to Matthew 17, and provides some context for the turmoil that surrounds Jerusalem—substantially predating the first century and continuing to this day.

Check out the links at the end of this post.  The Biblical Archaeology Review (BAR) is a fascinating resource that will engage your imagination and help you see the Bible.


Credits & Sources:

Day of Discovery More Than a Miracle
Gates of the Old City of Jerusalem
Golden Gate (Jerusalem)
Map of Jerusalem in the Time of Jesus
Biblical Archaeology Review
Where Jesus Walked DVD (Biblical Archaeology Review)
Matthew 17


Sermon on the Mount

The core teachings of Jesus Christ are recorded in Matthew’s account of the Sermon on the Mount.  This video is an experiment, using the Glo Bible and other online resources to build upon Dick Woodward’s Mini Bible College lessons.  Dick has some unique views on the context and content of Jesus’ formative teaching.

[vimeo 30211208]

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The Gates of Hell

Not long ago I visited St. Peter’s Basilica in Rome, and marvelled under Michelangelo’s magnificent dome at the fragmented scripture comprising the inscription around its base.  The inscription reads, “You are Peter and on this rock I will build my Church…to you I will give the keys of the kingdom of Heaven.” excerpted from Matthew 16:18-20.  There wasn’t enough room for the entire text of verse 18 which reads (according to the NIV), “And I tell you that you are Peter, and on this rock I will build my church, and the gates of Hades will not overcome it.”  Pretty impressive, particularly when gazing up into that dome.

A year later Joe Stowell stood in front of a cave called “the Gates of Hell” on a Day of Discovery broadcast.  I then realized that there is a real place called the Gates of Hell, and the scripture of Matthew 16 was much more graphic—more ‘real’.

Then I came across the following clip from Ray Vander Laan‘s “Faith Lessons” DVD series.  Ray puts this scripture in context.  It was a graduation ceremony of sorts for the disciples.  Jesus took them to Caesarea Philippi, stood below that cave and told them that no culture would prevail against His kingdom.  They would then leave Caesarea Philippi and head to Jerusalem and the crucifixion.

As Ray points out in this gifted teaching, we are charged by Christ with a mission, and that mission involves attacking our culture.  But we are not called to attack like the crusaders.  We are called to attack using the example of Jesus Christ—with love, forgiveness, gentleness, patience, respect and joy in our hearts.  Sounds easy enough—until you try.  As the Apostle Paul wrote in 1st Thessalonians, “Make sure that nobody pays back wrong for wrong, but always try to be kind to each other and everyone else.” (1 Thessalonians 5:15).  The ‘trying’ is very important.  When?  Always.  To whom?  Everyone.

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Tools for Bible Study

If you want to accomplish just about anything you need tools.

Just a few years ago a disciple’s tools included lots of large books: concordances, commentaries, Bible dictionaries and encyclopedias, multiple translations of the Bible, atlases, classic references (e.g. the writings of Josephus, Fox’s Book of Martyrs), modern authors (e.g. Oswald Chambers, Billy Graham, C.S. Lewis, Charles Spurgeon), and so on.  Our teachers had great discipline in studying the Bible.

Just as technology has revolutionized everything else, it has certainly made self-directed Bible study an incredibly easy and enjoyable undertaking.  No more tomes or trips to libraries—just videos, hyperlinks, electronically searchable texts, and a limitless wealth of free, digital references and information.  So how do we make sense of all the available material and keep our study focused? Yup, tools.

We have so many great tools and resources to share that this topic deserves its own category.  Welcome to our ‘Tools’ category.

You can use our Toolbox page as a general starting point—and look for more tools in future posts—but for now here are a couple of videos that highlight two powerful resources: BibleStudyTools.com and Evernote.  BibleStudyTools.com is my first stop when searching anything in the Bible.  Nothing else comes close to its’ ease of use and powerful, linked, filtered search capabilities.  Evernote is an amazing device that remembers everything and helps you recall anything quickly and effortlessly. Evernote has great application beyond Bible study, but it is also amazingly helpful for this purpose.