Resumé of previous articles None of us argues their way to faith, but after we’ve come to faith, we may well find that we have to justify it to ourselves. Read more about 'Why I believe in God (6): the Bible'...
Resumé of previous articles None of us argues their way to faith, but after we’ve come to faith, we may well find that we have to justify it to ourselves. Read more about 'Why I believe in God (6): the Bible'...
We don’t usually think of the Roman Catholic Church as suffering from the kind of worship-wars which have so often disrupted Evangelical churches. Read more about 'Worship wars, and the ‘simple people’'...
Resumé of previous articles None of us argues their way to faith, but after we’ve come to faith, we may well find that we have to justify it to ourselves. Read more about 'Why I believe in God (5): The Empty Tomb'...
First of all, a word of recapitulation. Read more about 'Why I believe in God (4): Jesus, God among us'...
It is not on the physical universe only that the Creator left his footprints. He has also left them on the story of the human race. Read more about 'Why I believe in God (3): his footprints in creation'...
Theology, in a nutshell, is about putting people in a position where they can speak a word about God; and since almost everyone has something to say about God, almost… Read more about 'What's theology about?'...
As I mentioned in my last posting, Saint Paul’s statement that every human being is by nature aware of God’s eternal power and godhead is an entirely apt description of… Read more about 'Why I believe in God (2): the bankruptcy of the alternatives'...
All my life I’ve believed in God. That may sound like a dangerous admission. Read more about 'Why I believe in God (1): a sense of deity'...
This is the substance of a talk given at the Scottish Evangelical Society Annual Conference in Glasgow, 21st – 22nd March, 2018. Read more about 'The Greatness of God: a meditation '...
A review of A Trinitarian Theology of Religions, by Gerald R. McDermott and Harold A. Netland (Oxford University Press. 331 pages. No price. ISBN 978-0-19-975183-9). Read more about 'The world of religions: a book review'...