Timothy Paul Jones

Free apologetics resources from Timothy Paul Jones

Timothy Paul Jones

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Apologetics: How Can Presuppositional Apologists Use Classical and Evidential Arguments?

29th December 2020

How do the classical arguments for God’s existence fit into presuppositional apologetics? Or do they? Is there any place for the teleological, cosmological, or ontological arguments in presuppositionalism? And what about historical texts, artifacts, and arguments? Can evidences from history help to make a presuppositionalist case for faith or not?

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Filed Under: Apologetics, Blog, History, Learn Tagged With: apologetics, B.B. Warfield, classical, classical apologetics, Cornelius Van Til, evidential, evidential apologetics, natural theology, presuppositional, presuppositionalism, Thomas Aquinas, Van Til

Apologetics: How Much Intellectual Common Ground Is There Between a Christian and a Non-Christian? Common Notions and Common Ground in the Writings of Cornelius Van Til

19th September 2020

The thinking of a Christian and a non-Christian diverges at the most basic level. The believer in Jesus Christ sees all of reality from the cognitive perspective of an individual who lives with “the mind of Christ” and whose life is shaped by the Word of God (1 Corinthians 2:16). This does not cause Christians […]

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Filed Under: Apologetics, Blog Tagged With: Alister McGrath, apologetics, canons of Dordt, common grace, common ground, common notions, Cornelius Van Til, Dordt, Dort, Dortrecht, evidential apologetics, evidentialism, presuppositional, presuppositional apologetics, presuppositionalism, presuppositionalist, Reformation, Reformed theology, Synod of Dordt, Van Tilian, Van Tillian

Timothy Paul Jones and Garrick Bailey: How to Do Apologetics in a Skeptical Age

18th August 2020

Have you ever heard terms like “presuppositionalism,” “evidentialism,” or “classical apologetics”? Have you wondered if there’s an easier way to understand apologetics? Maybe you’ve even wished that people could defend the Christian faith in a skeptical age without talking about these terms at all. If so, this episode is for you! (Actually, every episode is […]

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Filed Under: Apologetics, Audio, History, music review, Podcast, Three Chords and the Truth: The Apologetics Podcast Tagged With: apologetics, Augustine, Augustine of Hippo, Backstreet Boys, Chatraw, classical, cosmological, evidential, evidentialism, Frozen, inside out, inside out apologetics, James K.A. Smith, Josh Chatraw, Kenny Loggins, Meet Me Halfway, presuppositional, presuppositionalism, secular, skeptical, tassological, teleological, Tina Turner

Robert Plummer: Do the Gospels Tell the Truth? + “Truth, Goodness, and Beauty” (The Cure)

19th May 2020

What does it mean to say that the Bible tells the truth? Do the Gospels tell the truth? And what should Christians do when they find a claim in the Bible that looks like a contradiction? Do the Gospels Tell the Truth? New Testament scholar and Daily Dose of Greek mastermind Rob Plummer joins Garrick […]

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Filed Under: Apologetics, Audio, History, music review, Podcast, Three Chords and the Truth: The Apologetics Podcast Tagged With: apologetics, atheism, Bible, history, inerrancy, presuppositional, presuppositionalism, Rob Plummer, Robert Smith, The Cure, Worldview

J. Warner Wallace: A Cold-Case Detective Looks at the Gospels + “Another Brick in the Wall” (Pink Floyd)

12th May 2020

What happens when a cold-case detective applies his investigative skills to the New Testament Gospels? Find out as Timothy meets up with award-winning detective and bestselling apologetics author J. Warner Wallace. In addition to being a detective and apologist, Wallace is also a guitarist, bassist, and—Timothy is thrilled beyond words to discover—a fan of Steve […]

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Filed Under: Apologetics, Audio, Blog, Books, History, Learn, music review, Music reviews, Podcast, Three Chords and the Truth: The Apologetics Podcast Tagged With: Another Brick in the Wall, apologetics, evidentialism, Gospels, history, J. Warner Wallace, pig, Pink Floyd, presuppositionalism

Apologetics: An Activity for You to Try While Socially Distanced

25th April 2020

Here’s the final examination for students in this semester’s on-campus section of 28700 Christian Apologetics. My goal in this class is never for students merely to regurgitate information. I want to equip students to recognize inadequate worldviews in a variety of cultural artifacts and to engage these inadequate worldviews with gospel-centered apologetics. That’s why this […]

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Filed Under: Blog Tagged With: 28700, apologetics, classical, evidential, examination, presuppositionalism, Southern Seminary, The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary

Apologetics: Did Cornelius Van Til Really Teach that Non-Christians Know Nothing?

11th February 2020

I am not a Van Tilian presuppositionalist, though I am sympathetic with certain aspects of Cornelius Van Til’s approach. Over the past few years, I have—to the best of my knowledge—read every book and syllabus that Van Til wrote related to apologetics. Even after reading several thousand pages of Cornelius Van Til’s writings, I do […]

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Filed Under: Apologetics, Blog, Book reviews, History, Learn, Solve Tagged With: apologetics, Cornelius Van Til, critic, criticism, criticisms, criticisms of Van Til, critics, critique, critiques, Hegel, idealism, Kelly James Clark, misunderstandings of Van Til, presuppositional, presuppositional apologetics, presuppositionalism, transcendental argument, Van Til, Van Tilian, Van Tillian

Apologetics: Natural Theology, Evidential Apologetics, and Thomas Aquinas in Stanley Hauerwas’s Gifford Lectures

4th February 2020

I recently finished reading With the Grain of the Universe: The Church’s Witness and Natural Theology, the published text of Stanley Hauerwas’s 2001 Gifford Lectures at the University of St. Andrews. In one sense, this particular iteration of the Gifford Lectures was a failure—but it can hardly be regarded as an authentic failure, because the […]

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Filed Under: Apologetics, Blog, Book reviews, Learn Tagged With: antithesis, Aquinas, church history, Cornelius Van Til, ecclesiology, Gifford Lectures, Hauerwas, history, presuppositionalism, Reinhold Niebuhr, Stanley Hauerwas, Thomas Aquinas, Thomism, William James

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