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Friday, December 28, 2007
The Case for the Real Jesus
By David Limbaugh
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It's interesting that many who dismiss the Bible and certain essential Christian claims -- saying they believe there is scant evidence to support them -- are able to readily embrace rival belief systems and their texts, which are far less reliable.

Former atheist Lee Strobel has used his formidable journalistic and legal background as legal editor of the Chicago Tribune to research and write a number of bestselling books in defense of the Christian faith. His recently released "The Case for the Real Jesus" goes beyond the traditional apologetic to address some of the current attacks on the identity of Jesus Christ, typified by the heretical storyline in the popular The Da Vinci Code.

I strongly recommend this book this Christmas season because it compellingly debunks many of the most recent mythical challenges to Christianity. It is perfect for believers whose perceived spiritual security could be threatened by the crop of fantastic notions now circulating and for nonbelievers who are open to the evidence.

Strobel correctly observes that ideas have consequences and, particularly, what we believe about Jesus will have profound consequences for us individually. Since modern theories directly attack what Christians believe about the very identity of Jesus, Strobel wanted to examine their validity to determine whether the Christian idea of Christ could survive rigorous inquiry.

Having begun as a smug nonbeliever and converting only after subjecting Christianity's historical and doctrinal claims to scrupulous investigation, Strobel was unafraid to put his faith to the test once again. Are we, believers and nonbelievers alike, similarly unafraid?

Strobel asks, "Are you willing to set aside your preconceptions and let the evidence take you wherever it will? … I had to honestly ask myself that question when I was an atheist and decided to investigate the identity of Jesus. And more recently, this time as a Christian, I had to face that issue squarely once again when I was confronted by six potent challenges that could undermine everything I had come to believe about him."

Strobel points out that while the heretical ideas about Jesus achieved a new level of prominence in The Da Vinci Code, they have been around for years and have even been circulated widely in modern times preceding that story.

In the 1990s, Christian debunkers received a boost from a group of liberal Christian scholars known as the "Jesus Seminar." These professors examined the words and deeds of Jesus and, using colored beads to cast their votes, pronounced that fewer than 20 percent of the statements attributed to Jesus in the Bible were actually uttered by him. Continued...

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About The Author
David Limbaugh, brother of radio talk-show host Rush Limbaugh, is an expert in law and politics and author of Bankrupt: The Intellectual and Moral Bankruptcy of Today's Democratic Party.
 
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Subject: Lonestarblues-- 4 of 4
I liked the article by Michael Novak on "Christmas Atheists". (And your reference to CINOs.)

You said for you the Rosetta Stone is natural law and that you can not put faith in Divine Law. I would think natural law would be more your native tongue, not your Rosetta Stone. But I'm open to hearing more on that.

You close with a comment on there always being the mystery of the unknown-- for the both of us.

Yes, that is true. I do not claim to have eliminated the mystery of life, nor even the mysteries pertaining to the God I know in Christ.

But when the vastness of the unknown is like infinity to a chimp instead of infinity to a man I think there is actually more mystery in the knowing of the infinite God than there is in the not knowing of him.

I'm not sure there will be time for another full exchange as I will be traveling to Maine after Sunday and will not be able to post. I will be able to read though. I appreciate your openness to investigating the five facts presented in Strobel's book. I think we wrote more on it than HE did. :)

I hope it was helpful to both our ways of thinking-- and to your possible quest for believing.

Lonestarblues-- 3 of 4
On the matter of Jesus presenting, more than ideas but, the very Person of God: you speculate that he could be seen as presenting the latest of a long line of previous thoughts-- "a Jesus the Philosopher" view.

But if that were so, one has the very large question of why all the earliest writings about Jesus point in a completely different direction. About a third or more of each Gospel is dedicated to the last week of Jesus life. His Passion. And the earliest record of Jesus is probably the very passage behind our conversation-- 1 Corinthians 15:1-8.

It does not exactly follow that the disciples of Jesus misunderstood the essential way of looking at Jesus and still managed to be radically transformed by him. And they, in turn, passed on this "misunderstanding" in the face of much opposition, and transformed huge numbers of other people as well.
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