Methodological principle: dismissing miracle claims in historical sources reflects worldview bias, not following the evidence
Responding to the claim that miracle claims in historical sources can be safely dismissed
Bart Ehrman is in a small minority who deny Jesus was known
Next →Audience question: "Consensus holds Jesus existed but was no
Responses
What Winger Presently Gets Wrong: Women Apostles
Response to Mike Winger's Women in Ministry Part 5 on whether women were apostles in the New Testament
The Case for the Resurrection of Jesus
Gary R. Habermas and Michael R. Licona — Kindle highlights from 'The Case for the Resurrection of Jesus'. 110 highlights.
The Giving Part 2: Judas the Betrayer, a Balanced View of the Sovereignty of God
[Music] the giving is a balanced view of the sovereignty of God God's sovereignty is vitally important for us to know God yet it's God's sovereignty taught as a system of theological thought which can lead to a person reading into the biblical text an outside concept that is foreign to the writers i...
Your Tags
Personal labels you apply to any item — separate from system topics. Tags are shared across all databases. Visit /tags to browse all your tags.
...more
Personal labels you apply to any item — separate from system topics. Tags are shared across all databases. Visit /tags to browse all your tags.
...more