Related Resources: Answers To Tough Questions
Should Christians take part in Easter and Christmas celebrations?
How can Christians claim that their faith is rational when it holds to so many apparent contradictio
How could Jesus be both God and man at the same time?
What is the rapture?
Isn't it a sign of deficient faith when a sick Christian isn't healed or a Christian isn't delivered
Is it possible that the gospel account of the suffering and death of Jesus Christ, as portrayed in T
Does the phrase "only begotten Son" in John 3:16 imply that Jesus was derived from the Father in som
How could Jesus be God if He had the limitations of a human being?
How can it be morally right for Jesus Christ to die for our sins?
When will the rapture occur?
When there are so many religions in the world, how can Christianity claim to be the only way to God?
Does everyone who rejects the gospel understand what he or she is rejecting?
Is Christianity a European religion?
Is it true that Jesus never claimed to be God?
Does Matthew 27:25 imply that all Jews are universally responsible for Christ’s death?
Is it anti-Semitic for the New Testament to refer to the hostility of “the Jews”?
Even if Jesus was a messenger from God, why shouldn’t I believe He was merely one of many divine messengers, like Rama, Krishna, or Buddha?
How often in the history of the church have people mistakenly believed they were acting in fulfillment, or observing the fulfillment, of prophecy?
If the Christian view of God is the only right one, why are believers in magic or other religions sometimes miraculously healed of disease or injury?
If God exists, why doesn’t He make His existence something provable and undeniable?
Did Mary, Joseph’s wife and the mother of Jesus, ever give birth to other children?
What should I think of recent claims made in the media that Jesus Christ is legendary and never existed?
Does the fact that few ancient non-Christian sources refer to Jesus imply that He may not have really existed but is only a legend of the early church?
What should I think of claims that Jesus was just a wandering philosopher who was imaginatively transformed after His death into a legendary, wonder-working “god-man”?
Doesn’t the fact that Paul didn’t quote Jesus show that he wasn’t interested in Him as a real person but only as a means of promoting his new faith in a (metaphorically) “risen Christ”?
Is Christianity less inclined to violence than other religions and ideologies?
If Christianity as a belief system isn’t inclined towards violence, why have Christian nations shed so much blood?