Jun
What is the Trinity?
posted in Basics of Christianity, God, Tough Questions by Jim Denison
It has been said that if the mind were simple enough for us to understand it, we would be too simple to understand it. Likewise, if God were simple enough for my finite, fallen mind to understand him, he would not be God. How does a mother explain marriage to her five year old daughter? How does a mathematician explain calculus to his third grade son?
Jun
Is there only one way to God?
posted in Basics of Christianity, God, Tough Questions by Jim Denison
Poliomyelitis, or polio, is a disease caused by tiny virus particles which attack the brain and spinal cord. Until this generation, polio was a kind of AIDS in American society. Why is polio not feared as it once was? The answer is named Jonas Edward Salk. Dr. Salk, an American research scientist, announced in 1953 that he had developed a trial vaccine for polio. By 1955, his discovery was being used across the world.
Jun
Where did God come from?
posted in Basics of Christianity, God, Tough Questions by Jim Denison
Every parent knows the question is coming. We asked it of our parents, and they of theirs. Who hasn’t stared at the clouds by day or the stars by night and wondered what lies beyond. Where did the world come from? What lies beyond the incomprehensibly vast universe? If there is a God, who made him? If someone made him, how can he be God? Our children’s questions are our own.
Jun
Why did God tell Abraham to sacrifice Isaac?
posted in Basics of Christianity, Bible, Tough Questions by Jim Denison
The week after my first son was born, I was scheduled to preach on Genesis 22 and the story of Abraham’s offering of Isaac. I had to change the sermon. As I told the congregation, I thought I didn’t understand this story before. Now I knew I didn’t. Read the rest of this entry »
Jun
Why did God tell the Jews to kill all the Canaanites?
posted in Basics of Christianity, Bible, Tough Questions by Jim Denison
The book of Joshua presents most readers with a troubling question: how can a God of love command his followers to destroy an entire nation of people? The Canaanites had lived in their land for centuries before Joshua and his people came to claim it for themselves. While some in Canaan fought against God’s people and were destroyed as a result (cf. the battle of Ai, 8:14ff), others did not attempt armed aggression against Israel. The people of Jericho, for instance, retreated inside their city walls and mounted no attack against the Jews. Nonetheless, following divine orders, the Israeli soldiers “destroyed with the sword every living thing in it—men and women, young and old, cattle, sheep and donkeys” (6:21). Read the rest of this entry »
Jun
How do I study the Bible?
posted in Basics of Christianity, Bible, Tough Questions by Jim Denison
Visitors to Hampton Court in London are amazed by the maze they find there. Bushes form solid walls, head high. In the center sits a guide high on a platform. When pilgrims get lost wandering through the hedges, they look up to this guide, who points them to the next turn on their way. Read the rest of this entry »
Jun
Isn’t the Bible filled with contradictions?
posted in Basics of Christianity, Bible, Tough Questions by Jim Denison
Here is one of the most common ways skeptics justify their skepticism about the Bible. The question is based on the commonplace supposition that contradictions are bad. If you can find a statement I make which disagrees with something I’ve already said, you’ll feel justified in rejecting both. Even though one may be right. Even though they both may be. Why? Read the rest of this entry »
Jun
What makes the Bible different from other religious books?
posted in Basics of Christianity, Bible, Tough Questions by Jim Denison
My grandfather was born before the turn of the 20th century. In his lifetime he saw the advent of the automobile, commercial airplanes, and the computer. But he never met a Muslim, a Hindu, a Buddhist, or a Mormon. Our question never occurred to him. Read the rest of this entry »
Jun
Who decided what books should be in the Bible?
posted in Basics of Christianity, Bible, Tough Questions by Jim Denison
My earliest experience with the Bible was leafing through an ancient King James Version my parents kept in the guest room. The fountain-penned family tree calligraphied in the first pages fascinated me. The printed thees and thous made no sense, the begats even less. I assumed the entire thing had been handed from God to man in black leather. Read the rest of this entry »
Jun
What is the Apocrypha? And what translation should I use?
posted in Basics of Christianity, Bible, Tough Questions by Jim Denison
Serving as a summer missionary in East Malaysia in 1979, I was privileged to bring a hundred or so paperback Malay New Testaments to the people. At one church, members stood in a long line to receive a copy. At the end of the line was an elderly woman. She took her Bible from me with trembling hands, held it close to her heart, and wept. I thought of all my Bibles at home gathering dust. Read the rest of this entry »

