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I'm a former agnostic, though after learning some A-T philosophy, I would have to classify myself as something of a classical theist at this point. I really enjoyed Feser's works on philosophy and I was wondering if anyone could point me in the direction of some works of similar quality that made the case for Christianity specifically.
Thanks in advance for any recommendations.
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CS Lewis, in general, makes a basic introduction to Christianity. His book Mere Christianity is still a pretty popular book for people who are interested in Christianity. His other works like the Screwtape Letters are pretty entertaining and interesting. Peter Kreeft also devotes work on basic Christianity. Check out some of his books like Fundamentals of the Faith or Jesus-Shock.
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I'm surprised nobody has mentioned William Lane Craig'sReasonable Faith. True WLC is a theistic personalist but that doesn't effect most of the volume's material (just ditch the Paleyian Design Argument and maybe his way of presenting the Problem of Evil).
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Craig also wrote a book, The Son Rises, that develops the historical argument for the Resurrection more seriously.
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May I add? N.T Wright also talks about the Resurrection of Christ. His book The Resurrection of the Son of God talks about these matters.
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Alexander wrote:
I agree that Reasonable Faith and The Son Rises are good books, but I would still give preference to a book like The Everlasting Man which gives a better overall image of Christianity. Some modern apologists give the impression to be a Christian you have to be either (1) a life-long specialist in physics, philosophy, and historical criticism, or else (2) accept everything by blind faith. Chesterton always portrays Christian faith and conversion in a way that is far more true to life - reasonable, but not in such a way that only an intellectual could know it.
I haven't read The Everlasting Man, but I'd agree that this is an important distinction. There are historical arguments for the Resurrection, and there are what might be called aesthetic arguments for Christianity. The latter show what Christianity comes to, in (for example) the lives of the saints throughout history.
Somewhat relatedly, there is another wide class of arguments that deal with the epistemology of faith. I like David Johnson's Hume, Holism, and Miracles, which argues that Hume's On Miracles, and all riffs thereon by subsequent philosophers, inevitably begs the question against a holistic view according to which someone might have justified belief in miracles on the basis of (say) someone else's testimony. That is a theme that Catholic thinkers have sometimes touched on. See, for instance, a few of Elizabeth Anscombe's essays on believing people; James Ross's chapter on the religious belief of ordinary people in his book on the philosophy of religion; and Linda Zagzebski's Epistemic Authority. Of course there are also the reformed epistemologists like Plantinga, allowing that belief in God might be properly basic and therefore justified, even if most people cannot give explicit justifications. None of these arguments are attempts to show the truth of Christianity, or theism for that matter, but they are attempts to show that belief in Christianity can be rational. But even if they don't reach the truth of Christianity, what makes them noteworthy in juxtaposition with natural theological arguments is that it is (often) the rationality of Christianity and not mere theism at which they aim.
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Butler's Analogy is well worth a read.
They're not one book, but the Fathers are perhaps the greatest of Christian apologists, and among the greatest philosophers and theologians.
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Greg wrote:
Craig also wrote a book, The Son Rises, that develops the historical argument for the Resurrection more seriously.
How is Craig's presentation?
I read "The Case for the Resurrection of Jesus" by Habermas / Licona. It was a really nice, simplified breakdown of the so-called minimal facts approach. I can't see it converting any atheists / agnostics, but if you're already a generic theist, as I am, it certainly adds plausibility to the claims made by historical Christianity.
To everyone else: thanks for the recommendations. Got some reading to do.
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RBrad wrote:
Greg wrote:
Craig also wrote a book, The Son Rises, that develops the historical argument for the Resurrection more seriously.
How is Craig's presentation?
I'm really not sure. I read it a while ago, and it's not a field I am familiar with. I think it has been fairly well received, though.
Apparently, The Son Rises condenses Craig's work in a much more detailed study, Assessing the New Testament Evidence for the Historicity of the Resurrection of Jesus. (I had thought that The Son Rises was the detailed one, and that a part of Reasonable Faith condenses that. Which is probably true. But apparently there is a "master work".) Unfortunately the Amazon vendors price the latter quite prohibitively.