In Intellectual Neutral

Here is an excerpt from an article on loving God with all of your mind by William Lane Craig

“A number of years ago, two books appeared that sent shock waves through the American educational community. The first of these, Cultural Literacy: What Every American Needs to Know, by E.D. Hirsch, documented the fact that large numbers of American college students do not have the basic background knowledge to understand the front page of a newspaper or to act responsibly as a citizen. For example, a quarter of the students in a recent survey thought Franklin D. Roosevelt was president during the Vietnam War. Two-thirds did not know when the Civil War occurred. One-third thought Columbus discovered the New World sometime after 1750. In a recent survey at California State University at Fullerton, over half the students could not identify Chaucer or Dante. Ninety percent did not know who Alexander Hamilton was, despite the fact that his picture is on every ten dollar bill.

These statistics would be funny if they weren’t so alarming. What has happened to our schools that they should be producing such dreadfully ignorant people? Alan Bloom, who was an eminent educator at the University of Chicago and the author of the second book I referred to above, argued in his The Closing of the American Mind. that behind the current educational malaise lies the universal conviction of students that all truth is relative and, therefore, that truth is not worth pursuing….(MORE)

Do you listen?

He who scorns instruction will pay for it, but he who respects a command is rewarded.–Proverbs 13:13

We all need good input along the way. How quickly we seek it and heed it has a lot to do with our success. God’s word is our primary source of input but don’t neglect bringing wise friends and mentors in as well.

William Lane Craig at Watermark Community Church on the Moral Argument for God’s Existence

Does God exist? Is there any good evidence for this claim? I think so. And one of the better arguments is the Moral argument. Dr. Craig gives a short explanation of it here.

For more, see Craig’s website, Reasonable Faith and also his book by the same title:

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Welcome to College

Which Jesus?

“Students of Jesus today are faced with a multitude of options, ranging from the traditional Jesus who was Savior, Lord, and founder of the church, to a Jesus who was considerably different—a Jesus who was a sage, a religious genius or social revolutionary. These latter three portraits though clearly drawing their energies from live wires in the Gospels, leave us with a Jesus who is not big enough to explain his crucifixion, his following, or development of the Church. If we today are going to be honest about Jesus, we have to choose a Jesus who satisfies all the evidence historians have observed and who will also explain why it is that so many people have found him to be so wonderful that they attend churches every week to worship him.”—Scot McKnight

For more, see the excellent book, Jesus Under Fire by Wilkins and Moreland