Resources For Sharing Your Faith with Friends and Coworkers
Are you ready to share your hope? Do you want to share your faith, but worry you will get into situations where you don’t have the answers? Or are you struggling with a tough question of your own? Either way, there are fabulous resources out there for you. We’ve put together some of the greatest hits on the hardest topics – and most compelling cases – for faith today.
Are you ready to share your hope? Do you want to share your faith, but worry you will get into situations where you don’t have the answers? Or are you struggling with a tough question of your own?
Either way, there are fabulous resources out there for you. We’ve put together some of the greatest hits on the hardest topics – and most compelling cases – for faith today:
Is God Real? — David Platt
Platt’s approach to atheists about God, leading with the wonder of the created world and our innate need as humans to do good.
Can You Defend Your Hope in Christ? - Desiring God
John Piper offers seven reasons why Christ is the ultimate source of hope.
Answers to “Tough” Questions - The Veritas Forum
The Veritas Forum fosters dialogue and discovery on Christian topics across university campuses nationwide. In this 2008 Veritas Forum at Columbia University, best-selling author and pastor Tim Keller fields many tough questions from NBC journalist Martin Bashir and Columbia University's David Eisenbach.
Do you struggle with one of these common questions about faith or wonder how to respond if someone brings it up?
Check out Tim Keller’s compelling responses to some of the most popular questions & challenges for Christians today:
- Are faith and reason contradictory?
- Is God just a projection of our cultural circumstances?
- Is it narrow to believe in one God? Is everyone else going to hell?
- Is the Bible trustworthy?
- What about the behavior of so-called Christians?
- Are you resolutely convinced today that Christianity is true?
- How could God allow evil and suffering?
- Does it take faith to be an atheist?
- What does Christianity have against homosexuals? Are they going to hell?
- Why is Christianity so exclusive?
- What do you believe about politics?
- How do you get to heaven?
- Why would God make people who sin?
- What happened for you to have so much peace?
Books To Share With Friends and Coworkers:
Randy Pope explores the Answer to living a life of true satisfaction and offers practical ways to share that knowledge with others.
Lee Strobel cross-examines a dozen experts from the world’s most elite universities, asking hard-hitting questions--and taking a deeper look at the evidence for Christ from the fields of science, philosophy, and history.
Timothy Keller addresses the frequent doubts that skeptics (and even ardent believers) have about religion – using literature, philosophy, real-life conversations, and potent reasoning to explain how the belief in a Christian God is, in fact, a sound and rational one.
Richard E. Simmons III offers a series of short essays seeking to answer life’s most enduring question: Does God exist?
Helpful Tip: Offer to read one of these books along with your friend or colleague. Consider breaking it up into parts and planning to meet to discuss after you each complete the agreed upon reading.
Are you ready to share your hope? Do you want to share your faith, but worry you will get into situations where you don’t have the answers? Or are you struggling with a tough question of your own?
Either way, there are fabulous resources out there for you. We’ve put together some of the greatest hits on the hardest topics – and most compelling cases – for faith today:
Is God Real? — David Platt
Platt’s approach to atheists about God, leading with the wonder of the created world and our innate need as humans to do good.
Can You Defend Your Hope in Christ? - Desiring God
John Piper offers seven reasons why Christ is the ultimate source of hope.
Answers to “Tough” Questions - The Veritas Forum
The Veritas Forum fosters dialogue and discovery on Christian topics across university campuses nationwide. In this 2008 Veritas Forum at Columbia University, best-selling author and pastor Tim Keller fields many tough questions from NBC journalist Martin Bashir and Columbia University's David Eisenbach.
Do you struggle with one of these common questions about faith or wonder how to respond if someone brings it up?
Check out Tim Keller’s compelling responses to some of the most popular questions & challenges for Christians today:
- Are faith and reason contradictory?
- Is God just a projection of our cultural circumstances?
- Is it narrow to believe in one God? Is everyone else going to hell?
- Is the Bible trustworthy?
- What about the behavior of so-called Christians?
- Are you resolutely convinced today that Christianity is true?
- How could God allow evil and suffering?
- Does it take faith to be an atheist?
- What does Christianity have against homosexuals? Are they going to hell?
- Why is Christianity so exclusive?
- What do you believe about politics?
- How do you get to heaven?
- Why would God make people who sin?
- What happened for you to have so much peace?
Books To Share With Friends and Coworkers:
Randy Pope explores the Answer to living a life of true satisfaction and offers practical ways to share that knowledge with others.
Lee Strobel cross-examines a dozen experts from the world’s most elite universities, asking hard-hitting questions--and taking a deeper look at the evidence for Christ from the fields of science, philosophy, and history.
Timothy Keller addresses the frequent doubts that skeptics (and even ardent believers) have about religion – using literature, philosophy, real-life conversations, and potent reasoning to explain how the belief in a Christian God is, in fact, a sound and rational one.
Richard E. Simmons III offers a series of short essays seeking to answer life’s most enduring question: Does God exist?
Helpful Tip: Offer to read one of these books along with your friend or colleague. Consider breaking it up into parts and planning to meet to discuss after you each complete the agreed upon reading.