
Please Convince Me is my absolute favorite podcast. The host, J. Warner Wallace, is a cold case homicide detective. He has a real job! And he talks about Christian things like you might expect a detective to talk – everything is logic, case-making and evidence. Very cool.
Why Being Respected Is Better Than Being Liked
The most interesting segment starts at 8 minutes and ends at 21 minutes in.
Topics
- humans have an innate desire to be liked and to fit in with their peers
- there are times when our desire to do what is right will conflict with the desire to be liked and to fit in
- 1 Peter talks about how Christian living in the world will often have these conflicts
- Christians have a different standard and that creates conflicts with the surrounding culture
- at times like this, it is important for us to be RESPECTED rather than LIKED
- being a Christian conflicts with the goal of being popular
- two ways for us to proceed: 1) agree with others, 2) be who you are and let others agree with you
- James also says that there is a conflict between being friends with the world and friends with God
- you cannot have both friendship with the world and friendship with God
- even non-believers understand that there is a conflict between morality and the hedonistic culture\
- courage is needed in order to resist the pressure to embrace the beliefs of others in order to be liked
- courage is needed in order to point others to the truth so that they change to match what is true
- politicians often change their positions in order to appeal to the culture
- politicians seem to shy away from trying to argue through why others should accept their positions
- we should seek to influence others by explaining why others should accept what we believe
- we should have the courage to make the case for what we believe
- even if people do not accept our beliefs, they will still respect the way we can make the case
- they will respect our courage in being willing to prepare a case and make the case in public
- they will respect that we have not formed our beliefs based on feelings
- we need to get better at knowing more stuff and communicating that knowledge better
- wanting to be popular is too easy
- we should take the harder path and desire to be respected instead of liked
Other topics from listeners:
- the interpretation of “thou shalt not kill” in the Bible
- can a person still be a Christian if they are not doing works, like tithing or serving in the church?
- theistic evolution and the presumption of naturalism in science
And here’s another good podcast – it’s on the same topic as the PCM post I linked before.
Stop Teaching Young Christians About Their Faith
Topics:
- our nation is becoming more and more secular
- secularism makes it harder for us to defend our faith and values in public and influence the culture
- why is secularism happening? it’s because young people are walking away from the faith
- young Christians are leaving the faith in high school and college
- this is where the real battleground is – and that’s where apologists need to focus
- we need to be focused especially on junior high school and high school, and to a lesser degree college
- it’s good that we have lots scholars working physics, philosophy and biology
- but what we really need is ordinary Christians to get serious about apologetics and work on young people
- some people believe that there is no great youth exodus problem: are they right to doubt the statistics
- it’s undeniable that young people are inarticulate about their faith – that much is certain
- what young people in church actually believ is not Christianity, but moralistic therapeutic deism
- young people: life is about feeling good, being liked, and nice people of all religions are saved
- young people think that there is so little substance to Christianity that it can’t even be discussed
- the focus among young people today is not on true beliefs, but on being kinds to others
- even in churches, there is higher respect for helping others than on having knowledge and evidence
- instead of focusing on the worldview that grounds good works, the focus is on good works
- young people have learned to minimize discussions about specifics of theology
- teachers and college professors are hostile to public expressions of evangelical Christianity
- television is also hostile and much less Christian than it used to be
- even if young people come back to the church, they come back for the wrong reasons
- the adults come back for tradition and comfort but they don’t really believe Christianity is true
- they want to pick and choose what they believe based on what they like, like going to a buffet
- they return to church when they have kids so that their kids will absorb values – but not truth
- that’s what we have sitting in the pews: people who think Christianity is false, but “useful”
- and that’s why so many christians are so liberal on social values (abortion, same-sex marriage)
- they don’t really accept the Bible as authoritative, they pick and choose what they like and don’t like
- if Christianity is taught as “useful” then they will dump it when they find something more “useful”
- people who leave the church are exposed to Christianity, but it doesn’t stick
- young people lose their faith before college, and then when they escape the nest, they act it out
- the disconnecting from the faith occurs in high school, but it only becomes public after they leave home
- young people are becoming more focused on redefining “the good life” with consumption and materialism
- the typical experience of young adults involves alcohol use, drug use, and recreational sex
- young people actually want more than niceness – they want real answers to serious questions
- young people have doubts and questions, but no one in the church or home is equipped to answer them
- adults have to be involved in the education of young people
- parents who are engaged in teaching their children Christian truths see much better retention rates
- we need to stop teaching people (one-way preaching) and start training them (two-way interactive)
- when you give a young person a definite goal – a fight with a date certain – then they will be engaged
- when people know that they will fail unless they can perform, then they will be more engaged in learning
- church needs to be in the business of scheduling battles, and then training young people for the battles
- there is no sense of urgency, risk and purpose in young people, so the teaching is not effective
I’m absolutely sure you will love these podcasts. Give them a listen! I’m pretty sure that he will put me in jail if you don’t listen to them. So, um… please do!