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Christians are called to give a reason for their hope, which requires disciplined thinking and sound reasoning. You don't need all the answers to share your faith effectively - honesty about what you don't know often works better than pretending to be a know-it-all. Christianity is built on solid reason and evidence, not blind faith. Our incredible brains, with 86 billion neurons and 100 trillion connections, point to an intelligent Creator who wants us to think well. To do this, we must avoid logical fallacies like ad hominem attacks, straw man arguments, and false dichotomies. God is logical and orderly, inviting us to reason with Him, and the Gospel represents His ultimate wisdom for defeating evil and redeeming humanity.
By Jon AlsdorfChristians are called to give a reason for their hope, which requires disciplined thinking and sound reasoning. You don't need all the answers to share your faith effectively - honesty about what you don't know often works better than pretending to be a know-it-all. Christianity is built on solid reason and evidence, not blind faith. Our incredible brains, with 86 billion neurons and 100 trillion connections, point to an intelligent Creator who wants us to think well. To do this, we must avoid logical fallacies like ad hominem attacks, straw man arguments, and false dichotomies. God is logical and orderly, inviting us to reason with Him, and the Gospel represents His ultimate wisdom for defeating evil and redeeming humanity.