Apart form God, Facts are Mute

I. Anti-theism assumes that God has no bearing upon facts.

 

A. Anti-theism makes the naïve assumption that facts are there as the ultimates at the outset.

(Such vain reasoning is a function of assumed human autonomy. For without God, the human

mind arrogates to itself the task of supplying unity between facts.) [1]

1. The natural man thinks that he can supply the connection between facts. He assumes that

he is the final reference point in predication. In order for man to succeed at relating facts, he

would have to be able to do the following:

a.) He must be able to make a system that allows him to see

exhaustively all of the relations between facts.

b.) He must reduce the facts that confront him to logical relations. The individuality of each fact

must be given up in order that it may be wholly known by man.

c.) He must strive for exhaustive knowledge, in short, he must be omniscient. [2] (Man does not

strive for exhaustive knowledge.

Why should he? His presuppositional commitment to a temporal notion of reality attributes

facts to chance.)

2. The natural man’s attitude about the interpretation of facts can be summarized as follows:

a.) He considers himself the ultimate judge of what can or cannot be. (He will not allow any

authority to be above him revealing what has or has not happened and what will or will not

happen in the future.)

b.) His assumption of autonomy works against an understanding of God’s nature. He denies

that God is sovereign controller of all phenomena. The natural man denies that the universe is

created, controlled and redeemed by Christ.

c.) The above assertions imply a third: that man’s thought is absolutely original. He assumes

that the interpretation he makes for himself will be true for him because his thought is

“legislative” with respect to his environment.

d.) The facts of man’s environment are not created or controlled by the providence of God. They

are brute facts (uninterpreted and ultimately irrational because they exist in a universe

controlled by chance). [3]

B. If the facts of the universe are not interpreted to the glory of God, man is left with an atomistic concept of knowledge.

In that system of irrationality, facts have no meaningful relation to one

another, no significant contact.

1. There is not a single fact that can be interpreted rightly without reference to God as Creator of

that fact. Man cannot truly apply the category of causality to facts without the presupposition of

God. [4]

2. The assumption of brute fact is the most basic denial of the creation doctrine. (We need to

challenge man’s ability to interpret any fact unless that fact be created by God and unless man

himself is created by God.) [5]  (Man’s “quarrel” with God is never about any fact or combination

of facts. The argument is about the nature of facts. Back of that there is the argument about the 

nature of man. The unbeliever denies that he is a dependent creature accountable to God. [6]

3. Brute facts are mute facts -- they are ultimately meaningless if they do not reveal God. Like

beads with no holes and a string with no ends, unrelated, uninterpreted facts are the product of

an irrational world view. [7]

4. All facts are God’s facts. God conditions and structures all reality. In order for man to NOT

see facts for what they are (God’s facts), man asserts the non-createdness of reality. The

natural man’s assumption of brute fact is based upon his presupposition

about the nature of reality. [8]

5. Brute facts are facts that are unrelated to God’s plan. The Christian world view asserts that

there are no facts that are unrelated to God’s plan. (Because there is one system of reality,

there are no brute facts.)

II. The most fundamental question in epistemology is, “Can facts be

known without God?”

 

 A. Only God can give unity to the facts. The debate with the unbeliever cannot be settled by a direct appeal to facts. The reason for this is that only a final reference point can make facts intelligible  [9]

 

B. Presuppositional apologetics exposes the following: One’s starting point is not the samelevel of being as the facts to be studied  [10]  (A transcendental argument determines

the presupposition behind the fact. The traditional method of apologetics sees facts as more

ultimate than one’s world view.) [11]

C. The natural man sees facts as existing by their own power. The unbeliever clings to this epistemology because it allows him to retain his autonomy [12]

1. If a person presupposes chance, he won’t be able to find Christianity in the facts. (Although

they study facts in depth, more than 95% of scientists are unbelievers. Because unbelieving

scientists presuppose a chance universe, they deny all the authority structures and

relationships set up by God.) [13]

2. The believer and the unbeliever do not have a common method of knowing.

a.) When the unbeliever interprets the world, he sees every fact through the lens of his own

autonomy. He views reality as consisting of a non-created or purely contingent factual space-

time cosmos and a non-created, timeless, abstract principle of logic.[ [14]

b.) The presuppositionalist rejects the idea of a common ground of interpretation. Such

common ground would be a meaningless absurdity. Can any one intelligently assume that he

is both a creature and not a creature, a sinner and not a sinner? [15]

III. Only a Christian philosophy of facts can explain facts.

 

A. Only a universal can give meaning to facts. The question is, which universal can state or give meaning to any fact? There is only one such universal, the Godof Christianity  [16]

1. The Christian’s view of reality is based upon his view of being.  God is the ultimate reference

point for all knowledge. God’s control of all things demands the coherence of knowledge.

a.) Every transaction in the realm of knowledge necessarily has an ultimate reference point.

God’s knowledge is the basis for all coherent thought.

b.) The coherence of God’s thought is the very foundation of human knowledge. (It is the

apologist’s task to show the unbeliever that he has no intelligent philosophy of fact.) [17]

c.) Only the Christian can claim ultimate rationalism. The interpretation of all things by God’s

revelation is the basis for unified rational thought.

2. A coherent world view is the condition of knowledge.

a.) The Christian must argue that the unbeliever’s outlook renders pivotal concepts such as

fact, reason, experience, science, necessity, meaning and morality unintelligibledue the

incoherence of the unbeliever’s world view. [18] (The apologist seeks to remove the

unbeliever’s foundation by reducing his world view to absurdity.)

b.) The absurdity of autonomous philosophy is described by Van Til: “If you have a bottomless

sea of chance, and if you as an individual, are but a bit of chance, and if the law of contradiction

has by chance grown up within you, the imposition of this law on your environment is, granted it

could take place, a perfectly futile activity.” [19]

c.) Christianity is the only position that does not take away the very foundation for intelligible

scientific and philosophic procedure. (The unbeliever actually has been working and thinking in

terms of two conflicting world views. He openly acknowledges the autonomous view but does

not wish to acknowledge the theistic world view which he needs to make sense out of

language, math, science, history, logic, ethics, and everything else in his experience and

reason. The unbeliever professes his autonomous point of reference, but suppresses

knowledge of God.) [20]

B. Facts are what they are by virtue of their place in the plan of God.

1. God’s plan is necessary to make sense out of both “causation” (natural explanation) and

“purpose” (teleological explanation). The whole meaning of any fact is exhausted by its position

in an relation to the plan of God. [21] NOTE: At Scripps Institute of Oceanography unbelieving

researchers devote countless hours of post graduate work studying certain species of sea life.

For all their effort, they come not one bit closer to discovering “causation” and “purpose.” In

essence, a grade school Christian student knows far more when he says “God created that

fish (causation) for His glory (purpose).”

2. To say that some facts may be known without God is the opposite of the Christian position.

The unbeliever’s spiritual blindness is evident, for he is optimistic that his study facts without

God will result in true knowledge. [22]

3. The issue is not, “What can unbelievers do intellectually?” The issue is, “Can unbelievers

give an account of facts within their world view?” The unbeliever cannot make the object of

knowledge intelligible by means of his world view. [23]

C. The effort to evade God is never successful intellectually. Attempts to gain knowledge without stopping the suppression of God’s truth will always result in absurdity, vanity and folly (Rom 1:18-25).

1. No proof for God and the truth of His revelation in Scripture can be offered by an appeal to

anything in human experience that has not itself received its light from the God whose

existence and whose revelation it is supposed to prove. [24]

2. God’s revelation in nature, together with God’s revelation in Scripture, form God’s one grand

scheme of covenant revelation of Himself to man. The two forms of revelation must therefore

be seen as presupposing and supplementing one another. Revelation in Scripture and

revelation in nature are mutually meaningless without another and mutually fruitful when taken

together. [25]

D. Unity of knowledge (a central principle of man’s cultural task) is only possible if God is ultimate.

(God is ultimate being, ultimate knower, ultimate reference point/ starting point, ultimate

authority.)

1. Unity of knowledge cannot be obtained by a compromise of principle between those whose

ultimate point of reference is God and those whose ultimate point of reference is man. [26]

2. God’s knowledge is absolute, men must have God’s knowledge in order to have their own

knowledge. The only alternative is folly. The natural man displays the vanity of his thinking when

contends that he does not need an absolute universal in order to know with certainty. (It ought

to be clear that the nature of knowledge and the nature of reality are necessarily joined. If they

are not joined, knowledge has no rational basis. Ontology has everything to do with knowledge,

for in God, what is real is rational. It is His omniscience that makes rational, unified knowledge

possible.)

IV. The Creator-creature distinction gives us our starting point and method for finding the meaning of facts.

 

 A. The unbeliever takes the erroneous position that the law of reason is the point of identity between God and man.

1. There is no single point of identity between the mind of God and the mind of man . The

difference between the mind of Creator and creature is not merely quantitative, but qualitative.

[27] (God knows a rose in a qualitatively different way than man. God is the original Knower, He

thought of the idea of a rose in eternity and created it in time. Our thoughts will always be finite

and “creaturely”.)

2. God’s being is “fundamentally other.” Man is but a derivative of God, therefore the content of

God’s mind is radically different from the content of our own minds. We can never know what

God knows in the same way that God knows it. God lives wholly above and beyond time. Any

notion we apply to God will at best be a finite replica of the same notion God has of Himself.

(As far as our conceptualization is concerned, we cannot think of eternity otherwise than as the

passage of years.) [28]

B. Non-Christian thinking is univocal thinking.

(Univocal refers to man thinking independently of God. The unbeliever’s reasoning is “univocal”

in that he views knowledge as identical for God and man.)

1. Our knowledge of the world is not univocal (the same as God’s), but analogical(dependent

upon the self-revelation of the Creator). [29]

2. Univocal reasoning denies the foundation upon which analogy is built.

a.) It seeks to erase the ontological distinction between God and man.

b.) It rejects the authority of God and His Word.

d.) It is an abrogation of man’s covenant consciousness.

e.) It represents an effort to shed and flee from the temporal, finite make up of man. (Human

reason is enthroned by univocal reasoning; “you shall be as gods.”) [30]

C. Univocal reasoning reveals one’s view of reality.

1. When one attempts to reason univocally, one assumes that reality is of one type. Therefore,

when discussing ontology, cosmology or even trees, one assumes that these categories are

the same for God at every point as for man. [31]

2. By contrast, the Christian reasons analogically. Man is an analogue of God, he is to think

God’s thoughts after Him. When the believer reasons about the complexities of human

anatomy, he reasons analogically. He declares along with the Psalmist that man is “fearfully

and wonderfully made” (Ps 139:14).

a.) The unbeliever places God’s knowledge of the human body and a doctor’s knowledge of the

human body on the same plane. As a consequence of arrogant univocal reasoning, the

unbeliever refuses to say of God’s knowledge, “[It] is too wonderful for me” (Ps 139:6).

b.) The believer is careful to guard the following in his thinking in order that his reasoning will

be thoroughly analogical:

· He thinks under the authority of Scripture.

· He thinks as a being in covenant with God.

· He recognizes the finite, creaturely status of his thoughts. He regards his thoughts as derivative of their original (God).

· Consequently, his reasoning uses the law of non-contradiction. [32]

c.) Analogical thinking is firmly rooted in the Creator-creature distinction. Being is key,

everything other than God is the creation and the creature. [33] We do not know one thing as

God knows, otherwise we would posit an identity between the mind of God and the mind of

man. [34]

3. Univocal reasoning always leads to skepticism and self-contradiction. Epistemological

despair is the result of suppressing the truth of God; the only source of certainty. [35]

4. Univocal thinking assumes that a finite human can attain epistemological self-sufficiency.

a.) It is God alone who knows all knowledge simultaneously. God’s mental processes

established the laws of logic. His providential laws of causation uphold the creation, His

orderliness is the basis for inductive science.

b.) God made our senses and reasoning faculties to be accurate, but limited probes of

objective reality. God alone is the “Fisherman” whose “net” catches all “fish” (knowledge).

c.) We are gifted with an imitation of His net that will catch many fish. But countless fish are too

small for the mesh of our net. And innumerable fish are too big for our nets. God has told us

what categories (of knowledge) these “fish” are so that we won’t be presumptuous enough to

 fish for these. No fish are too large or small for God’s net. My net is made in the image of

God’s net. But mine is creaturely, finite, limited. The fish which only God’s net can catch are not

absurdities. [36]

5. God’s incomprehensibility is infinitely inexhaustible.

a.) Man’s ignorance is not primarily from finitude. Man’s ignorance is due to the infinite

ontological “chasm” between self-existent God and the creature.

b.) Paradoxes and antinomies will not be resolved by more knowledge or even exhaustive

knowledge. If the paradoxes could drop away by more information, then the Creator-creature

distinction would drop away as well. (Univocal reasoning “flirts” with the concept of the divinized

mind. It attempts to insert the temporal into the eternal.) [37]

V. A fact can only have the meaning that Scripture ascribes to it.   Facts are only interpreted truthfully by the knowledge of God.

 

A. The apologist must always maintain that the “fact” under discussion must be what Scripture says it is in order to be intelligible as a fact at all. [38] 

 

 1. The apologist must present his philosophy of fact with his facts.  The presuppositional   

apologist does not need to present less facts in doing so. He will handle the same facts, but

he will handle them as they ought to be handled. (It’s futile to talk endlessly about facts without

ever challenging the unbeliever’s philosophy of fact.) [39]

2. The evidentialist mistakenly assumes that facts can be considered apart from an interpretive system.

a.) Frequently the apologist is challenged by the unbeliever, “Let the facts speak for

themselves.” The natural man often appeals to the realm of empirical science as a zone “free

from world view.”

b.) On the contrary, all empirical observation and observation is laden with theory. Modern

scientific description is itself explanation. When researchers describe the simplest facts, the

description presupposes a system of metaphysics and epistemology. [40]

c.) A person cannot even be a scientist without a philosophy of reality. (Our battle is always 

over  philosophy of fact.) Christianity does not need to take refuge under the roof of a

scientific method independent of itself. Rather than assuming

a defensive posture, the apologist can assert that biblical Christianity offers itself as “a roof” to

methods that would be scientific. [41]

B. Every starting point involves faith.

 

1. Even the description of facts requires a starting point. A starting point always involves a

commitment to presuppositions.

2. The anti-theist claims that man can have true knowledge of a fact without the “fact” of God’s

existence. Thus, the starting point is man himself. His starting point and method are solely

from himself. (By contrast, the theist knows that knowledge of any fact presupposes the

existence and knowledge of God who created the fact and Christ who interpreted the fact in

Scripture.) [42]

3. All men do their thinking on the basis of a position or perspective that is accepted by faith. If

your faith is not in God who speaks infallibly in His Word through Christ, then your faith is in

man as autonomous. “All of one’s reasoning is controlled by either of these

presuppositions.” [43]

4. Underlying the natural man’s discussion of facts is his commitment to his particular method

of knowing. His theory of knowledge (epistemology) is but a part of a whole network of

presuppositions he maintains. His presuppositions include beliefs about the nature of reality

(metaphysics) and his norms for living (ethics). A key point for the apologist to understand is

that the unbeliever (when espousing his autonomy) treats his method of knowing, reasoning,

proving and learning as normative. [44]

C. All the facts are in for God, therefore we must accept His interpretation of them.

(In an open universe with a finite god, a “new fact” may appear at any time.) [45]

1. In order for man’s interpretation to be correct, it must correspond to the interpretation of God.

The accuracy of man’s synthesis and analysis rest upon God’s analysis. Our thought is

receptively constructive. [46]

2. To be neutral in method is to suggest that the universe is open for God as well as you. It

implies that system is non-existent. It infers that synthesis is prior to analysis for God as well

as for man. It places God within the universe.

3. If facts are not viewed through the lens of the plan of God, they will be viewed through the

lens of possibility. (Chance and possibility are like a bottomless pit. The skeptic can toss any

fact into its dark depths while uttering, “without a system, anything is possible.”) [47]

D. Every fact of the universe must be Christologically interpreted.

1. Christ came to save the world. His work is of cosmic significance. Therefore through Christ and His word, an authoritative interpretation is given to mankind of the whole cosmic scene. Thus, every fact in the universe must be Christologically interpreted.

2. Only the world view that centers upon the Person and work of Christ can render facts intelligible to sinful men. [48] (Even when we investigate a fact, we cannot come up with “truth” that does not correspond with God’s truth in Christ.) [49]

E. A transcendent argument determines the presupposition behind the fact.

1. The starting point is never the same level of being as the facts to be studied. The

transcendental method exposes the world view behind the facts. When seeking to uncover the

foundations for the “house of human knowledge,” it behooves the apologist to ask questions

that reveal a person’s world view:

· What is the nature of things that are real?

· How does the world operate?

· Where did it come from?

· What is man’s place in the world?

· What is man’s nature?

· Are there moral or epistemological norms that are not chosen by the individual?

· What are the criteria for truth?

· What are the proper methods of knowing?

· Is certainty possible? [50]

2. When interpreting facts, we never grant to our opponent that human categories are ultimate.

If we compromise at that juncture (by granting the ultimacy of human categories), it destroys the

self-consciousness of God. God’s absolute self-consciousness is inseparable form His

authority as final interpreter of facts. [51]

3. The apologist emphasizes that God’s mind is the final point of reference. We are to press

the non-Christian to be epistemologically self-conscious. To the glory of God, we contrast his

philosophy of fact with the Christian world view. [52] (We use the transcendental method to

expose the inconsistencies of the unbeliever’s world view. The natural man’s system is not a

system, it is the opposite of God’s truth.) [53]

Endnotes:

[1] Greg L. Bahnsen, Van Til’s Apologetic, (Phillipsburg: P&R Publishing, 1998), pp. 520-523).

[2] Ibid., p. 717.

[3] Ibid., p. 310.

[4] Ibid., p. 378.

[5] Ibid., p. 379.

[6] Ibid., pp. 380, 381.

[7] Ibid., pp. 376, 382, 384.

[8] Cornelius Van Til, The Defense of the Faith, pp. 259, 260, 308.

[9] Greg L. Bahnsen, Van Til’s Apologetic, pp. 524, 525.

[10] Ibid., p. 519.

[11] Ibid., p. 466, 467, 539,

12] Ibid., p. 716.

[13] Ibid., pp. 396-399.

[14] Ibid., p. 421.

[15] Ibid.

[16] Ibid., p. 38.

[17] Ibid., p. 109.

[18] Ibid., p. 111. Cited by Bahnsen from Cornelius Van Til, The Reformed Pastor and Modern Thought, (Philadelphia: P&R Publishing, 1971). pp. 30, 31.

[19] Cornelius Van Til, The Case for Calvinism, (Philadelphia: P&R Publishing, 1963), pp. 141, 142.

[20] Bahnsen, Van Til’s Apologetic, p. 114.

21] Ibid., p. 172.

[22] Ibid., 171-174.

[23] Ibid., p. 514.

[24] Ibid., p. 211.

25] Ibid., p. 195.

[26] Ibid., p. 723.

[27]Jim Halsey, “A Preliminary Critique of Van Til: The Theologian” Westminster Theological Journal 1:39(Fall, 1976) p. 123, 128, 129.

[28] Ibid., p. 122.

[29] Ibid., p. 125.

[30] Ibid., p. 126.

[31] Scott Oliphant, “The Consistency of Van Til’s Methodology” The Westminster Theological Journal, 52 (1990), p. 45.

[32] Jim Halsey, “Critique of Van Til,” p. 125.

[33] Ibid., p. 122.

[34] Ibid., p. 124.

[35] Ibid., p. 127.

[[36] Grover Gunn, ”Epistemology 101” (from a lecture given by T E Grover Gunn at Christ Presbyterian Church, Elkton, MD, March 10, 1997). Transcript available at http://capo.org/cpc/apolo42.htm. Pp. 2-5.

[37] Halsey, “Critique of Van Til,” pp. 128, 132, 135.

[38] Bahnsen, Van Til’s Apologetic, p. 529.

[39] Cornelius Van Til, The Defense of the Faith, pp. 317, 264.

[40] Bahnsen, Van Til’s Apologetic, pp. 640-42.

[41] Ibid., p. 644.

[42] Oliphant, “Van Til’s Methodology” WTJ, p. 34.

[[43] Cornelius Van Til, The Case for Calvinism, 128, 129.

[44] Bahnsen, Van Til’s Apologetic, p. 263.

[45] Ibid., p. 702, 704.

[46] Ibid., p. 702.

[47] Ibid., pp. 652-655.

[48] Ibid., p. 215.

[49] Oliphant, “VanTil’s Methodology” WTJ, p. 36.

[50] Bahnsen, Van Til’s Apologetic, p. 512.

[51] Ibid., pp. 490-493.

[52] Ibid., pp. 229, 248, 700.

[53] Oliphant, “Van Til’s Methodology” WTJ, p. 39.

Apologetic Methodology: Conducting an Internal Critique of the Unbeliever’s Worldview

INTRODUCTION: The following suggestions are intended to provide practical guidelines for engaging the unbeliever in a fruitful evangelistic dialog. The presuppositional apologist is ever mindful that the natural man has chosen an erroneous worldview in order to sustain his rebellion against his Creator (and in the process maintain a position of estrangement from God – Romans one).

When we walk the unbeliever through a series of questions designed to critique his worldview, it is to be done in a transcendental manner – this means that the Christian apologist seeks a point of contact with the natural man that lies beneathhis working consciousness. That point of contact is the sense of deity that the natural man seeks to studiously suppress.

In order to do this, it means that the apologist must also seek a point of contact with the systems constructed by the natural man. This point of contact must be in the form of a head-on collision. Only by this collision will there be a point of contact with the natural man’s sense of deity. When this collision takes place, the epistemology and metaphysical principles that control the unbeliever’s reasoning will be exposed.

EXAMPLE: If a man had played checkers his entire life and had never heard of chess; the first time he witnessed a chess game he would no doubt attempt to understand it solely through the vantage point of his experience as a checkers player. So also, the natural man runs everything he hears about the Gospel through the grid of his worldview of autonomous self. (Keep in mind that the unbeliever won’t reason his way to the God of Scripture by slowly paring away his sinful commitment to autonomy. A collision is necessary which will expose his rebellion against his Creator.)

The following questions are designed to accomplish the goal described above – that is to produce an antithesis or collision with the core assumptions of the natural man. As stated above, this collision is intended to bring the unbeliever face to face with his sense of deity (an essential step in bringing conviction of sin and thereby demonstrating the need for salvation).

Philosophic naturalism with its view of an open universe robs God of every attribute described in Psalm 139 (omnipotence, omniscience, omnipresence). One way to critique this extremely common erroneous worldview of naturalism is to ask the following QUESTION: Since the universe contains both personal and impersonal structures (persons, matter, motion, physical laws) – which is fundamental? Is the impersonal grounded in the personal? Or is the personal grounded in the impersonal? Secular thought generally assumes the latter. Naturalism says we are the product of matter, motion, chance, etc. Naturalism regards the explanation of our existence NOT to rest on the personal, but the impersonal – naturalism affirms the ultimacy of the impersonal. God as Creator and absolute personality is the ground of all other reality. He has no need of any other being – He is self-sufficient, self-existent (Acts 17:25).

Each of these answers (ultimacy of the impersonal or ultimacy of the personal) has CONSEQUENCES. If the impersonal is primary, then there is no consciousness, no wisdom, and no will in the ultimate origin of things. What we call reason and value are unintended, accidental consequences of chance events.

When modern scientists seek the causes of all things, they almost always assume that the personal elements in the universe can be explained by the impersonal (matter, laws, and motion) rather than the other way around. Without absolute personality, we are left with chance or “fate” being absolute.

 

Because of commitment to autonomy, the unbeliever has an irrational preference for impersonalism over personalism. We must not allow the unbeliever to suppose the impersonal is more ultimate. We challenge him to consider the alternative. Ask him to give a proof for his view – the kind of proof he requires of us! Show him his impersonalism is the product of irrational faith. God as Creator and absolute personality is the ground of all other reality. He has no need of any other being – He is self-sufficient, self-existent (Acts 17:25). Take the unbeliever to passages of Scripture which set forth the Creator’s authority, rights, power, ownership, and plan.

In order to induce a collision that brings the unbeliever into a greater consciousness of his sense of deity, the apologist engages in raising and answering ultimate questions – this will UNCOVER the unbeliever’s rebellion against God. We must talk to the unbeliever in light of Romans one; don’t talk to him in merely a logical paradigm. (Raising and answering ultimate questions is the only way to bring out his rebellion and attack it; remember, the neutrality approach nurturespride and autonomy.)

There is no neutral spot in the universe to study God – it’s impossible to go outin front of God in order to understand God. All must be under Him. There is no independent viewing of God – we think of Him in a dependent manner because all creatures are upheld by Him every moment. We can only understand the creation by the Word of God (Ps 8:1-5). The pagan allows his abilities and faculties and powers of building and inventing to inflate him to arrogance and pride.

In our apologetic method, we do not allow the unbeliever to pit his faulty worldview against the supernatural God of Scripture. We take the sinner back to the presuppositions upon which his worldview is founded.

Man cannot know God, creation, or himself APART from God’s interpretation. Man, in his intellectual rebellion, allies himself with Satan’s interpretation (or worldview).

Give the unbeliever the Gospel. If he disagrees, then ask him some of the following QUESTIONS: Do you know what you believe? What are your convictions? What is your position? THEN: Where did you get that? Where are your answers coming from? Mine are rooted in the Word of God, the Bible. What would disprove your position? What is the basis for your claim against Christ?

Then give the apologetic for the Gospel (as Paul in Acts 17). The pagan has no credible argument; he only has absurdity. Begin every encounter with the claims of Christ. We argue presuppositionally that man knows God and was created to think God’s thoughts after Him.

The natural man sees himself as an expert in his opinions. You have not taken him on UNTIL you take him on at the point where he judges God. The unbeliever sets his mind autonomously against God.

We carry our worldview to the pagan UNPROVEN. We impress upon him that he does not have a legitimate reason why the biblical worldview is not absolutely true. QUESTIONS : Do you understand that it’s possible to use you mind to sin? Do you know that God requires you obey Him in your thought life (2 Cor 10:5)? May I show you what God says about your worldview? Take him to Romans 1 and Ephesians 4 so that he understands the difference between a believer and an unbeliever.

If he subscribes to naturalism, you can ask the following QUESTION: Do you believe that chance produced knowledge, personhood, the laws of non-contradiction (logic), uniformity in nature, and an ethical code? The laws of logic come from God. The law of non-contradiction is being used by you to war against the knowledge of God. You have not been able to explain anything. Take him back to Scripture and show him the passages about futile thinking (Rom 1; Eph 4), and show him that wisdom and knowledge begin with the fear of God (Prov 1:7).

 

EXAMPLE: If you set out to map Mount Everest with a flashlight and a 12 inch ruler you would utterly fail. So also, because God is transcendent, we are utterly dependent upon His self revelation in order to know Him as He truly is. As finite creatures made of dust we do not possess the “equipment” to take His measure.

The transcendental argument determines the presupposition behind the sinner’s interpretation of any particular fact. Underlying the natural man’s discussion of facts is his commitment to his particular method of knowing. His theory knowledge (epistemology) is but a part of a whole network of presuppositions he maintains. His presuppositions include beliefs about the nature of reality (metaphysics) and his norms for living (ethics). A key point for the apologist to understand is that the unbeliever (when espousing his autonomy) treats his method of knowing, reasoning, proving and learning as normative.

The starting point is never the same level of being as the facts to be studied. The transcendental method exposes the world view behind the facts. When seeking to uncover the foundations for the “house of human knowledge,” it behooves the apologist to ask QUESTIONS that reveal a person’s world view:

· What is the nature of things that are real? (Is the ground of all existence personal or impersonal?)

· How does the world operate? (By chance or by the perfect plan of an all-wise and good God?)

· Where did our world come from? (Wouldn’t you agree that man’s origin, identity, and destiny are inseparable?)

· What is man’s place in the world? (What is the source of man’s purpose, calling, and worth?)

· What is man’s nature? (Is he merely an advanced animal, or is man designed in the image of image and likeness of his Creator? Thus fully accountable to his Creator?)

· Are there moral or epistemological norms that are not chosen by the individual? (Are there fixed moral laws that form an external point of reference?)

· What are the criteria for truth? (Is it consensus, science, common sense, and/or the ultimate authority of God?)

· What are the proper methods of knowing? (Is it human reasoning, or God’s authoritative self-revelation in Christ and the Holy Scriptures?)

· Is certainty possible? (What is the source of epistemological certainty?)

 

The purpose of the above questions is to provide an internal critique of the unbeliever’s worldview in such a way that he becomes epistemologically self-conscious –that is that he owns he presuppositions that underlie his worldview, admitting his commitment to darkness, and futile thinking.

 

To the glory of God, we contrast the unbeliever’s philosophy of fact with the Christian world view. (We use the transcendental method to expose the inconsistencies of the unbeliever’s world view. The natural man’s system is not a system, it is the opposite of God’s truth.)

When the unbeliever rejects Christ, he is also rejecting Christ as interpreter of the world (Christ’s interpretation of the world includes the whole world of knowledge).

 

Our methodology must reflect a fidelity to the epistemic Lordship of Christ.Semi-rationalistic apologetics (common to classical and evidential apologetics) fails to do this. It fails to deliver the final blow which is found in Romans 1. Until that final blow is delivered, the natural man tosses Christian evidences over his head into a sea of probability. Autonomy of reason will stay unchallenged; it will continue to be viewed as the final reference point, the final arbiter of truth.

The presuppositional apologist utilizes Romans one, and, in so doing he attacks and exposes the mechanism of the unbeliever (suppression, speculation, futility, etc.). Only then is the ultimacy of chance and contingency properly cast down so that Christ’s epistemic role may have its proper and authoritative place.

Can we expect a man to accept Christianity when he hasn’t thoroughly investigated all other religious options? Should he crucify his intellect by swallowing a fantastic and totally demanding world view because you say so? In the Name of the Lord Jesus Christ and His Word, you must surrender to the good news of salvation. By contrast, the semi-rational apologists declare, “How in the name of common sense can you expect him to believe your message instead of theirs?” The answer (says Whitcomb) is somewhat shocking. That person has no right to challenge the message, because the Holy Spirit who made him in the image of the living God had given him the capacity to recognize spiritual truth when he hears it.

QUESTION: Do you understand that God holds you responsible for how you respond to His revealed truth? God has built into us the capacity to recognize spiritual truth as God Himself proclaims it to them, and then demands they recognize who He is (reject, resist, and suppress the testimony of His Word and you are doomed forever. God does not doom people for what they cannot do. You are responsible because God tells you that you are capable of recognizing Him when He speaks.

To be made in the image of God is to be endowed with the capacity to recognize spiritual truth. God has made every person in possession of His image and likeness (though warped and distorted by the fall). This image is still in tact and functioning – that is why we put murderers to death. Jesus Christ “enlightens every man.” He has given all men a sufficient illumination and capacity to recognize God’s truth when they see it. What people need is not more light! They are immersed in light – this is the condemnation, not that they couldn’t recognize the light, but that they rejected the light and would not come to the light.

Our apologetic approach of raising and answering ultimate questions is not designed to overpower the depraved and corrupt reasoning of the natural man. An internal critique of the sinner’s worldview is designed to show the absurdity of their argument and worldview. Our apologetic approach is not designed to overcome and answer every objection – BECAUSE no answer will satisfy the unbeliever UNTIL gives up his rebellion against God.

When we seek a point of contact with the unbeliever, it is not to “out logic” him so that he will say “Uncle!” intellectually. We are always to keep in mind that at the bottom of every objection lodged by the unbeliever is an attack upon the character, authority, government, and nature of God.

Our point of contact with the unbeliever, according to Scripture, is for the purpose of bringing conviction, exposing rebellion, reaching the conscience, and surfacing his sense of deity.

 

Point of contact QUESTIONS: Do you consider death, disease, injustice, evil, disasters, victimization, war, etc. to be “normal” for mankind according to God’s perspective? -- then give him the Christian worldview and the Gospel again (Syll. p. 1, I., B, 1).[1]

Can you explain why Christ’s hearers consistently attacked Christ’s Person and message? Show the unbeliever from Scripture why every sinner, has a propensity (Rom 1) to mishandle the Scriptures (p. 2, II., A. 2, B. 2) & (p. 4, II. E. 2).

Do you welcome God’s merciful and faithful testimony about sin; do you consider it a mercy that God should bear witness to the universality and depth of depravity human sin? Why or why not? Certainly in the world of medicine, he knows that proper remedy is inseparably linked to accurate diagnosis (pp. 2-3, II. C. 1). Does he understand that only regeneration can avail to “reset” the sinner’s mind and give him a new heart and a new record in heaven? (p. 2, II. C).

Can you define yourself apart from God? If he attempts to do so, show him how irrational such an attempt is – God has determined the categories of knowledge. To abandon God’s categories is to move into futility and irrationality (p. 3, II. D. 2-3). Who we are depends completely upon who our Creator is! Who you really are depends upon who you are in the sight of God.

As your Creator, Designer and Lord, He authoritatively defines who you are and what your standing is before Him. The apologist should strive to surface the natural man’s judging of God. Question: Why do men argue and disagree with God as to what their standing is before Him? Answer: Because of what is described in Colossians 1:21 – men are “hostile in mind” toward God – they regard God as an enemy (p. 6, IV. D., 1-2; V., 1).

True repentance is holistic; it is both intellectual as well as overtly moral. Faith and repentance constitute a radical, even traumatic change in which the there is a complete exchange of epistemologies involved. The repenting man abandons his own thoughts and surrenders to Christ as his epistemology. This is why it’s absurd to think that an unbeliever has one or two “sticking points” that are keeping him from saving faith (p. 5, IV. C., 2-3).

QUESTION: How does your belief system differ from the Word of God? Listen to his objections and then present to him the opposite of what he claims to believe. Note that the categories of guilt, righteousness, good works, forgiveness, judgment, atonement will all have their distorted counterparts in the erroneous worldview of the natural man (p. 6, V. 2).

Where are your answers coming from? Tell him that yours are coming from the Word of God. Show the unbeliever what God says about his worldview. Remember, the sinner’s intellectual assumptions are on trial in God’s court. In the Bible, God always turns the table on the skeptic and accuser of the divine. The revelation of Christ is not on trial; for the revelation of Christ is inseparable from the infallible proof God has given; God’s revelation of Christ is inseparable from Christ’s eschatological role as Judge of mankind (Acts 17:30-31).

 

Do you understand that Christ’s death and resurrection were necessary in order for men to know God and His truth? The COST of having true knowledge is nothing short of a personal relationship with the living God through His Son as He is revealed in Scripture (p. 7, V. B, 2). The point of contact with the sinner cannot be man’s opinions, misgivings, suspicions, and speculations. Due to the fact that man is estranged from God, who is the source of all truth; man cannot reason about God until he knows God in a personal relationship of justification and reconciliation.

Do you know what God says about your reasoning ability? The apologist is not to set about to construct a mountain of reason to persuade the unbeliever; he is to continually set forth biblical thinking about ultimate questions (when you’re talking to a rebel, keep raising and answering ultimate questions so that the unbeliever is continually confronted with God’s authority).

Human reason is a faculty planted by God for the purpose of receiving and re-interpreting God’s revelation, therefore reason cannot operate accurately independent of God; it must be the servant and tool of divine revelation. Reason cannot be relegated to some neutral category or neutral authority. Scripture states that the status of your reason is inaccurate if it is operating autonomously. Only God can think independently with total accuracy – when man attempts to do so, he is reaching for the impossible status of divinity.

Truth is inseparable from Who God is. Truth does not exist as an independent body of knowledge separate from God. Repentance begins when the sinner abandons all independent thinking about God and begins to worship God as He is revealed in Scripture.

If one attacks God, who is the ultimate reference point and source of all truth, he puts himself in a position to not understand truth. (Repentance puts a halt to judging God.) Semi-rational systems of apologetics flatter man’s reason. The classical approach allows a man to continue to worship his own mind. In the classical approach, the laws of logic and the scientific method are put ahead of Scripture (Scripture being the object of faith). By contrast the presuppositional apologist understands that Scripture is proclaimed in order to produce faith in Scripture.

QUESTIONS to pose to the unbeliever that are designed to surface his faulty epistemology:

· Is there a truth standard outside of God? What is its authoritative ultimate reference point?

· What is your god like – can you describe his attributes and character? (Does your description correspond to reality? Is it reasonable, rational, and realistic?)

· How would you know if you were using your God-given mind to sin against God?

· Do you believe it is possible to reject the God of the Bible and then make sense when talking about all of life?

· Does good exist apart from God?

· Do you believe it is possible to clear your conscience by keeping a moral code?

· Do you believe that God alone has the right and responsibility to determine absolute right and wrong and the consequences of each?

· What is your source of certainty regarding unseen things? (i.e. “there is no hell”).

· What are God’s claims upon man?

· Are you made in the image of God? Do you know how fully that affects your life?

· Can you explain how your position differs from the Word of God?

· Do you know what God says about your worldview?

· Do you understand why it is possible for man to know God?

· In each case, press the antithesis – show the unbeliever that the truth is the very opposite of what he purports. Ask him, “Where did you get that answer?” Can you give a credible reason for rejecting the claims of Christ?” “Do you realize that your answers are seeking to deny God’s authoritative self-revelation?”

To this list one might add questions about the evil and suffering. Unbelievers have an extremely deficient view of the origin of evil and suffering. How does your worldview account for evil and suffering? Only the Christian worldview can give an adequate accounting of the existence of evil and suffering and its origin AND its destiny.

[1] This reference refers to the Ten Lessons on Biblical Apologetics by Jay Wegter. These references are to the first lesson in the series.