Sentences with phrase «mere christianity»

-- C.S. Lewis, from Mere Christianity
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In addition to core studies in English, math, science, history, languages, and the fine arts, students take a required sequence in religion and philosophy: 6th - grade students study the Apostles» Creed and the saints; in the 7th grade, they focus on the Church and the Ten Commandments; 8th graders conduct an overview of the Bible and the Sacraments; 9th - grade students study the Old Testament, the Apologetics, and C. S. Lewis's Mere Christianity; the 10th - grade focus is the New Testament and Church history; 11th grade introduces metaphysics and ethics; and the 12th - grade course features the philosophy and social teachings of the Catholic Church.
Collins freely acknowledges this debt, tracing his own spiritual Big Bang moment to reading Lewis's Mere Christianity.
C.S. Lewis Mere Christianity
Try reading the last section in C.S. Lewis» book «Mere Christianity» called «Beyond Personality».
If this seems like a cop - out, do not worry; this is the approach that C. S. Lewis argued for in his book, Mere Christianity:
When I first read Mere Christianity about thirty years ago, while I fully agreed that how the death of Jesus works was not nearly as important as the truth that it works, I intended to do my best in learning how.
C. S. Lewis wrote in his book Mere Christianity that this world is enemy - occupied territory and that Christianity is the story of how the rightful king has landed, and is calling us all to take part in a great campaign of sabotage.
Wright's title suggests that his book is an attempt to update C. S. Lewis's Mere Christianity, and the Anglican bishop of Durham does have something of Lewis's knack for producing an unforgettable image or phrase.
Advice to my «non-creationist» human cohabitants... pick up a copy of a book written by an «once atheist» C.S. Lewis — «Mere Christianity»; it won't explain how the universe was born (that can't be right..
~ Mere Christianity, chapter 3 - The Shocking Alternative, pg.
At the end of Mere Christianity's chapter titled «Right and Wrong as a Clue to the Meaning of the Universe,» Lewis claims that until people repent and want forgiveness, Christianity will not make sense.
Natural Law is hard — «as hard as nails» (Mere Christianity, (p. 23).
The first five chapters of C. S. Lewis's Mere Christianity (1953) discuss this objective norm to which people appeal and by which they expect others to abide.
Though I am a believer in «mere Christianity,» not everything Christianity entails is mere.
Mere Christianity is not the City of God or the Summa Theologica or the Institutes of the Christian Religion.
I confirmed as a Christian when I read CS Lewis» MERE CHRISTIANITY.
Because it was possible for Christians (to say nothing of non-Christians) to misread Scripture, the church was right in developing a «mere Christianity» to aid readers.
CS Lewis is one of the most influential writers in my life, from explaining the moral law in Mere Christianity, to his concepts of heaven in The Great Divorce, Last Battle, and Weight of Glory, to a humbling illustration of our sin and God's redemption in Till We Have Faces.
Mere Christianity was mere nonsense.
A very intelligent Christian friend once challenged me to read Lewis» book Mere Christianity, claiming that it was an air - tight case for god.
But I have to wonder why so many fundamentalist Christians still look to him to defend their faith, because Lewis» theology (especially as articulated in Mere Christianity) is severally at odds with some of the most basic traditional Christian dogmas (e.g. hell and who's going there, et cetera).
I really think I should pick up a copy of «Mere Christianity» sometime though.
Whatever one thinks of Lewis, the idea of «Mere Christianity» is pretty funny.
«God is the only comfort,» Lewis writes in Mere Christianity; «He is also the supreme terror: the thing we most need and the thing we most hide from.
Read the «Case for Christ», «Mere Christianity», and research what apologetics is, you may be surprised how much that science proves God's Existence.
I suggest you read Mere Christianity by CS Lewis.
It's mildly interesting to ponder whether C. S. Lewis's Mere Christianity or Francis Schaeffer's Escape from Reason influenced evangelical apologetics more.
C.S. Lewis writes in «Mere Christianity» that: «You must make your choice.
One of modern Christianity's most beloved authors and thinkers, Lewis is remembered for classics including Mere Christianity, The Chronicles of Narnia and The Screwtape Letters.
-- C.S. Lewis, from «Mere Christianity»
His «trilemma» in «Mere Christianity» was the pivotal point in my turn from agnosticism to faith in Christ:
Answering the most common objections raised by sceptics who visited his Manhattan church it (again) invited comparisons with CS Lewis» Mere Christianity.
I am just young and naive enough still to think Lewis's «mere Christianity» a viable option for unity.
Two books that changed me in late high school (they set me firmly on the path I still follow): Mere Christianity by C.S. Lewis (it grounded my faith in reason)[and] Out of the Saltshaker by Rebecca Manley Pippert (for many reasons: loving Jesus so much that it overflows into your relationships with non-believers, and it gave me a picture of a strong, intelligent woman who was doing ministry)-- Laura Mott Tarro
In his classic book, Mere Christianity C. S. Lewis wrote something which directly applies to the question in our courts and churches today about defining marriage.
-- The Case for Christ by Lee Strobel (Zondervan: 1998)-- Good News About Injustice by Gary Haugen (intervarsity: 1999)-- I Don't Have Enough Faith to be an Atheist by Norman Geisler & Frank Turek (Crossway: 2004)-- Living with Questions by Dale Fincher (Zondervan: 2007)-- Mere Christianity by C.S. Lewis (Harper: 2001)-- The Reason for God by Timothy Keller (Dutton Adult: 2008)-- Strong's (the complete library)-- Understanding Intelligent design by William Dembski & Sean McDowell (Harvest House: 2008)-- BeThinking.org — ConversantLife.com — Discovery.org/csc — Probe.org — Reasons.org
If he wasn't adding Christianity into his themes then why even justify himself by writing, «Mere Christianity».
«Crossing the Threshold of Hope» by John Paul II is a fairly good choice — as is «Mere Christianity» by C.S.Lewis.
Those of you who have read Mere Christianity know what I am talking about.
Last week, Louizandre Dauphin, a 33 - year - old former high school English teacher, decided to relax by reading Mere Christianity and another book by pastor Timothy Keller at a nearby wharf.
Mere Christianity is so powerful because of those reasons.
One hundred fifty years before C. S. Lewis, William Wilberforce wrote the Mere Christianity of his time.
A friend from another Christian denomination might well be handed Mark Shea's By What Authority while a friend who has never set foot in a Church in their life is more likely to find themselves with a copy of C.S. Lewis» Mere Christianity.
Well then how do you explain away great works like Mere Christianity, the Reason for God to name modern writings?
The claim is made that the Bible is still authoritative, for on the fundamentals of the faith — what C. S. Lewis labels «Mere Christianity» — there is unanimous judgment.
The first five chapters of C. S. Lewis's Mere Christianity (1953) discuss this objective...
I think C.S.Lewis said something similar in Mere Christianity.
On the other hand, during WWII, Lewis was the voice of a radio program on the BBC, which later became the Christian classic Mere Christianity.
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