Arguments for God's Existence
Classic and contemporary arguments for theism, explained plainly.
Articles
Part ten of our AI series—Doug Wilson's recent essay escalates the threat from private devotion to corporate worship, and the church may not be ready for what's coming.
Canada's Combatting Hate Act raises urgent questions about religious liberty, free expression, and the historical pattern of state-enforced orthodoxy.
The Trump administration's clash with Anthropic over AI military use echoes a familiar pattern—one we first saw when scientists split the atom.
An introduction to our Bible contradictions series—why we're doing this, who we're doing it for, and how we approach these challenges with intellectual rigor and pastoral care.
A growing number of users are treating large language models like digital divination tools—constraining outputs to yes/no answers and interpreting the results as revelation. Part one examines the phenomenon and why magicians have always been the first to call out the trick.
How would the Puritans respond to artificial intelligence? Their rigorous theology of truth, vocation, and human dignity provides surprising insight for navigating our algorithmic age.
Part four of our AI series—examining the theological boundaries around using artificial intelligence to simulate conversations with deceased loved ones.
A theological examination of artificial intelligence through the lens of providence, idolatry, and the Creator-creature distinction.
Part one of a two-part series—why the human impulse to deify artificial intelligence reveals more about our fallen nature than about technology itself.
A Reformed examination of how our universal sense of moral duty points to the God of Scripture—and why evil, far from disproving God, actually requires Him.
After examining twenty-five articles' worth of claims—solar deity parallels, pagan plagiarism, astrological ages, and political manipulation—what have we learned? And more importantly, what do we do now?
Zeitgeist argues that religion detaches humans from nature, demands blind submission, and eliminates moral responsibility. But what does the actual teaching of Jesus reveal about authority, ethics, and human accountability?
Zeitgeist claims no historian documented Jesus and that Josephus was forged. But what do scholars—including skeptics—actually conclude about the evidence for the historical Jesus?
Zeitgeist concludes that Jesus never existed, that Constantine manufactured Christianity at Nicea, and that religion is fundamentally a tool for political manipulation. What does the evidence actually show?