Confessor
Puritan Board Senior
I was thinking about presuppositional apologetics, and why another triune god could not take the place of the Christian God (which would allow for a belief in deism), and I remember reading about this a little in Van Til's Apologetic, but it didn't go that in-depth in the part I read.
It talked about man's natural intellectual failures (such as his persistence to believe things that are not true, etc.), which would indicate that man is in need of some redemption, and then it points to Christ. Does anyone know of a better way to formulate this so that presuppositional argumentation can point to Christ?
It talked about man's natural intellectual failures (such as his persistence to believe things that are not true, etc.), which would indicate that man is in need of some redemption, and then it points to Christ. Does anyone know of a better way to formulate this so that presuppositional argumentation can point to Christ?