Let God Defend Your Faith

Hello everyone and welcome back to Deeper Waters where we are diving into the ocean of truth. First off, a lot of you have been wanting me to get things more organized here and thankfully, someone from my church is willing to work on my computer and to help with that. Thus, you and I both get our wish. To continue with where we’re going, we’re looking at Christian sound bites now and as an apologist, this next one I find quite annoying.

There have been a number of times when people have heard me speaking about the need for Christian apologetics and have said “Don’t defend your faith. Let God do that.” I always ask the same question in response when I hear someone say that. “Do you take the same approach to evangelism?”

To begin with, we are to defend our faith because God told us to. When we do evangelism, we are going to confront people of different viewpoints and we need to show why our viewpoint is correct and theirs is wrong. We are told to contend for the faith in Jude 3. In Philippians 1, Paul says he is in chains for the defense of the gospel.

However, let’s look at this from another perspective. One question often asked is “What about those who’ve never heard?” One reason I don’t believe this is answered is because God has given us the Great Commission. There is no plan B. God doesn’t say “I want you to do the Great Commission, but if you don’t, I’m going to handle things this way.” Now I do believe he will handle things in a just and right way, but we are not given any excuse to not perform the Great Commission.

God has given us a task. We are to do it. Thus, my biggest objection to this is that it justifies laziness again. We could use it in all manner of ways.

“Don’t donate to the church or give to charity. If God wants them to have money, he’ll get it.”

“Don’t pray. If God wants you to have something, he’ll give it.” (Mind you I don’t think such is the only purpose of prayer anyway)

“Don’t study the Bible. If God wants you to know something, he’ll tell you.”

“Don’t go to the grocery store. If God wants you to eat, he’ll feed you.”

“Don’t go to work. If God wants you to have money, he’ll give it to you.”

The idea is that God is supposed to do everything for us. Now there’s no denial that God can do what has been said above. If God wanted to, he could have food brought to any of us every day so we would never have to go to the grocery store. That has not been his plan however and considering the way the Jews and ancients as a whole viewed deities, that shouldn’t surprise us.

We have this view that God is to do our work for us. This even gets to where we want God to make our decisions for us today. It gets us from the holy view of God where He is not meant to serve us but we are meant to serve Him. (Consider this when The Shack has at the end the main character saying “God, my servant.”)

What is most often the case I would say is people wanting to justify laziness. Yes. Being an apologist requires work and there are many times I do not desire to be reading and it takes discipline, but the results are worth it. Even if you do not do apologetics to the degree a lot of us do, you should be studying to show yourself approved in knowing what you believe.

There is no valid excuse for laziness at the throne of God after all.

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