How Does Anyone Know God Exists?

The following books are recommended in How Does Anyone Know God Exists?, a small group curriculum published by Willow Creek Resources.

I’m Glad You Asked, by Ken Boa and Larry Moody

Letters From a Skeptic, by Gregory Boyd and Edward Boyd

Reasonable Faith, by William Lane Craig

Why Believe?, by C. Stephen Evans

Give Me an Answer, by Cliffe Knechtle

Help Me Believe, by Cliffe Knechtle

Finding Faith, by Andrew Knowles

Handbook of Christian Apologetics
, Peter Kreeft and Ronald Tacelli

Mere Christianity, by C.S. Lewis

Miracles, by C.S. Lewis

Know What You Believe, by Paul Little

Know Why You Believe, by Paul Little

The Case for Christ, by Lee Strobel

The Case for Faith
, by Lee Strobel

Hermeneutical Foundations

The following books were used in the course on Hermeneutical Foundations taught by Vern Poythress, Professor of New Testament Interpretation, at Westminster Theological Seminary, during the Spring 2007 semester:



















According to the seminary catalog – -

Hermeneutical Foundations

Purpose:
• To evaluate and reform views on foundational issues in hermeneutics

Topics covered include the role of hermeneutics; the nature of meaning; divine authorship; grammatical-historical method; the problem of historical relativity; problems of circularity, incompleteness, probability; and the work of the Holy Spirit in hermeneutics. Area seminar for Ph.D. students specializing in Hermeneutics and Biblical Interpretation; others admitted only by special permission of the instructor.

Knowledge and Christianity

The following books were used in K. Scott Oliphint’s Knowledge and Christianity class at Westminster Theological Seminary, during the Spring 2007 semester:









Books recommended by K. Scott Oliphant

K. Scott Oliphint, Professor of Apologetics and Systematic Theology at Westminster Theological Seminary, recommends the following books for every pastor’s library:



























The Truth War: Fighting For Certainty in an Age of Deception

The Truth War: Fighting for Certainty in an Age of Deception

“[The postmodern age] is the age of no truth, an age that has reached a point of deadly fatigue when it comes to facing the truth—a generation that no longer believes truth can be known. Dr. John MacArthur knows better, and he is armed with the courage to confront this age with a bold defense of truth….His argument is compelling, his defense of truth is brilliant, and his concern for the church is evident on every page. The evangelical church desperately needs this book, and it arrives just in time.”

—R. Albert Mohler, Jr.,
President, The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary

Christian Faith, Knowledge, and Science textbooks

The following are textbooks used by William Dembski in his PhD seminar on Christian Faith, Knowledge, and Science taught at Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary during the Fall 2006 semester.

Book  Cover Book  Cover Book Cover
Book Cover Book  Cover Book  Cover

Longing to Know, by Esther Meek

Longing To Know , by Esther Meek

Recommended by John Frame:

“All in all, this is the best book on epistemology (let alone Christian epistemology) to come along in many, many years. It is a must for any serious student of the discipline and, indeed, for ordinary people who are trying to get clear on how to know God.” ( John Frame , from a review published in Presbyterian)

Book Cover