Hi all,
For those of you who aren't familiar with Lee Strobel, he is the author of Christian popular apologetic books. His releases include The Case for Faith, The Case for Christ, and, most recently, The Case for the Real Jesus. A journalist with a legal background, his Case books contain interviews with scholars and experts who give scholarly defenses of the Christian positions to which the books are devoted. Of course, since he is presenting a case for the Christian side of the issue, he consults those who are known to support these positions. He does ask those he interviews about the alternate (opposing) viewpoints advocated by others. Strobel is a former atheist.
I recently got to see Strobel in person where he spoke about his odyssey from atheist to Christian. His wife had become a Christian during their marriage and challenged him to examine the God-issue for himself. He took up the challenge, expecting to be able to discredit the Bible. For two years, he did research and interviewed scholars and experts (a method that would be expected of someone with his legal and journalistic backgrounds). At the end of his quest, he became convinced that the Bible is reliable and accurate, and particularly, that the accounts of Jesus, as written, were trustworthy. At that point, he acted on what he learned, he prayed, turned his life over to God, and his life was changed significantly for the better. That his life changed by turning to Jesus is not an unusual testimony, but that he arrived at that point by an intellectual route is interesting.
In his latest book, The Case for the Real Jesus, Strobel mentions author Anne Rice, who also went from atheist to believer on the basis of her investigations. These testimonies also sound much like that of Josh McDowell, author of many popular apologetics books. So there have been those who have gone from atheist, agnostic, or skeptic to believer based on what they learned about the Bible in their investigations. Yet there are those, like Dr. Bart Ehrman, who went basically in the opposite direction—from Christian to agnostic—on the basis of investigating the evidence.
For some of us, deciding for or against the God of the Bible is purely an emotional decision—evidence either way is not a factor. For others, our positions may originate with emotions—maybe subtle and developing over a period of time—and historical, literary, or textual evidence provides support for what we feel.
From what I've read, it looks like some of you have come to your conclusions about God and the Bible through an intellectual route—research, questioning, and reasoning. I'd like to see what any of you who reached your position based on serious investigation would like write about your personal search, and what points were the most significant in bringing you to your conclusions.
Thanks,
Mike