Why Believe in a God?
Wednesday, November 12th, 2008 : By Hugh Williams
C.A. sent me a link to a story about the American Humanist Association spending $40,000 on an ad campaign asking: “Why believe in a god?” I was especially intrigued by this because our Gospel Conversations class is paying a lot of attention to the sort of questions people ask, and here’s a big one gift-wrapped and served up on a plate.
Rather than serve up some pat answers here, I’d rather hear from you, Grace Fellowship (especially you Gospel Conversationalists out there)… Why believe in a god?
(P.S. Please do a better job than the American Family Association’s representative, who said, “It’s a stupid ad.” He said some other things after that, but by then I wasn’t
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Election Reflections
Wednesday, November 5th, 2008 : By Hugh Williams
I put a few thoughts together before the election, but never got around to posting them. Now that the results are in, it seems like it’s still worth posting, so here goes…
1. Over the last four years, Grace Fellowship has been immeasurably more impactful to my life than the White House. I have no reason to suspect that the next four years will be any different, and that’s as it should be.
2. In John 19:11, Jesus said to Pilate, “You would have no authority over me at all unless it had been given you from above.” That’s been true of every elected official who has served and led us, and it’s just as true of the
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Pre-Evangelism
Thursday, October 30th, 2008 : By Hugh Williams
On Sunday, the Gospel Conversations class discussed “pre-evangelism.” What’s that? If “evangelism” is “telling people about the good news,” then “pre-evangelism” is what you do before you tell people the good news. After all, “take up your cross and follow me” is not good news unless you know the whole story.
D.A. Carson has written a helpful article on Acts 17 in which he outlines the need for explaining the “big story” of the Bible in our evangelism:
Paul at the Areopagus in Athens has established an entire frame of reference before he gets to Jesus. He has challenged the Greek worldview with his JudeoChristian worldview. If he had presented clichés like “Jesus died
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The Questions You’d Least Like To Be Asked
Saturday, October 25th, 2008 : By Hugh Williams
Here’s the situation: you’re in a conversation with someone about the Gospel. The person you’re talking with says, “Let me ask you a question.” You feel a pit forming in your stomach because there are some questions you really, really don’t want to be asked.
I want to build up an inventory of those questions, so let me have ‘em. Please use the mail form to send in your questions—I’ve turned off the comments because I don’t want anybody to be afraid of asking questions “in public.” (Note: if you’d actually like a question answered, please indicate
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Synthesize This
Friday, October 24th, 2008 : By Hugh Williams
1. How Not to Help the Poor
The Acton Institute observes that government policies addressing poverty have perpetuated it and even worsened it by creating social pathologies… prior to 1960, 82% of black families had a married man and woman raising their children. The situation is very different now. Even during slavery days, a black child was more likely to grow up with both parents than he or she is today.
[via JT]
2. The End of the Nation? Russia Chooses Death Over Life
Al Mohler writes on the alarming fact that 64% of Russian pregnancies end in abortion:
The recent
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Sound Economic Advice
Friday, October 10th, 2008 : By Hugh Williams
Saturday Night Live comes to the rescue with a sure-fire solution to our economic woes.
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Questioning Evangelism
Wednesday, September 24th, 2008 : By Hugh Williams
I just learned that Google Books are embeddable in blog posts, so I thought I’d give it a try with the title I called out yesterday, Randy Newman’s Questioning Evangelism:
GBS_insertEmbeddedViewer(’StP9vsO7XRQC’,550,800);
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Isn’t Sin Just "Missing the Mark?"
Tuesday, September 23rd, 2008 : By Hugh Williams
During Sunday’s Gospel Conversations class, I quoted a bit from a great book I read over the summer: Questioning Evangelism. The title does not mean the author questions the value of evangelism — rather, he advocates evangelism that is characterized by asking lots of questions. If you want a smart, fresh take on evangelism, I highly recommend this book. (Also see the review at 9Marks.)
Here’s the quote I read during our class, which focused on the gravity of sin and the fact that we can’t really understand the Gospel
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How to Communicate the Gospel
Monday, September 22nd, 2008 : By Hugh Williams
Note: what follows is not the approach we’re teaching in the Gospel Conversations class, but it’s good for a chuckle from the Jollyblogger:
The truth of the gospel is the principle article of all Christian doctrine… Most necessary is it that we know this article well, teach it to others and beat it into their heads continually. — Martin Luther
Just for fun… any captions you’d add to this picture?
“Have you ever heard of the Four Spiritual Laws?”
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Gospel Conversations Homework
Sunday, September 21st, 2008 : By Hugh Williams
For everyone in the Gospel Conversations Connections class, please read and/or listen to Jonathan Edwards’ sermon, Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God, in time for our next class (October 5).
Download the Text
Download the Audio (Preached by Mark Dever)
You don’t have to become a Jonathan Edwards scholar—just pay attention to the way Edwards’ presentation of the Gospel is driven by a deep appreciation for the horror of sin.
Next time, having covered the bad news, we’ll get to the good news as we talk about the unique and central role played by Jesus Christ.

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