Books on Worldview
This titles deal with the winsome engagement of the Christian mind with intellectual currents hostile to it. H.J. Pollitt’s ‘The Inter-Faith Movement’ is an incisive critique of the popular effort to integrate all faiths, based on the untenable idea that, at heart, they all lead to the knowledge of the true God. ‘Green Eye of the Storm’, by John Rendle-Short, is an examination of four men of science who grappled with the consequences of evolutionary theory, and found the Scriptures to be a faithful guide not only in the spiritual realm, but also to historical and scientific truths. Finally, John Byl’s ‘The Divine Challenge’ is a full-frontal assault on man’s pretension to intellectual and moral autonomy. He shows how the rejection of God and His truth leads not to rationality and goodness, but their negation, and convincingly demonstrates the uniquenss of Christianity in being able to furnish a firm foundation for truth, morality and meaning.
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The Inter-Faith Movement
The New Age Enters the Church
Description
The New Age Enters the Church’ — traces the historical development of religious pluralism and the stages by which it has eroded the once-held view of the exclusiveness of the Christian faith. 224pp.
Description
The effects of the controversy over evolution, as seen in four eminent scientists with Christian convictions. 312pp.
The Divine Challenge
On Matter, Mind, Math & Meaning
Description
Byl argues convincingly that only a Christian worldview based on the truth of the Bible and the sovereignty of God can give life the coherence, meaning, purpose and hope men crave. 336pp.
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