We are pleased to announce the release of:
I Don’t Have Enough FAITH to Be an ATHEIST
by Norman and Geisler and Frank Turek (forward by David Limbaugh). This book is broken down into 15 chapters that will help you not only handle the truth, but identify divine design and identify top ten reasons we know the New Testament and writers told the truth! This book does not stop there, though…the appendix addresses more topics that stump many people: If God, Why Evil? Isn’t That JUST Your Interpretation and Why the Jesus Seminar Doesn’t Speak for Jesus.
Everyone believes something about Religion or possibly a higher power. Norman L. Geisler and Frank Turek will help you understand that “Christianity is not only more reasonable than all other belief systems, but indeed more rational than unbelief itself.
If you are struggling or a bit skeptical about Christianity or know someone who is…this volume will be an interesting and helpful resource for you!
The Book can be read and used alone (or used with the workbook listed below)
Feel free to read a Sample chapter and view the Table of Contents and then Visit our online store to read more and order your copy
If you really want to dive deeper, add:
I Don't have Enough Faith to Be an Atheist Workbook
The Workbook is Apologia’s first apologetics curriculum for high school students! This workbook will equip teens to and young adult/Christians to be bold in their faith and know how to defend it!
This workbook will help tackle: absolute truth, demolish the follies of postmodernism, debunk moral relativism, and march logically and surely toward the inescapable truths of the Christian faith
This workbook is not written to use alone. It should be used in conjunction with the book: I don't Have Enough Faith to Be an Atheist
Feel free to read a Sample chapter and view the Table of Contents and then Visit our online store to read more and order your copy














Bob,I completely agree that poplee’s decision to trust someone isn’t a purely logical-analytical process, regardless of the context. If we thought more about what generally creates trust among poplee, we might do better at helping poplee trust us and trust Jesus.On a related note, I don’t know what you believe about these things, but it’s hard to talk about how the apostles or even Jesus earned poplee’s trust and not talk about miracles. Biblically, it seems that miracles served as one of the main ways Jesus and the apostles demonstrated “the divine source of their message,” if not the way. Obviously this has been on my mind lately, and reading this post of yours immediately brought it to mind again. I just hope that this author brings this facet of the apostolic “apologetic model” into his discussion, just for the sake of academic honesty if nothing else. Good post.