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BibleProject was started by friends Timothy Mackie and Jonathan Collins in 2014. [6] They wanted to create free online teaching videos combining Mackie's academic background with Collins' professional experience writing explainer videos for technology companies. The organization's model is to be crowdfunded. [7]
Robert B. Pamplin, Jr. (Masters of Arts in Theology (1978) and a Doctor of Ministry in Theology (1982) from Western Seminary) Thomas R. Schreiner (M.Div. and Th.M.) Dan Kimball; Tim LaHaye; Tim Mackie (co-founder of BibleProject) Matt Mikalatos; Mark Driscoll (pastor) (Master of Arts degree in exegetical theology from Western Seminary)
Theology type Name of the article Worldcat publications number (as in 2020) ... Tim Mackie: 14: C Arminian: F. Stuart Clarke: 13: C Arminian: Thomas J. King: 13
The Reason for God: Belief in an Age of Skepticism deals with objections to Christian belief in Part 1, "The Leap of Doubt". Skeptical authors cited include J. L. Mackie, [2] Richard Dawkins, [3] Daniel Dennett, [4] Sam Harris, and Christopher Hitchens. [5]
[49] [50] In the book, Bell also questions "evacuation theology" which has Christians focused on getting to heaven, instead of focusing on God's renewal and transformation of this world. Bell argues that Jesus (and the wider Jewish tradition of which he was a part) focused on God's ongoing restoration of this world, not getting individuals to ...
John Leslie Mackie FBA (25 August 1917 – 12 December 1981) was an Australian philosopher. He made significant contributions to ethics, the philosophy of religion, metaphysics, and the philosophy of language. Mackie had influential views on metaethics, including his defence of moral scepticism and his sophisticated defence of atheism. He wrote ...
In epistemology, McGrew works on foundationalism, internalist and externalist theories of epistemic justification, theories of rationality, a priori knowledge, objectivity and relativism, formal and performative self-refutation, perceptual knowledge and the given, and metaepistemology.
Hence, the free-will defense fails. Plantinga responds by pointing out two flaws in Mackie's reasoning, which, together, he names Leibniz' Lapse, owing to their reliance upon the misunderstandings of the German philosopher Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz. The first is the presumption that God can force humans to use their free will only for good ...