C.S. Lewis, the articulate defender of historic Christianity, E.J. Carnell, the exemplary advocate of a progressive evangelical theology, and Reinhold Niebuhr, the prophetic post-liberal theologian represent a range of challenges which twentieth century Christian apologetics has had to respond. Seen here in the context of their personal stories, the three thelogians give a human face to the theological task and isolate the enduring questions to which Christian theology must seek to give an intelligible answer if it is to remain a viable option in a skeptical world.
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