Tuesday, March 31, 2026

1 Question + 32 Christians = 0 Actual Answers

The video 1 Question + 32 Christians = 0 Actual Answers features the host of the channel Mindshift analyzing 32 comments from Christians responding to a specific question: "Why do you trust God?" The host distinguishes "trust" from "belief" or "obedience" and argues that none of the respondents provided a logically justified answer.

Summary of the Arguments

The host categorizes the responses into several recurring themes, critiquing each through a skeptical lens:

  • Personal Experience: Many commenters cited personal anecdotes or "answered prayers." The host argues that this is unreliable because followers of every religion claim identical experiences to validate their own (often mutually exclusive) deities.

  • Biblical Authority: Several responses relied on the Bible's instruction to trust God. The host critiques this as circular reasoning, noting that one must already trust the Bible to accept its command to trust God.

  • Fear and Sovereignty: Some argued they trust God because He is all-powerful and they have "no choice." The host characterizes these as reasons for obedience or fear, rather than reasons for genuine relational trust.

  • Deflections and Attacks: A portion of the comments avoided the question entirely, instead attacking the host for being a "bitter ex-Christian" or questioning why an atheist cares about God.

  • False Dichotomies: Arguments were made that if one doesn't trust God, they must trust "man," which the host refutes by stating that human trust is based on verifiable evidence and the ability to correct mistakes.


Evaluation of the Video

The video is a systematic critique of common religious apologetics, presented with a blend of logic and personal conviction.

  • Effectiveness of Logic: The host is highly effective at identifying logical fallacies, such as the "Santa Claus" false analogy and the inconsistent application of personal experience. His insistence on the specific definition of trust forces the viewer to confront the difference between blind faith and evidence-based reliance.

  • Tone and Delivery: The tone is provocative and direct. While this resonates strongly with his target audience (skeptics and those deconstructing their faith), it may feel dismissive to a believer seeking a neutral dialogue. However, the host maintains that his goal is intellectual honesty rather than appeasement.

  • Strengths: The video's primary strength lies in its structure. By using actual user comments, the host grounds his abstract philosophical arguments in real-world examples of how people articulate their faith.

  • Weaknesses: The sample size (32 comments) is limited to the host's own comment section, which naturally skews toward certain types of interactions. A more robust evaluation might include responses from formal theologians or philosophers to see if the 0 actual answers claim holds up against scholarly or academic Christians.

Overall, the video serves as a powerful tool for those looking to analyze the common refrains of modern Christian testimony from a rationalist perspective.

Rebuttal

a rebuttal to Mindshift's critique would focus on shifting the definitions of "trust" and "evidence" from a scientific framework to a philosophical and relational one.

Here is a rebuttal to the video’s core arguments:


1. The Historical Approach (Breaking the "Circular" Logic)

The host argues that trusting God because "the Bible says so" is circular. However, a common theological rebuttal is that many believers don't start with "divine inspiration." They start with historical reliability.

  • The Argument: If the New Testament is treated as a collection of historical documents, and the Resurrection of Jesus is considered the most probable explanation for the birth of the early church, then trusting Jesus becomes a logical deduction.

  • The Rebuttal: Trust isn't based on a circular book; it's based on a historical person (Jesus) whose claims were "validated" by an event in history.

2. Relational Trust vs. Scientific Proof

The host demands justification that looks like a lab report. A rebuttal would argue that relational trust works differently than propositional trust.

  • The Argument: You don't prove your spouse is trustworthy via a double-blind study; you build a cumulative case through years of interaction.

  • The Rebuttal: For the believer, answered prayers aren't individual data points to be debunked; they are part of a decades-long relationship. While a skeptic sees confirmation bias, a believer sees a consistent character.

3. The Properly Basic Belief

The host critiques personal experience as fault" because others have it too. Philosophers like Alvin Plantinga argue that belief in God can be properly basic.

  • The Argument: Just as we trust our senses that the physical world is real (without being able to prove we aren't in a simulation), a sensus divinitatis (a sense of the divine) might be a foundational part of human hardware.

  • The Rebuttal: If humans are designed to perceive the divine, then experiencing peace or presence is a rational ground for trust, not a trick of the brain.

4. Addressing the Santa Claus Analogy

The host compares God to Santa to show the absurdity of the belief. A rebuttal would call this a category error.

  • The Argument: Santa is a "thing" within the universe (like a teapot or a unicorn) that can be falsified. In classical theism, God is the "Ground of All Being", the reason why there is something rather than nothing.

  • The Rebuttal: You can’t debunk the "foundation of existence" the same way you debunk a man in a red suit. The arguments for God (Cosmological, Teleological) address why the universe exists at all, which is a far more robust "question" than the host implies.


The Steel Man Conclusion

A thoughtful believer might say the host is right about bad answers (fear, cliches, and circularity), but wrong that no answer exists. They would argue that trust in God isn't about ignoring logic; it’s about placing trust in the "Source of Logic" itself when human understanding reaches its limit.

o provide a direct rebuttal to the host's opening argument in 1 Question + 32 Christians = 0 Actual Answers—specifically his claim that eternal punishment for a "lie" is an unjust "meltdown" by a "fiend"—Christian apologists typically offer a three-layered counter-argument based on the nature of God, the nature of sin, and the nature of human choice.


1. The "Dignity of the Offended" Argument

The host argues that because human society doesn't arrest people for lying, God shouldn't punish it eternally. Apologists like William Lane Craig and St. Anselm argue that the severity of a crime is determined not just by the act, but by the dignity of the person being offended.

  • The Rebuttal: A lie told to a friend is a social slight; a lie told under oath in court is perjury; but a lie (or any sin) directed at an infinitely holy and perfect God is an offense of infinite gravity. In this view, sin isn't just a "mistake"; it is a rejection of the source of all Truth and Life. Dr. William Lane Craig on Hell.

2. Hell as a "Trajectory," Not a "Sentence"

Tim Keller and C.S. Lewis famously rebutted the "torture chamber" imagery by redefining what Hell actually is.

  • The Rebuttal: Hell is not a place where people are begging for mercy but are being kept in fire against their will. Rather, it is the natural trajectory of a soul that has chosen to live for itself instead of God. Keller argues that if you live a life of self-absorption and "clenched fists" toward God, Hell is simply that state allowed to continue into infinity. As Lewis famously put it in The Problem of Pain, "The doors of hell are locked on the inside." Tim Keller on "The Reason for God".

3. The Problem of "Infinite Punishment for Finite Sin"

The host calls the punishment "unjust" because the sin is finite but the time is infinite. Apologists address this using the Ongoing Sin Theory.

  • The Rebuttal: People do not go to Hell for a single lie they told in 1995. They are in Hell because they continue to sin and reject God in the afterlife. William Lane Craig argues that insofar as the inhabitants of Hell continue to hate God, they continue to accrue guilt. Therefore, the punishment is not "infinite punishment for a finite sin," but an ongoing punishment for an ongoing rebellion.

4. Correcting the "Equal Punishment" Misconception

The host implies that Christians believe a "white lie" and "murder" deserve the exact same eternal torture.

  • The Rebuttal: Most theologians and apologists (such as J. Warner Wallace) point to biblical passages (e.g., Luke 12:47-48) suggesting that there are different degrees of punishment in Hell based on the light a person had and the severity of their deeds. The idea that all sins receive an identical "infinite torture" is often a caricature of the actual doctrine.

Host's PointApologist's Rebuttal
"Lying isn't even a crime."Lying against an infinite God is an infinite offense (St. Anselm).
"Infinite punishment is unjust."Punishment continues because the rebellion continues (William Lane Craig).
"God is a fiend for torturing."Hell is the soul's chosen "self-absorption" into infinity (Tim Keller).
"All sins are treated the same."The Bible suggests degrees of accountability and justice (J. Warner Wallace).

To provide a robust and rational answer to "Why do you trust God?", one must move beyond subjective feelings and circular reasoning. A rationalist’s trust in God is typically built on a Cumulative Case—the idea that while no single argument is a "mathematical proof," the collection of evidence from philosophy, history, and personal experience makes trust the most "reasonable" conclusion.

Here is a synthesis of the most intellectually rigorous arguments for that trust:

The Rational Framework for Trusting God


1. The Ontological Foundation: God as the "Ground of Reason"

A rational answer begins by arguing that trust in God is the prerequisite for trust in reason itself.

  • The Argument: If human consciousness is merely the byproduct of blind, unguided physical processes (atoms colliding), there is no reason to trust that our thoughts are "true" rather than just "advantageous for survival."

  • The Conclusion: Trusting in an infinite, rational Mind (God) as the source of our finite minds provides a logical foundation for why we can trust logic, mathematics, and the laws of nature in the first place.

2. The Historical Anchor: The Reliability of Jesus

For many, trust isn't placed in a generic "higher power," but in a specific historical figure. This moves trust from "abstract philosophy" to "empirical data."

  • The Argument: Unlike other religious claims, Christianity is pinned to a historical event: the Resurrection. Rational trust is built on the fact that the early disciples—who were in a position to know the truth—transformed from cowards to martyrs, and the "empty tomb" remains the most debated yet un-refuted event of antiquity.

  • The Conclusion: If the Resurrection is historically probable, then the character of the Person who rose (Jesus) is proven trustworthy. Trusting God becomes a logical response to a verified historical "signal."

3. The Moral Argument: The Source of "Ought"

Rationalists often struggle to explain objective morality in a purely materialistic universe.

  • The Argument: We all live as if "evil" is a real thing, not just a biological preference. If there is no God, morality is a social construct. However, if objective moral values exist (e.g., "it is always wrong to torture an innocent"), there must be an objective standard for them.

  • The Conclusion: Trusting God is a recognition that our internal moral compass is aligned with an external Reality. It is more rational to trust that our sense of justice is real than to believe it is a useful delusion.

4. Relational Induction: The "Track Record"

In any other context, we trust people based on a track record.

  • The Argument: A believer looks at "answered prayers" or "internal peace" not as scientific proofs for others, but as relational data for themselves. If I ask a friend for help 100 times and they show up in unexpected ways 90 times, it is rational for me to trust them the 101st time.

  • The Conclusion: While a skeptic calls this "confirmation bias," a rationalist sees it as Bayesian inference. They are updating their probability of God’s reliability based on repeated, lived experience.


Final Summary

The most robust answer is that trust in God is a "Leap of Reason," not a "Leap into the Dark." It is the conclusion that:

  1. Existence requires a Necessary Cause.

  2. Reason requires a Rational Source.

  3. Morality requires an Objective Standard.

  4. History provides a Specific Person (Jesus) who demonstrated all three.

"I believe in Christianity as I believe that the sun has risen: not only because I see it, but because by it I see everything else." — C.S. Lewis (The Weight of Glory)

Saturday, March 28, 2026

7 of Paul’s Most Damning Passage

 The video 7 of Paul’s Most Damning Passages by the channel Mindshift explores seven New Testament verses attributed to the Apostle Paul that the narrator, Brandon, considers ethically problematic or contradictory to the teachings of Jesus.

Summary of the 7 Passages
  • Galatians 5:12 - Hostility toward Opponents: Paul expresses a wish that those advocating for circumcision would "castrate themselves" 02:26 Opens in a new window . The video argues this sets a precedent for hostility and division within the church.

  • 1 Corinthians 5:5 - Handing over to Satan: Paul instructs the church to "hand [a sinner] over to Satan for the destruction of the flesh" 06:23 Opens in a new window . The narrator views this as a justification for excommunication and the harmful idea that physical suffering leads to spiritual salvation.

  • 1 Corinthians 9:27 - The Body as an Enemy: Paul speaks of "punishing" and "enslaving" his own body 09:33 Opens in a new window . The video critiques this for promoting self-loathing and a theological view that the physical body is inherently wicked.

  • Romans 7:19 — The "Broken Man" Excuse: Paul laments doing the evil he doesn't want to do 12:13 Opens in a new window . The narrator argues this forms the basis for the "total depravity" doctrine, which he claims allows people to excuse harmful behavior as being "just a fallen man."

  • Ephesians 5:22-24 — Marital Submission: These verses command wives to be subject to their husbands "in everything" 14:34 Opens in a new window . The video argues this has been used for centuries to justify patriarchy and the denial of women's rights.

  • Ephesians 6:5 — Obedience to Slave Masters: Paul tells slaves to obey their earthly masters as they would obey Christ 17:47 Opens in a new window . The video highlights how this verse was historically used to defend American slavery and silence abolitionists.

  • 1 Corinthians 16:22 — Cursing Non-Believers: Paul concludes his letter by pronouncing a curse on anyone who does not love the Lord 19:01 Opens in a new window . The narrator sees this as a "dog whistle" for social hostility and dehumanization of outsiders.


Evaluation

  • Perspective: The video is framed from an ex-Christian/skeptical viewpoint. It focuses on "deconstruction"—the process of questioning and stripping away traditional religious beliefs.

  • Argumentation: The core argument is that Paul, as the "architect of Christian theology," often mirrors the worst aspects of Greco-Roman culture (slavery, patriarchy) rather than a timeless divine morality. The video is effective at showing the historical and modern harm caused by literal interpretations of these specific texts.

  • Critical Tone: Brandon is candid and occasionally witty, using phrases like "Paul throwing a hissy fit" to humanize a figure often viewed as infallible. He acknowledges that while Paul says "pretty things," believers often ignore these "damning" passages to avoid cognitive dissonance.

  • Conclusion: It is a well-structured critique that challenges the idea of biblical inerrancy by highlighting moral friction between Paul’s epistles and contemporary ethics, as well as the teachings attributed to Jesus.

Theological and scholarly interpretations often offer a different lens through which to view these passages, focusing on literary context, ancient culture, and rhetorical strategy.

Here are the primary scholarly rebuttals to the interpretations presented in the video:


1. Galatians 5:12 — Rhetorical Irony

While the video views Paul’s wish for self-castration as a "hissy fit," many scholars interpret it as reductio ad absurdum (reducing an argument to absurdity).

  • The Rebuttal: Paul is using biting irony to show that if his opponents believe cutting the skin (circumcision) brings one closer to God, then "going all the way" to castration should be even better. It is a powerful rhetorical knockout blow meant to expose the theological error of legalism rather than express literal hatred toward people's bodies.

2. 1 Corinthians 5:5 — Rehabilitative Discipline

The interpretation that Paul is "using the devil like a paddle" is often countered by the restorative intent found in the text itself.

  • The Rebuttal: The "destruction of the flesh" is frequently understood not as physical torture, but as the stripping away of the sinful nature or the person's worldly pride. By being "handed over" (excommunicated) to the world (Satan's realm), the individual is forced to face the consequences of their sin so they might repent and be spiritually restored.

3. 1 Corinthians 9:27 — The Athletic Metaphor

Scholars emphasize that Paul’s language of "punishing" his body is part of a larger extended metaphor comparing the Christian life to an Olympic athlete.

  • The Rebuttal: The Greek word hupopiazo (to buffet) is a boxing term. Paul is not advocating for self-harm; he is describing spiritual self-mastery. Just as an athlete disciplines their physical instincts to win a prize, Paul "buffets" his own sinful impulses to ensure he remains disqualified-free in his mission.

4. Romans 7:19 — The Human Condition

The video views this as an excuse for harmful behavior, but many theologians see it as a psychological diagnosis of the human will.

5. Ephesians 5:22-24 — Mutual Submission

The critiques of patriarchy often overlook the preceding verse and the subversive nature of Paul's instructions.

6. Ephesians 6:5 — Survival and Subversion

Regarding slavery, scholars point out that Paul was a leader of a persecuted minority with zero political power to abolish a global economic system.

  • The Rebuttal: Instead of violent revolution, which would have led to the slaughter of the early church, Paul introduced reciprocal duties. By telling masters they have the same Master in heaven and should treat slaves with dignity, he was planting the seeds for the eventual dismantling of the institution from the inside out.

7. 1 Corinthians 16:22 — Liturgical Warning

The "curse" on non-believers is often viewed by scholars as a formal liturgical warning rather than a personal expression of malice.

  • The Rebuttal: The phrase "Anathema Maranatha" was likely an early church greeting or liturgical cry. It is a solemn reminder of allegiance to Christ in light of His expected return, functioning more as a prediction of divine judgment than a "dog whistle" for human violence.

Thursday, March 26, 2026

What Happened to the Original Bible?

Introduction

The quest for the "Original Bible" is often framed as a detective story where the primary evidence has gone missing. In his provocative video, What Happened to the Original Bible?, Darante' LaMar argues that because we lack the original autographs, the Bible we hold today is merely a library of evolved texts and copies of copies. This raises a critical question for both skeptics and believers: does the lack of a single, original master copy undermine the integrity of the Christian scriptures?

In this post, we will summarize LaMar's arguments, evaluate the historical reality of biblical transmission, and see how the "embarrassment of riches" in manuscript evidence provides a robust rebuttal to the claim that the original message has been lost to time.


Summary of Arguments

The core thesis of the video is that there is no such thing as an "Original Bible." Instead, there is a complex library of texts that evolved over centuries.

LaMar explains that we possess zero original "autographs" (the actual documents written by the authors). What we have are "copies of copies," many dating centuries after the events they describe.
The word "Bible" comes from the Greek Biblia (plural: "books"). For centuries, these were individual scrolls kept in chests, only later bound into a single "Codex".

Because the texts were hand-copied, errors and intentional changes "crept in." LaMar notes there are more variations among biblical manuscripts than there are words in the New Testament.

There was never a single "table of contents" agreed upon by all Christians. Different traditions (Catholic, Protestant, Ethiopian Orthodox) include different books, and the canonization process was organic and often political, not a single decision made at the Council of Nicaea.

LaMar argues that the search for an "original" text is typically a "security blanket" used to avoid the exhausting work of moral reasoning and interpretation in the present.
Evaluation

Strengths:

Historical Accuracy: The video is well-grounded in modern academic biblical scholarship and textual criticism, accurately debunking popular myths like the Council of Nicaea "voting" on the canon.

Accessibility: It simplifies complex concepts, like the "Ship of Theseus" analogy for the Bible's evolution, making high-level scholarly debates understandable for a general audience.

Nuance: It avoids the "telephone game" cliché, acknowledging that scribes like the Masoretes were regularly meticulously careful, even if variations still occurred.

Weaknesses:

Philosophical Pivot: Toward the end, the video shifts from history to a psychological critique of faith. This portion is more subjective and may feel like a deconstruction polemic rather than a neutral historical analysis.

Focus on Fragmentation: While historically true, the emphasis on "more variants than words" can be misleading without the context that the vast majority of those variants are minor spelling differences that don't change the text's meaning.
Rebuttal: The Scholarly Counter-Argument

While LaMar’s historical facts are largely correct, many scholars and apologists argue that the conclusions drawn from these facts are overly skeptical.

Superiority of Manuscript Evidence: Scholars point out that while we don't have autographs, the New Testament has far more manuscript evidence than any other ancient work. see The Worst Argument Against the Bible. For comparison, we have only a handful of copies for works by Plato or Tacitus, often with a 1,000-year gap, yet their general reliability is rarely questioned.  How does the Quality of New Testament Manuscripts Compare to Other Ancient Manuscripts? 

Textual Stability: Scholars like Daniel Wallace note that roughly 99% of the New Testament text is established with certainty. Most of the 400,000+ variants are "insignificant," such as spelling "John" with one 'n' instead of two, and do not impact any core Christian doctrine. Bart Ehrman, atheist/agnostic, and NT scholar, says this: ...the essential Christian beliefs are not affected by textual variants in the manuscript tradition of the New Testament.

Early Patristic Evidence: Even if all biblical manuscripts were lost, the New Testament could be almost entirely reconstructed from the thousands of quotations found in the writings of early Church Fathers. Is the original Bible still in existence? | GotQuestions.org.

Reliability of Oral Tradition: Scholars argue that ancient oral cultures were "communal" and highly conservative, meaning the core "identity and meaning" of the stories were protected by the community's collective memory, making them more stable than a simple "telephone game" suggests.
The Reliability of the New Testament | The Gospel Coalition.


The textual reliability of the Bible is assessed through textual criticism, a branch of philology that seeks to reconstruct the original wording of ancient documents. Because we lack the autographs (the original physical documents penned by the authors), scholars must triangulate the original text using thousands of later copies.

The New Testament: A Case of Embarrassment of Riches

The New Testament (NT) is widely considered the best-attested work of antiquity. Its reliability is measured by the number of manuscripts, their age (proximity to the original), and their geographical diversity.

Manuscript Count: There are over 5,800 Greek manuscripts of the NT. When including other early translations like Latin, Coptic, and Syriac, the total exceeds 24,000 [see College Church]


Earliest Fragments: The gap between the original writing and our earliest copies is minuscule compared to other ancient works.

P52 - John Rylands Fragment: A small piece of the Gospel of John dated to approximately 125–130 AD, only a few decades after the original was likely written. CSNTM.

P46: An early papyrus containing most of Paul's letters, dated to roughly 200 AD. Reading the Papyri

The "Patristic" Safety Net: Even if every biblical manuscript were lost, the New Testament could be almost entirely reconstructed from hundreds of thousands of quotations found in the writings of the Early Church Fathers Tekton Apologetics.


Decoding the 400,000 Variants

A common point of skepticism is that there are more "variants" (differences) in NT manuscripts than there are words in the NT. While true, scholars categorize these variants to determine their impact
Stand to Reason:

CategoryDescriptionPercentage
Non-Meaningful & Non-ViableMinor spelling errors (orthography) or word order changes that don't change the meaning.99%
Meaningful but Non-ViableChanges the meaning (e.g., a late scribe adding "Jesus" where the text said "He"), but found only in a single, late manuscript.<1%
Meaningful and ViableChanges the meaning and has strong early manuscript support.<1%


Key Example: The Adulterous Woman" (John 7:53–8:11) and the long ending of Mark (16:9–20) are the most famous "Meaningful and Viable" variants. Most modern Bibles include them with footnotes stating they are not found in the earliest and best manuscripts. Zondervan Academic.

3. The Old Testament and the Dead Sea Scrolls

Before 1947, the oldest complete Hebrew Bible was the Leningrad Codex (1008 AD). Skeptics wondered how much the text had changed over the 1,000+ years since the time of Christ.

The 1,000-Year Bridge: The discovery of the Dead Sea Scrolls (DSS) provided manuscripts dated from 250 BC to 68 AD.


The Isaiah Scroll: When scholars compared the DSS Isaiah scroll to the Masoretic Text (from 1,000 years later), they found it was 95% identical.  Bible Archaeology

The .5% variation consisted almost entirely of minor spelling and stylistic shifts, proving the meticulousness of the Jewish scribal tradition UASV Bible.

4. Comparative Reliability Table


To understand these numbers, scholars compare the Bible to other widely accepted historical texts. If one rejects the Bible's textual reliability, they must also reject almost all of ancient history
Reasonable Theology.



AuthorDate WrittenEarliest CopyApproximate Time Span between original & copyNumber of CopiesAccuracy of copies
Lucretiusdied 55 or 53 B.CUnknown1100 yrs2Unknown
PlinyA.D. 61-113A.D. 850750 yrs7Unknown
Plato427-347 B.CA.D. 9001200 yrs7Unknown
Demosthenes4th Cent. B.CA.D. 1100800 yrs8Unknown
Herodotus480-425 B.C.A.D. 9001300 yrs8Unknown
SuetoniusA.D. 75-160A.D. 950800 yrs8Unknown
Thucydides460-400 B.C.A.D. 9001300 yrs8Unknown
Euripides480-406 B.C.A.D. 11001300 yrs9Unknown
Aristophanes450-385 B.CA.D. 9001200 yrs10Unknown
Caesar100-44 B.C.A.D. 9001000 yrs10Unknown
Livy59 BC-AD 17UnknownUnknown20Unknown
Tacituscirca A.D. 100A.D. 11001000 yrs20Unknown
Aristotle384-322 B.C.A.D. 11001400 yrs49Unknown
Sophocles496-406 B.C.A.D. 11001400 yrs193Unknown
Homer (Iliad)900 B.C.400 B.C.500 yrs64395%
New Testament50-100 A.D.A.D. 130> 100 yrs560099.50%


5. The Scholarly Consensus

Even agnostic scholars like Bart Ehrman and evangelical scholars like Daniel Wallace agree that the New Testament is the best-attested work of the ancient world. The debate is not over whether we have enough evidence, but over whether the evidence allows us to reconstruct the absolute original with 100% certainty Trinity Foundation

Most textual critics conclude that the text is 99% established, and no major Christian doctrine rests on a disputed variant. Logos.com.

Conclusion

While the physical autographs of the Bible have long since succumbed to the ravages of time, the message they contained has been preserved with a level of accuracy that is unparalleled in ancient history. The transition from the YouTube skepticism of copies of copies to the scholarly reality of 24,000+ manuscripts reveals that the Bible is not a game of telephone, but a meticulously documented tradition.

When we compare the textual stability of the New Testament, supported by fragments like the John Rylands Fragment (P52), to other ancient classics like Plato or Caesar, it becomes clear that rejecting the Bible's reliability would require rejecting almost all of ancient history. Ultimately, we do not need the original paper to have the original words; the science of textual criticism ensures that the Bible we read today is a faithful reflection of the texts that first changed the world.


1 Question + 32 Christians = 0 Actual Answers

The video 1 Question + 32 Christians = 0 Actual Answers features the host of the channel Mindshift analyzing 32 comments from Christians re...