Apologetics which dominates this work is fully explained in the second chapter of the I ntroduction. It will suffice here to say that what is now offered to the public is not an abstract treatise on Apologetics in which all the traditional common places of the subject The Theistic A rgument, Revelation, I nspiration, Miracles, Prophecy, The Canon, etc. are dis cussed, without reference to present needs and trials of faith. It is an apologetic presentation of the Christian ,faith with reference to whatever in our intellectual environ ment makes faith difficult at the present time. The constituency to which it addresses itself consists neither of dogmatic believers for whose satisfaction it seeks to show how triumphantly their faith can at all possible points of assault be defended, nor of dogmatic unbelievers whom it strives to convince or confound, but of men whose sympathies are with Christianity, but whose faith is stifled or weakened by ariti-C hristian prejudices of varied nature and origin. The aim dictates the method. (Typographical errors above are due to OCR software and don't occur in the book.)
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