“Just Show Me the Evidence”
We open the series with a brief, beginning-to-end overview of what a presuppositional conversation actually looks like — and then turn to Scripture to discover why this method is not one option among many but the Biblical pattern itself.
- Acts 17, 1 Peter 3:15, Proverbs 1:7, Colossians 2, the Gospels... as foundations for the Biblical method
- Romans 1:18–25 and the diagnosis of the unbeliever
- 2 Corinthians 10:3–5 and taking every thought captive to Christ
- No persuasion even when evidence is given (Luke 16:31, Acts 4:13-22, etc.)
- Why the starting point determines the destination
The unbeliever's self-asserted autonomy yields presuppositions that suppress and reinterpret the facts so that no quantity of evidence, weighed on his terms, will compel the conclusion that the God of Scripture exists. The defect is in the interpreter, not the evidence. The demand “just show me the evidence” smuggles in the false assumption that the unbeliever is a competent neutral judge entitled to arbitrate the facts by his own self-asserted “autonomous” standard.