May 21, 2025

Don't Apologize For Your Faith

Do you know why you believe what you believe? Don't worry; I didn't either for a long time. Recently, I have jumped into the deep end of apologetics, and it's been fun but confusing. David Libby returns to the podcast, bringing his practical wisdom on apologetics. A logger by trade and a passionate philosophy student, David embodies the truth that you don't need advanced degrees to understand and articulate your faith profoundly.

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00:00 - Introducing David Libby and His Book

06:21 - Understanding Biblical Terminology and Philosophies

11:05 - The Nature of Luciferianism Explained

16:19 - Philosophy Behind Biblical Apologetics

22:11 - Practical Applications of Apologetics

29:13 - Future Books and Final Thoughts

WEBVTT

00:00:00.240 --> 00:00:02.968
Welcome back to Honest Christian Conversations, friends.

00:00:02.968 --> 00:00:03.991
I'm Anna Murby.

00:00:03.991 --> 00:00:05.746
Thank you for tuning in today.

00:00:05.746 --> 00:00:09.109
This guest is a returning guest, david Libby.

00:00:09.109 --> 00:00:20.454
He's been on the podcast a total of four times, counting today, so that shows you how much I appreciate his impact on this podcast and his input in life.

00:00:20.839 --> 00:00:22.588
He loves apologetics.

00:00:22.588 --> 00:00:25.265
He is a layman, as he calls it.

00:00:25.265 --> 00:00:39.412
He doesn't have a PhD in it, he did not go to school for this, he's just been studying it for a long time and he has such a love and a desire to know about it, so much so that he wrote a book about apologetics.

00:00:39.412 --> 00:00:49.531
And it's easy to understand for those of us who want to know why we believe what we believe, but we don't feel like going and learning it in a school environment.

00:00:49.531 --> 00:01:05.069
So you are definitely going to want to tune into this if this is something you enjoy geeking out about, because we should all know why we believe what we believe in, but some of us really want to know more than others, and this episode is going to help you with that.

00:01:05.420 --> 00:01:10.930
So, without further ado, let's get to it Before the episode starts.

00:01:10.930 --> 00:01:14.884
Make sure you follow the show so you never miss another episode.

00:01:14.884 --> 00:01:17.168
David, welcome back to the show.

00:01:17.168 --> 00:01:25.453
I am so excited to have you on for a fourth time, which means you are the winner.

00:01:25.453 --> 00:01:31.564
You are the first guest I have had on the podcast four times, so congratulations.

00:01:31.564 --> 00:01:36.855
Sorry there is no prize for you, but I'm honored to have you back.

00:01:37.140 --> 00:01:39.769
Being on your podcast, Anna, is the only prize that I need.

00:01:40.822 --> 00:01:41.667
Oh, thank you.

00:01:43.643 --> 00:01:50.328
And I've been on a number of podcasts, and you're the first one that I've been on four times, so you get a prize too.

00:01:51.903 --> 00:01:52.465
All right.

00:01:52.465 --> 00:02:08.824
Well, we are on again, because you have a new and wonderful book out that I am still working through because it is chocked full of so much information that it's not quote unquote an easy read.

00:02:08.824 --> 00:02:17.087
It's very in-depth, so I'm enjoying it, but I've got to slow slice it and probably read it over so I can completely digest everything.

00:02:17.087 --> 00:02:22.407
But the book right here is called Apologize Without Apologizing.

00:02:22.407 --> 00:02:23.991
I love the title, by the way.

00:02:24.032 --> 00:02:32.116
that's very clever and perfect because when I told my husband what the book was about, he's like apologizing.

00:02:32.116 --> 00:02:34.263
You have to apologize for being a Christian.

00:02:34.263 --> 00:02:39.701
I said, no, that's not what it means and I don't understand why we call it that.

00:02:39.701 --> 00:02:41.425
But I like your title.

00:02:41.425 --> 00:02:42.829
It's very catchy.

00:02:42.829 --> 00:02:54.366
And go ahead and tell us a little bit about who you are, for those who aren't familiar with you because they have not tuned into your last three episodes which they should once this episode is done.

00:02:54.366 --> 00:02:58.122
But give us an overview of who you are and then you can tell us about your book.

00:02:58.322 --> 00:02:59.022
Okay, thank you.

00:02:59.022 --> 00:03:03.429
Yeah, I live in central Maine.

00:03:03.429 --> 00:03:08.795
I've been active in the church all my life, raised in a Christian home.

00:03:08.795 --> 00:03:12.610
I had my time of testing.

00:03:12.610 --> 00:03:14.164
I tend to be a skeptic by nature.

00:03:14.164 --> 00:03:14.968
I tend to test things.

00:03:14.968 --> 00:03:32.563
So I had my kind of wayward years and have come to a place where I know with certainty that the biblical worldview is correct and that that of course leads to the next logical step and that is to have a devoted love for the Lord and desire to serve him.

00:03:32.563 --> 00:03:33.887
And I know you do too, anna.

00:03:33.887 --> 00:03:35.913
I appreciate what you do in this podcast.

00:03:36.381 --> 00:03:40.711
I don't ever want to present myself as something other than what I am.

00:03:40.711 --> 00:03:48.514
So you know, I've been criticized on other podcasts for talking about things like philosophy and apologetics, and I don't have a master's degree in any of that or anything.

00:03:48.514 --> 00:03:54.641
So you know, I'm a layman, I'm a logger by trade, but I love the Lord and I've studied these things quite deeply.

00:03:54.641 --> 00:03:58.611
And the new book gives a philosophical defense of a biblical worldview.

00:03:58.611 --> 00:04:01.223
There are a lot of ways to defend the biblical worldview.

00:04:01.223 --> 00:04:12.306
You know we have a lot of very convincing, powerful evidences, I believe, for the existence of God, for the divine origin of the Bible, but we also have strong philosophical arguments, and that's what I get into in this book.

00:04:12.306 --> 00:04:26.543
I am hired by a great Christian philosopher named Cornelius Van Til, died the year that I graduated from high school, in 1988, and then a lot of thoughts of my own as well, but we can dive into that as we go if you like.

00:04:27.084 --> 00:04:28.225
Yeah, absolutely.

00:04:28.225 --> 00:04:36.610
First of all, I feel like we should not say, oh, you don't have room to speak to this because you don't have this.

00:04:36.610 --> 00:04:43.045
If you have a passion for something, you're going to do what it takes to know what you're talking about.

00:04:43.045 --> 00:04:46.550
You're not just going to talk about it and even still, so what?

00:04:46.550 --> 00:04:51.386
Look at all the people in the world who have degrees in certain things and where they went wrong.

00:04:51.386 --> 00:04:58.812
I'm not going to even go into COVID, but I'm just saying that out there and everyone is probably laughing now because they get it.

00:04:59.132 --> 00:05:07.464
But, yeah, that's actually pretty annoying that people would do that, and I'm not surprised, as they throw that out all the time.

00:05:07.464 --> 00:05:08.127
What is a woman?

00:05:08.127 --> 00:05:10.240
Oh, I'm sorry you can't say that You're a dude.

00:05:10.240 --> 00:05:13.449
It's like I think a guy can tell what a woman is.

00:05:13.449 --> 00:05:14.672
But anyway, we won't go there.

00:05:15.500 --> 00:05:18.887
We're not talking about that kind of stuff.

00:05:18.887 --> 00:05:26.050
We are talking about the philosophies of the Bible, which I think a lot of people need to know, these things.

00:05:26.050 --> 00:05:34.168
But it can seem pretty daunting because a lot of the words that are in the book I've heard, because I've been hearing on different podcasts, but do I know what they mean?

00:05:34.168 --> 00:05:35.050
Not necessarily.

00:05:35.050 --> 00:05:42.016
Let me see if I can remember some of them, just like eschatology.

00:05:42.016 --> 00:05:44.942
What does that mean for those of us who don't know?

00:05:45.343 --> 00:05:49.851
Eschatology is the study of last things is what the word literally means.

00:05:49.891 --> 00:05:57.901
So yeah, essentially Okay.

00:05:57.901 --> 00:06:02.367
Yeah, see that that's something that a lot of people are really looking to talk about now, and they're they've got their theories.

00:06:02.367 --> 00:06:08.456
Some people think that Trump is ushering in the Antichrist age, some don't.

00:06:08.456 --> 00:06:10.627
There's just so much of that.

00:06:10.627 --> 00:06:14.411
What do you go into when you talk about that in your book?

00:06:14.411 --> 00:06:16.848
What do you talk about specifically?

00:06:17.199 --> 00:06:21.879
Well, I didn't get into eschatology a whole lot in the book, but it's more of a philosophical defense.

00:06:21.879 --> 00:06:27.932
I think I did mention in chapter six I was talking about a concept called final authorities.

00:06:27.932 --> 00:06:29.944
What is the justification that you give?

00:06:29.944 --> 00:06:34.512
You know, the final end-of-the-line justification that you give for whatever you believe to be true.

00:06:34.512 --> 00:06:46.336
You know, the book argues that if that end-of-the-line justification isn't a God who meets certain preconditions which are found only in the God of the Bible, then you end up with a final authority who can't justify truth and knowledge and so forth.

00:06:46.336 --> 00:06:53.959
But in that section I talk about faith and how every worldview has faith in its foundation somewhere, and of course that includes us.

00:06:53.959 --> 00:06:58.329
And I mentioned eschatology, as Hebrews puts it, the belief in the unseen.

00:06:58.329 --> 00:07:08.997
So we believe in the eschatological promises of God because we know that they're promised to us by a sovereign God who will not mislead us, and so I think that's about the only mention of eschatology in the book.

00:07:08.997 --> 00:07:14.940
But I don't get a whole lot of end time stuff, stuff that should be talked about right now in the church, I believe.

00:07:15.442 --> 00:07:18.810
Yeah, yeah, I know some people are talking about it.

00:07:18.810 --> 00:07:23.648
Some are afraid to broach the situation because of how divisive it can be.

00:07:23.648 --> 00:07:35.247
But yeah, I mean, there are certain things that we should be talking about as a church and we aren't, and we should just take the Bible at its word, at its face value, and study that.

00:07:35.247 --> 00:07:40.583
If you want to discuss the situation, we don't have to bring in our own stuff.

00:07:40.762 --> 00:07:41.764
Yeah, right, right.

00:07:41.764 --> 00:07:44.767
And just because something's divisive doesn't mean we shouldn't talk about it.

00:07:44.767 --> 00:07:51.255
And sometimes people, I think they tend to be a little bit too polarizing.

00:07:51.255 --> 00:08:03.721
You know, a lot of times eschatology is one of those topics that tends to do that I'm a preterist, I'm a pre-male or whatever, and I think that the best way to be a good watchman is to dismount your eschatological hobby horses.

00:08:03.721 --> 00:08:06.867
And you know, maybe kind of keep an open mind about how things could play out.

00:08:07.088 --> 00:08:08.550
Yeah, yep, I agree.

00:08:08.550 --> 00:08:13.668
So another word that you use in the book is Luciferianism.

00:08:13.668 --> 00:08:15.031
I believe I said that right.

00:08:15.031 --> 00:08:25.327
Go ahead and share what that is and how often it's discussed in the book, because I'm pretty sure if you've been in church for a while you kind of know where it's stemming from.

00:08:25.327 --> 00:08:32.587
But there might be people listening who have no idea what that means and you know they're going to want to read your book.

00:08:32.587 --> 00:08:34.166
They're going to need to know what that is.

00:08:34.166 --> 00:08:36.024
So, what exactly is that?

00:08:36.245 --> 00:08:38.840
Sure, yeah, yeah, that's a very good question, anna.

00:08:38.840 --> 00:09:07.553
And again, that's not the main thing the book is about, but it is mentioned and I think that the best way to put it would be Luciferianism would be any worldview that venerates Lucifer as Lord rather than Jesus Christ, and it might shock us as Christians to hear that anybody does that, but you need to understand that their worldview is twisted and they see Lucifer as the light bearer, the good guy, god's the evil tyrant.

00:09:07.553 --> 00:09:18.033
I don't get into this at all in the book, but one of the big linchpins that defines Luciferianism would be the idea that you get to be God, you get to ascend, you get to.

00:09:18.033 --> 00:09:37.706
We find this in all sorts of diverse worldviews out there New Ageism and Mormonism and any others where basically the lie is repeated that was given to Adam and Eve in the Garden, in all sorts of diverse worldviews out there New Ageism and Mormonism and any others where basically the lie is repeated that was given to Adam and Eve in the Garden of Eden, that if you follow me not me, david Libby, but me Lucifer the light bearer then you can be gods in your own right, you can be like God.

00:09:37.941 --> 00:09:42.011
I'm reminded of a radio interview that I saw probably 25 years ago now.

00:09:42.011 --> 00:10:03.743
There was a local radio show where I lived in southern Maine where the host liked to get you know kind of sketchy pushing the envelope sort of guests on the show and he had a young couple who were Satanists on his show and I thought, boy, I got to listen to this and I wasn't expecting to hear stuff about blood and you know, sacrificing goats and so forth, but it wasn't that at all.

00:10:03.743 --> 00:10:09.669
It was all about how Satan's really the good guy and the history books are written by the one who has the upper hand at the end of the battle.

00:10:09.759 --> 00:10:18.349
You know, the victor writes the history books, that's it was that God had thus far, in this great, you know, cosmic dualistic struggle, had had the upper hand over Satan.

00:10:18.349 --> 00:10:20.123
And so he wrote the history books.

00:10:20.123 --> 00:10:22.749
But he gave us a distortion of real history.

00:10:22.749 --> 00:10:24.130
He presented himself as the good guy.

00:10:24.130 --> 00:10:25.433
And Satan's really the good guy.

00:10:25.433 --> 00:10:26.865
God's the evil, tyrant.

00:10:26.865 --> 00:10:29.868
Satanism's all about love and light and so forth.

00:10:29.868 --> 00:10:44.311
If you dig into Luciferianism, you dig into the darker, secret corners of it, then you find rituals and things that are absolutely disgusting, and you can see that well, no, actually Satan's the bad guy, just like the Bible says.

00:10:46.543 --> 00:10:47.724
Yeah, exactly.

00:10:47.724 --> 00:11:04.581
I mean I listen to Candace Owens and she loves to do deep dives in certain things and a lot of the stuff she's deep diving into now definitely stems from Luciferianism, so I'm very familiar with all that stuff.

00:11:04.581 --> 00:11:10.667
I'm always trying to learn new things, so I'm listening to different podcasts about different things.

00:11:10.667 --> 00:11:12.908
I'm learning new things.

00:11:12.908 --> 00:11:16.010
Do I retain it all 100%?

00:11:16.010 --> 00:11:17.951
Not really, but you?

00:11:18.011 --> 00:11:23.375
know, sometimes I got to re-listen to things or I hear it on a different podcast and it clicks.

00:11:23.375 --> 00:11:25.798
Like I said, your book is amazing.

00:11:25.798 --> 00:11:41.129
It's very detailed, it's very straightforward and it talks about a lot of things that are difficult to understand if you read it the first time and you're not really intellectually minded or this is just not a thing that you're used to thinking about.

00:11:41.129 --> 00:11:54.344
But it is worth a second read too, and a third and fourth, however many times you need, so that you can understand, because these are biblical truths, the basis, the foundation of why we believe what we believe.

00:11:54.344 --> 00:12:09.686
And yeah, I'm definitely going to be reading it more than once and probably even highlighting things and looking things up, because there's more words that I have heard before but I don't know what they mean and soteriology.

00:12:09.686 --> 00:12:11.289
I think I said that right.

00:12:11.610 --> 00:12:12.613
You did say, it right yeah.

00:12:14.240 --> 00:12:26.740
But yeah, those are just words that whenever someone's talking about these things, they'll bring them up and a lot of people probably glaze over because it's just too big of a word.

00:12:26.740 --> 00:12:27.783
I can't possibly know that.

00:12:27.783 --> 00:12:28.283
I'm not.

00:12:28.283 --> 00:12:31.491
I don't have a PhD, I don't know these things.

00:12:31.491 --> 00:12:32.663
I can't know these things.

00:12:32.663 --> 00:12:36.192
It would be like me with math If someone were to ask me a math question.

00:12:36.192 --> 00:12:37.942
Whatever I tune out, I don't.

00:12:37.942 --> 00:12:39.825
I don't speak your language.

00:12:39.825 --> 00:12:44.652
Sorry, I don't care and I don't want people to be that way.

00:12:44.652 --> 00:12:54.024
With the Bible and you have to know what you believe and why you believe it, and if you come across someone who wants to challenge you on it, you kind of got to know these things.

00:12:54.765 --> 00:13:00.081
Go ahead and explain to us soteriology and epistemology.

00:13:00.081 --> 00:13:00.962
I think, yeah, you got it.

00:13:01.023 --> 00:13:01.484
I'm always making sure.

00:13:01.744 --> 00:13:02.105
I do it right.

00:13:02.105 --> 00:13:03.206
I think, yeah, you got it.

00:13:03.206 --> 00:13:06.070
I'm always making sure I do it right, you did great.

00:13:06.250 --> 00:13:07.792
Yeah, I'm happy to, I guess.

00:13:07.792 --> 00:13:10.355
A quick word about the use of big words and things.

00:13:10.355 --> 00:13:19.094
First, I don't like it when people act like intellectual bullies and use big words just for the sake of using big words and try to sound intelligent, try to sound more intelligent than they are.

00:13:19.094 --> 00:13:27.355
But sometimes we need to use big words because that's the only word that really works and you can either use epistemology or a whole paragraph in its place.

00:13:27.355 --> 00:13:37.466
So really, the way to overcome that hurdle, which everybody has, you know, nobody's born knowing the big word, so everybody you know has to.

00:13:37.466 --> 00:13:39.751
Anyone who knows them has to learn them at some point.

00:13:39.751 --> 00:13:44.011
The way to overcome that hurdle is to learn the vocabulary.

00:13:44.011 --> 00:13:49.192
So epistemology is simply oh and, by the way, a lot of times these big words aren't nearly as fancy as they sound.

00:13:49.759 --> 00:13:54.466
Epistemology is simply the branch of philosophy that deals with knowledge how do we know what we know?

00:13:54.466 --> 00:13:57.227
Only philosophers even ask questions like that.

00:13:57.227 --> 00:14:06.907
We go through life assuming that we know certain things and then if we dig more deeply and ask well, how do I really know that, and what makes me think I'm right about that?

00:14:06.907 --> 00:14:17.445
Or who says that's true or untrue, or whatever, and if you start digging deeper, then you find that sometimes what you think is knowledge is actually built on a whole lot of assumptions that you're making.

00:14:17.445 --> 00:14:20.922
And so, anyway, epistemology is the branch of philosophy that digs into all of that.

00:14:20.922 --> 00:14:24.847
Soteriology simply means doctrine of salvation.

00:14:24.847 --> 00:14:30.735
So soteriology is how do you know you're saved, how do you know you're in right standing with a just and holy God?

00:14:32.240 --> 00:14:32.620
It's the gospel?

00:14:32.620 --> 00:14:37.273
Essentially, yeah, and that is definitely something that we who call ourselves Christians should know.

00:14:37.273 --> 00:14:44.332
So yeah, ladies and gentlemen, look into soteriology, because this is important things.

00:14:44.332 --> 00:14:48.884
Just because the word sounds big and scary doesn't mean you should be afraid of it.

00:14:48.884 --> 00:14:52.812
How long did it take you to study and write this book?

00:14:52.812 --> 00:14:57.690
Because, I mean, I wouldn't say it's, you know, it's a decent size.

00:14:57.690 --> 00:15:03.350
I wouldn't say it's like a big encyclopedias size, but it's also not super small.

00:15:03.350 --> 00:15:09.283
It's full of so much information and I know that this took you some time.

00:15:09.283 --> 00:15:22.482
It has to have taken you a lot of time to get all that in there and to make sure that what you're saying is truth and facts, and you've got sources, which means you had to read other stuff.

00:15:22.482 --> 00:15:25.129
How long did it take you to write?

00:15:25.530 --> 00:15:26.442
well, that's a good question.

00:15:26.442 --> 00:15:30.172
I would say it took me about a year from the time I first made my outline.

00:15:30.172 --> 00:15:36.947
The way the way I write is, I come up with an outline so I know what each chapter is going to be, usually before I begin, and sometimes the outline changes as I go.

00:15:36.947 --> 00:15:50.429
But so from the time I first put an outline down with an old-fashioned pen and a notebook, from the time it was completed, it's was probably about a year, but it actually took many, many years to actually put this together, because this is stuff that I've been studying for, you know, 20 plus years.

00:15:51.231 --> 00:15:51.533
Okay.

00:15:52.535 --> 00:15:57.827
And I've taught Sunday school classes about this at church a couple different churches and I've written articles and essays and things.

00:15:57.827 --> 00:16:10.847
So in fact, the last two chapters are essays I wrote for another forum and included them, and I mentioned that in the book, that these were essays taken from somewhere else and I included them as case studies to show how this philosophy can be applied practically.

00:16:10.847 --> 00:16:28.744
So I guess, if you compile all the time I've spent studying and thinking and all the Sunday school notes and every time I taught I always wrote my own curriculum and it's probably I don't know, it's probably 20 plus years in the making Nice.

00:16:28.764 --> 00:16:29.806
Yeah, I don't let up.

00:16:29.806 --> 00:16:31.028
Nice.

00:16:32.155 --> 00:16:38.889
By the way, my own personal approach to study has always been to do a whole lot more thinking and praying than I actually do reading.

00:16:38.889 --> 00:16:41.804
I do quite a lot of reading, but I do a lot.

00:16:41.804 --> 00:16:45.304
God has blessed me for 30 years with mindless work.

00:16:45.304 --> 00:16:55.760
It doesn't require a whole lot of thought, so I'm able to ponder other things, and I actually oftentimes brought a notebook with me to work and I'll stop what I'm doing, I'll scribble something down and then keep working.

00:16:55.760 --> 00:16:57.746
So a lot of thought has gone into it as well.

00:16:57.967 --> 00:17:04.411
Yeah, that's good to know because I'm pretty sure there's a lot of people out there who want to go deeper in the Bible.

00:17:04.411 --> 00:17:11.219
They want to understand more, but they're saying I don't have the time to read, I don't have the time to do this, I don't have the time to do that.

00:17:11.219 --> 00:17:12.684
You know, you can always just write down a question you have.

00:17:12.684 --> 00:17:15.054
So you can always just write down a question you have.

00:17:15.054 --> 00:17:25.451
Right, you know, if you're doing your work, like you said, you have a job, a logger, where you don't have to sit there thinking, focusing.

00:17:25.451 --> 00:17:33.569
It's not like you're typing at a computer and then all of a sudden a thought pops in your head and you're typing that out on accident because you didn't mean to.

00:17:33.855 --> 00:17:39.237
Your work allows you that space to mentally process, think about things.

00:17:39.237 --> 00:17:44.596
Maybe you read something a while ago and you're just thinking well, why was it written that way?

00:17:44.596 --> 00:17:47.806
Why that word, why this book?

00:17:47.806 --> 00:17:50.032
And you can think about that.

00:17:50.032 --> 00:17:51.797
Some other people don't have that job.

00:17:51.797 --> 00:17:55.344
Maybe they drive for a living and they can't exactly do that.

00:17:55.344 --> 00:17:57.776
Write down your question when you get a chance.

00:17:57.776 --> 00:18:01.222
Talk it out in your head, talk it out out loud.

00:18:01.222 --> 00:18:06.386
I mean, maybe people driving around will think you're, you know, on a phone or something.

00:18:06.386 --> 00:18:10.001
Maybe they won't think you're so weird anymore, because everyone drives hands-free.

00:18:10.001 --> 00:18:12.128
Now, that's true, not drive.

00:18:12.410 --> 00:18:14.717
Well, some people drive hands-free if they have one of those cars.

00:18:15.157 --> 00:18:18.467
I mean they drive and they talk on the phone hands-free.

00:18:18.747 --> 00:18:18.968
Right.

00:18:19.055 --> 00:18:26.587
But you know there's so many different ways and I love that you said that that you don't do so much of reading all the time.

00:18:26.587 --> 00:18:32.067
You can just process the thoughts that you have, the things about what you've read before.

00:18:32.067 --> 00:18:35.726
There's different ways of meditating on the scripture.

00:18:35.726 --> 00:18:38.064
There's different ways of spending time with God.

00:18:38.064 --> 00:18:51.174
You don't have to actually just be sitting in front of your Bible, listen to it when you're driving and then ask yourself questions about it, think about it, write down something later that you want to go deeper on.

00:18:51.275 --> 00:18:58.724
There's so many different ways that we can connect with God and I think we get so bogged down from what we've heard is that you have to be in the word.

00:18:58.724 --> 00:18:59.707
You have to be in the word.

00:18:59.707 --> 00:19:00.595
You have to be in the word.

00:19:00.595 --> 00:19:09.843
There's nothing better than an actual physical Bible, which is true, that is true, but sometimes that is not something you have at your fingertips.

00:19:09.843 --> 00:19:14.800
Think of all the people in different countries who don't actually have a physical Bible.

00:19:14.800 --> 00:19:17.547
How are they making it?

00:19:17.547 --> 00:19:22.244
How are they successful while they're in prison and they don't have an actual Bible to study?

00:19:22.244 --> 00:19:26.220
They've memorized, they've studied, they have it in their hearts.

00:19:27.122 --> 00:19:29.468
Yeah, yeah, good, that's great, Anna, thank you.

00:19:29.468 --> 00:19:31.760
Yeah, we never want to neglect God's Word.

00:19:31.760 --> 00:19:37.546
Of course, I know you agree with that, but we also need to nurture the subjective side of our relationship with the Lord.

00:19:37.546 --> 00:19:39.520
So, yeah, very well said.

00:19:39.520 --> 00:19:40.063
Yeah, thank you.

00:19:41.375 --> 00:19:47.327
He wouldn't have given us such brilliant minds that are capable of so much more than we actually know they can do.

00:19:47.327 --> 00:19:51.807
He wouldn't have done all that if he didn't want us to use it.

00:19:51.807 --> 00:19:53.540
He wants us to innovate.

00:19:53.540 --> 00:19:54.596
He wants us to think.

00:19:54.596 --> 00:20:01.941
He wants us to be brilliant, not in the way that the world thinks of brilliance, but how he actually created us.

00:20:01.941 --> 00:20:04.384
We are created to give him glory.

00:20:04.384 --> 00:20:09.666
So if you are using your brain in a way that gives him glory, then do it.

00:20:10.135 --> 00:20:21.468
If you're driving your truck and you can't actually read your Bible because you're driving a lot, then listen to the Bible and chew over it, think about it, mull over it.

00:20:21.468 --> 00:20:31.121
If you're a mom and you can't read the Bible without a kid coming and tugging on you every five seconds and you keep reading the same line over and over, then just keep reading that same line over and over.

00:20:31.121 --> 00:20:32.834
Maybe you'll have it memorized.

00:20:32.834 --> 00:20:41.162
I mean, there's so many different ways that we can focus on God and that we can go deeper in our relationship.

00:20:41.162 --> 00:20:44.424
And I think we get scared when we hear big words.

00:20:44.424 --> 00:20:53.451
But, like you said, big words sometimes are easier to say than a paragraph explaining what those big words mean.

00:20:53.914 --> 00:21:00.703
Look up what the big word means and it's probably not as scary as it sounds, and yeah, and just keep studying.

00:21:01.998 --> 00:21:07.803
Yeah, and once you learn, once your vocabulary expands and you learn more and more of the big words, then it becomes easier and easier as you go.

00:21:07.803 --> 00:21:10.798
So yeah, yeah, well said.

00:21:17.566 --> 00:21:22.590
Hey friends, have you joined the Honest Christian Conversations online group yet?

00:21:22.590 --> 00:21:31.138
If you haven't, you're missing out on a perfect opportunity to grow your relationship with Jesus Christ.

00:21:31.138 --> 00:21:34.365
This is a community for those who want to go deeper in their relationship.

00:21:34.365 --> 00:21:46.240
You can do Bible studies together, ask the questions you have biblically and get the answers that you might need or maybe you're somebody who has answers to somebody else's questions.

00:21:46.240 --> 00:21:48.345
You can leave your prayer requests.

00:21:48.345 --> 00:21:50.297
You can leave your praise reports.

00:21:50.857 --> 00:21:52.941
This is a community.

00:21:52.941 --> 00:22:02.824
This is what church is supposed to be, and I am so glad that I finally took that step to make this group so that people's lives can flourish in Jesus name.

00:22:02.824 --> 00:22:09.724
Also, if you haven't signed up for the mailing list, you're missing out on an opportunity there as well.

00:22:09.724 --> 00:22:17.848
I send out a weekly email chocked full of so much awesome content that I don't have time right now to share it all with you.

00:22:17.848 --> 00:22:27.300
But when you do sign up for that mailing list, you get my seven-day free devotional that I created just for those who sign up for the mailing list.

00:22:27.300 --> 00:22:42.224
If you haven't joined either of these, you can go to my website, honestchristianconversationscom and sign up there, or you can use the links for it in the show notes which chapter was your favorite to write?

00:22:42.435 --> 00:22:43.535
Wow, that's a good question.

00:22:43.535 --> 00:22:51.048
I really enjoyed writing the latter chapters where I tried to put kind of heavy philosophical concepts in a practical use.

00:22:51.048 --> 00:22:53.656
But, yeah, I never really thought about them.

00:22:53.656 --> 00:22:54.636
My favorite to write, I guess.

00:22:54.636 --> 00:23:04.934
I think maybe my favorite to write would have been either chapter four or chapter five, because chapter four is what the previous three chapters pilots.

00:23:05.680 --> 00:23:07.498
Pilots rhetorical question.

00:23:07.558 --> 00:23:07.680
Yeah.

00:23:09.323 --> 00:23:13.553
And then chapter five is the grass withers and the flowers fades.

00:23:13.853 --> 00:23:15.065
Yep, those are the two I had in mind.

00:23:15.065 --> 00:23:18.506
The philosophy kind of culminates there.

00:23:18.506 --> 00:23:34.643
The whole point of the book is to show that there cannot be any such thing as transcendent norms or standards or rules that govern right and wrong behavior that would be ethics, or right and wrong thought, that would be epistemology Unless there is a transcendent God who meets certain preconditions.

00:23:34.643 --> 00:23:44.593
It has to be a personal God, it has to be a sovereign God, an immutable, unchangeable God, and he has to reveal himself to us in various ways.

00:23:44.593 --> 00:23:50.573
So the culmination of the argument actually shows the logical impossibility of such a God not existing.

00:23:50.573 --> 00:23:58.920
It's not logically possible for God to not exist, because if there were no God we would not have these transcendent norms, transcendent laws or standards.

00:23:58.920 --> 00:24:02.061
So in other words, this would be a nihilistic world.

00:24:02.061 --> 00:24:03.424
Another big fancy word.

00:24:03.424 --> 00:24:05.549
Nihilism simply means nothingism.

00:24:05.549 --> 00:24:09.366
It would be a world where there are no absolutes if there is no absolute lawgiver.

00:24:09.366 --> 00:24:11.231
This would be a simple way to put it.

00:24:11.740 --> 00:24:13.505
A lot of atheists have argued that.

00:24:13.505 --> 00:24:16.839
Well, maybe this is a nihilistic world, then Just live with it.

00:24:16.839 --> 00:24:20.507
Well, the problem is you can't live with it because nihilism refutes itself.

00:24:20.507 --> 00:24:23.172
You can't argue for nihilism without refuting it.

00:24:23.172 --> 00:24:29.451
You can't argue against the existence of rationality, for example, without using absolute norms of rationality.

00:24:29.451 --> 00:24:31.765
You know your argument against them depends upon them.

00:24:31.765 --> 00:24:41.233
So if you really we're scratching the surface here, but if you really dig deeply, I think you can see that it actually becomes logically possible for there not to be this transcendent lawgiver.

00:24:41.233 --> 00:24:47.192
So I guess that was, I guess, my favorite parts of the book to write, because that's where the argument culminates.

00:24:47.192 --> 00:24:52.073
In chapter five I get into the defense of the Bible as divine revelation.

00:24:52.073 --> 00:24:57.828
We go through some evidences, but then we also tie in that claim that the Bible is of divine origin.

00:24:57.828 --> 00:25:01.474
With this philosophical argument, this transcendental argument it's called.

00:25:03.182 --> 00:25:22.231
Yeah, yeah, I really liked chapter four for sure, and I think I'm in the middle of chapter five, maybe it's chapter six, I can't remember which one, but I did like chapter four and how you made it more of a practical way for us to understand those of us who don't have PhDs or something.

00:25:22.732 --> 00:25:23.193
That's me too.

00:25:23.900 --> 00:25:38.414
Yeah, you made it easy for us to understand what the concepts are that you have been talking about, and I liked the example you used of the professor whose house got robbed and how the cops treated it.

00:25:38.414 --> 00:25:40.667
I thought that was very clever, very funny.

00:25:40.667 --> 00:25:51.880
I was actually laughing because it makes sense and these are arguments that people actually make and when you you know, you think of it as a joke while you're reading it, like that is hilarious.

00:25:51.880 --> 00:25:57.401
But then you take a step back and you realize some people live this way, some people have this mindset.

00:25:57.401 --> 00:26:02.801
That is crazy, and then it sobers you up and then you're no longer laughing, you feel sad.

00:26:02.801 --> 00:26:08.096
You feel sad for the people who live that way, who think that nothing matters.

00:26:08.837 --> 00:26:09.579
Yeah, yeah.

00:26:09.799 --> 00:26:12.509
You know, there's no absolutes of any kind.

00:26:12.509 --> 00:26:14.617
It's crazy to believe that.

00:26:14.617 --> 00:26:24.684
There are people out there who believe that, and I liked your practical examples because they made it real and put it on a level of yeah, I know somebody who's like that.

00:26:24.684 --> 00:26:25.646
That's crazy.

00:26:25.646 --> 00:26:28.564
I got to talk to them, I got to throw this book at them and say read it.

00:26:30.711 --> 00:26:35.384
I think surveys have shown that it's a very healthy majority among college students anyway.

00:26:35.384 --> 00:26:44.833
The late theologian Bible teacher, rc Sproul, used to say how you know, surveys have shown that, shown that 90-some percent of college students believe in this ethical and epistemological relativism.

00:26:44.833 --> 00:26:53.255
They said that's the bad news, but the good news is none of them actually believe it, because they enter the real world and they can't live consistent with their beliefs.

00:26:53.255 --> 00:26:55.696
I can tell you a cool story you might appreciate.

00:26:55.696 --> 00:27:02.001
Actually, these ethical and epistemological relativists can't stand it when you use their own guns against them.

00:27:02.001 --> 00:27:03.308
And here's an example of that.

00:27:03.308 --> 00:27:06.925
And you mentioned COVID earlier and that's another whole topic we maybe could talk about sometime.

00:27:06.925 --> 00:27:12.276
But there was a lot more to that than what the mainstream is telling us and that's something that you know we've dug into.

00:27:12.576 --> 00:27:23.944
But it was during that time, during the time of the strictest you know so-called mandates and so forth, I had to go into a you know so-called mandates and so forth.

00:27:23.944 --> 00:27:26.796
I had to go into a you know a park store to get a hydraulic hose for one of my pieces of logging equipment.

00:27:26.796 --> 00:27:32.990
Hydraulic hose had blown and I went in with no mask on my face and the manager happened to be present.

00:27:32.990 --> 00:27:34.993
It was a woman, and you know.

00:27:34.993 --> 00:27:37.953
She offered me a mask and I said no, thank you, ma'am, I'm already wearing one.

00:27:37.953 --> 00:27:41.086
And she said oh no, you're not, I'm not wearing a mask.

00:27:41.086 --> 00:27:41.868
And I said well, here I am.

00:27:41.868 --> 00:27:47.070
I said aren't you aware that in our culture, objective truth is defined purely subjectively?

00:27:47.070 --> 00:27:48.032
And she said huh.

00:27:48.032 --> 00:27:52.571
And I said in other words, you can have your truth and I can have my truth, and we're both right.

00:27:52.571 --> 00:28:04.602
Neither one has the right to tell the other.

00:28:04.622 --> 00:28:07.308
One example if I tell you that I identify as a woman, then that's what I am, according to my truth, right, and she agreed.

00:28:07.308 --> 00:28:07.869
She said yes, that's correct.

00:28:07.869 --> 00:28:08.951
I said well, according to my truth, I'm wearing a mask.

00:28:08.951 --> 00:28:09.333
What did?

00:28:09.353 --> 00:28:09.473
she do.

00:28:09.473 --> 00:28:13.161
I was, I promise you, I was very, very polite, very polite towards her.

00:28:13.161 --> 00:28:13.961
I was never unkind.

00:28:13.961 --> 00:28:14.884
She was not.

00:28:14.884 --> 00:28:18.208
She, you know, kind of cussed me out, told me to get out of her store.

00:28:19.210 --> 00:28:22.815
Yeah, see, they don't like it when you bring it out.

00:28:25.660 --> 00:28:27.123
She had nothing to say, nothing intelligent to say, in response.

00:28:27.123 --> 00:28:31.113
So I very politely told her I'd be glad to leave the store when I'm done doing business.

00:28:31.113 --> 00:28:35.551
But anyway, the point is they don't like it when you turn their own guns against them.

00:28:35.551 --> 00:28:37.080
But you know, that is their philosophy.

00:28:37.080 --> 00:28:40.103
Their philosophy is if I say I'm wearing a mask, I'm wearing a mask.

00:28:40.103 --> 00:28:41.904
You don't have to tell me otherwise.

00:28:41.904 --> 00:28:42.945
My truth is my truth.

00:28:42.945 --> 00:28:43.866
Your truth is your truth.

00:28:44.686 --> 00:28:44.906
Yeah.

00:28:45.188 --> 00:28:46.288
But of course it's absurd.

00:28:46.568 --> 00:28:47.589
Yeah, absolutely.

00:28:47.589 --> 00:28:54.935
There's only one truth and everyone needs to come to that eventually, whether it's willingly or unwillingly.

00:28:55.516 --> 00:28:56.977
Right, right right.

00:28:58.122 --> 00:29:01.351
Yeah, what part of the book was hard for you to write?

00:29:01.351 --> 00:29:12.111
Maybe because it required the most studying, or it was something that you just didn't want to write about because you knew it was going to rub people wrong.

00:29:12.300 --> 00:29:13.380
Well, that's a good question.

00:29:13.380 --> 00:29:28.494
I guess maybe the chapter that would fall into that category would be the last two, which were actually written as essays that were published on a public forum up here in Maine called the Corner North, where people publish philosophy and theology and all kinds of stuff.

00:29:28.494 --> 00:29:36.190
And I wrote a series of four essays in response to an invitation by somebody in a freedom group up here in Maine who was kind of enamored that.

00:29:36.190 --> 00:29:42.467
You know there are a lot of New Agers in these groups, a lot of pantheistic, Hinduistic sort of people, and actually we've mentioned Luciferians earlier.

00:29:42.467 --> 00:29:46.646
Right, I know for sure these groups are infiltrated by people who are self-conscious Luciferian.

00:29:46.646 --> 00:29:58.730
Anyway, we were invited to critique a concept called natural law by a fellow named Mark Passio and there was a correct biblical concept of natural law, God's moral law, stamped on our hearts in Natural Revelation, Romans 2.15.

00:29:58.730 --> 00:30:03.423
But that's not what this guy meant.

00:30:03.423 --> 00:30:10.891
What this guy meant was there is such a thing as objective ethics and how he came upon this knowledge was through access to secret knowledge in his time, working in the dark occult, which of course is satanic.

00:30:10.891 --> 00:30:20.092
So I kind of picked that apart philosophically and showed how it was philosophically unsound, how he doesn't give sound justification for objective ethics.

00:30:20.092 --> 00:30:23.269
And I included the first essay in that series of four.

00:30:23.269 --> 00:30:34.548
And again, the reason I included these was and I say up front in the book that these are essays that were written for somewhere else the reason I included them was to give case studies to show how you can use these principles practically our work as ambassadors for Christ.

00:30:34.759 --> 00:30:37.567
The first of the series of four I included, then the last.

00:30:37.567 --> 00:30:39.392
I also included the middle two.

00:30:39.392 --> 00:30:43.974
I didn't because they were very, very similar to the content of other chapters, chapters three and four of the book.

00:30:43.974 --> 00:30:57.669
But I think those might have been the hardest to write because I wrote them as essays knowing that they were going to be posted publicly for an audience that was not going to like them very much, but I felt obligated to be faithful to my Lord.

00:30:57.669 --> 00:31:05.369
The last one clearly presents the gospel and the need to be reconciled with just and holy God, and that one got some negative response.

00:31:05.369 --> 00:31:08.704
I guess you know this may be a confession of sin, I don't know.

00:31:08.704 --> 00:31:13.343
I find it hard to do things that I know are going to make me a target.

00:31:13.703 --> 00:31:15.929
Yeah, no, I think we're all that way.

00:31:15.929 --> 00:31:29.111
I get that it's hard, especially, I think that's one of the reasons why people don't want to read anything like this kind of book, where they know the information.

00:31:29.111 --> 00:31:39.288
Then they have not necessarily the obligation, but they have the knowledge and if someone comes up to them and starts talking about something and they can share that with them, they might be afraid to share that with them for whatever backlash they might get.

00:31:39.288 --> 00:31:44.563
Yeah, I completely understand that it would be hard for you to want to include certain things that you already know.

00:31:44.563 --> 00:31:47.371
We're going to rub people the wrong way.

00:31:47.371 --> 00:31:54.788
I mean, you and I did an episode on yoga that rubbed some people the wrong way and I got some comments on YouTube about it.

00:31:54.788 --> 00:31:56.586
But you got to do what you got to do.

00:31:56.586 --> 00:32:05.515
If you know that God is telling you to do something, you got to be obedient to him, because that is who we are here for, not for the praise and adoration of man.

00:32:05.515 --> 00:32:10.251
So I'm glad that you still wrote it and that you included it in your book.

00:32:10.440 --> 00:32:13.087
Yeah, thank you, and I appreciate that about you, anna.

00:32:13.087 --> 00:32:14.171
And you're exactly right.

00:32:14.171 --> 00:32:20.111
It was the Pharisees who were deeply concerned about the praise of man.

00:32:20.111 --> 00:32:21.953
We're not supposed to be that way.

00:32:21.953 --> 00:32:25.141
Our Lord told us they hated me, they're going to hate you too, and so you know.

00:32:25.141 --> 00:32:26.445
We have to expect that right.

00:32:26.685 --> 00:32:37.049
Yeah, Yep, absolutely Well, David, before we go, please tell everybody where they can get Apologize Without Apologizing your amazing book.

00:32:37.811 --> 00:32:39.986
Yeah, thank you, it's on Amazon right now.

00:32:39.986 --> 00:32:41.787
We mentioned Luciferianism earlier.

00:32:41.787 --> 00:32:44.144
I don't know if I should say this publicly.

00:32:44.144 --> 00:32:46.372
I don't think Amazon is a tool of the devil.

00:32:48.102 --> 00:32:54.885
Yeah, there's a lot of stuff going on nowadays behind the scenes, with everything it's yeah, yeah, for sure.

00:32:54.885 --> 00:32:55.849
It's everywhere.

00:32:56.432 --> 00:32:59.362
Yeah, but the way I look at it, I don't mind using his tools against him.

00:32:59.362 --> 00:33:02.347
So it's available on Amazon.

00:33:02.347 --> 00:33:08.903
If you just look up my name, david Libby, and the name of the book, yeah, you can probably find both books that you have.

00:33:09.222 --> 00:33:15.289
Go ahead and tell everybody what the name of your first book is too, because that might be a title they want to know about.

00:33:15.289 --> 00:33:17.271
Just give us a little bit of what it's about too.

00:33:17.432 --> 00:33:19.894
Sure, yeah, yeah.

00:33:19.894 --> 00:33:29.794
The other book is called A Different World, the subtitle God's Sovereignty in the Face of Suffering, and it briefly tells the story of my family's very long and difficult battle with chronic illness.

00:33:29.794 --> 00:33:33.707
And then it gets into answering some of the really difficult questions.

00:33:33.707 --> 00:33:38.163
If there's a God who is sovereign and loving, then why is there suffering in this world to begin with, and that sort of thing?

00:33:38.163 --> 00:33:43.074
And so that book is A Different World, and then the new one is Apologize Without Apologizing.

00:33:43.074 --> 00:33:46.445
Oh, by the way, your husband is exactly right, we shouldn't apologize for being Christians.

00:33:46.445 --> 00:33:48.686
That's the without apologizing part of the book.

00:33:48.686 --> 00:33:53.328
Yeah, give a defense without saying you're sorry about it.

00:33:53.328 --> 00:33:58.451
But anyway, they're both available on Amazon.

00:33:58.451 --> 00:34:00.145
If you look up one, you'll find the other one.

00:34:00.365 --> 00:34:01.209
Yeah, yeah.

00:34:01.209 --> 00:34:06.332
And if you guys want to hear him share about his first book.

00:34:06.332 --> 00:34:09.931
Go back to season three, the episode I did with David Libby.

00:34:09.931 --> 00:34:17.009
He shares his testimony and he shares more about why he wrote the book, so it's definitely worth listening to.

00:34:17.360 --> 00:34:19.949
And I might have a third one in the works.

00:34:19.949 --> 00:34:25.954
I haven't actually even started it yet, but we could give a little teaser on it if you wanted to.

00:34:26.175 --> 00:34:27.097
Yeah, absolutely.

00:34:27.239 --> 00:34:32.074
You mentioned Luciferianism earlier and I even have a really cool book title.

00:34:32.074 --> 00:34:34.922
I'd like to write a book called Lucifer's Enlightenment.

00:34:34.922 --> 00:34:36.648
Apologize for the apologizing.

00:34:36.648 --> 00:34:43.228
The very first chapter starts by showing the inadequacy of humanist philosophy.

00:34:43.228 --> 00:34:47.594
How humanist philosophy has been a failure in its attempt to justify knowledge.

00:34:47.594 --> 00:34:54.534
As I've dug into humanist philosophers, I've found a common thread and that is that they're not as humanist as they make themselves out to be.

00:34:54.534 --> 00:34:57.445
The atheist and naturalist.

00:34:57.445 --> 00:34:59.791
Naturalist meaning doesn't believe in a spiritual realm.

00:34:59.791 --> 00:35:05.373
Friedrich Nietzsche, for example, wrote late in life a little-known book about Zarathustra, his spirit guide.

00:35:05.373 --> 00:35:09.739
So he claims to not even believe in spirits and yet he has a spirit guide.

00:35:09.739 --> 00:35:14.572
Anybody who knows New Ages and that sort of thing, you know that spirit guides are demons.

00:35:14.572 --> 00:35:19.753
So Charles Darwin was, I think, a 33rd-degree Freemason, which means he was not an atheist.

00:35:19.753 --> 00:35:23.065
You can't be a 33rd degree Freemason, which means he was not an atheist.

00:35:23.065 --> 00:35:24.188
You can't be a 33 degree Freemason.

00:35:24.208 --> 00:35:24.510
Freemasonry is.

00:35:24.530 --> 00:35:24.789
Luciferianism.

00:35:24.789 --> 00:35:31.490
You know lower levels may not realize that, but by the time you get to 32, 33 degree you know that you're worshiping Lucifer.

00:35:31.490 --> 00:35:40.791
So all these philosophers, you know they were Freemasons, they shared their philosophies in the Freemason halls, and we could dig deeper, but there's a thread that runs throughout.

00:35:40.791 --> 00:35:47.710
I think that if you really dig into humorous philosophy you really recognize it as a satanic deception.

00:35:47.710 --> 00:35:49.646
So I'd love to write about that.

00:35:49.646 --> 00:35:51.246
And that shouldn't surprise Christians.

00:35:51.246 --> 00:35:53.989
You know we say this sort of thing and Christians' hackles go up.

00:35:53.989 --> 00:35:57.460
And I don't get that because it's so profoundly biblical.

00:35:57.460 --> 00:36:00.925
You know the Bible says that Satan is the prince of this world.

00:36:00.925 --> 00:36:02.106
It's so profoundly biblical.

00:36:02.126 --> 00:36:04.230
You know, the Bible says that Satan is the prince of this world.

00:36:04.269 --> 00:36:05.271
We're not saying anything new.

00:36:05.291 --> 00:36:07.155
It's been this way since Genesis 3.

00:36:07.155 --> 00:36:08.836
Atheism has been around since the fall.

00:36:14.659 --> 00:36:18.405
Anyway, I'd love to tie, I'd love to show the connection between the humanist philosophy and where I think it actually comes from.

00:36:18.425 --> 00:36:23.371
Well, that sounds like it'll be interesting as well, just like your other books have been Well, thank you, who knows if I'll live long enough to get it done, but anyway.

00:36:24.052 --> 00:36:26.315
Yep, if God wants it done, it'll happen.

00:36:28.360 --> 00:36:28.601
That's right.

00:36:28.621 --> 00:36:28.960
Yeah, that's right.

00:36:28.960 --> 00:36:34.092
Well, thank you so much, David, for coming on and talking to us and sharing about your book.

00:36:34.092 --> 00:36:36.447
I've enjoyed our conversation once again.

00:36:36.699 --> 00:36:37.481
Well, me too, Anna.

00:36:37.481 --> 00:36:38.322
Thank you very much.

00:36:38.561 --> 00:36:39.443
Thanks for listening.

00:36:39.443 --> 00:36:46.570
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00:36:46.570 --> 00:36:52.815
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00:36:52.815 --> 00:37:01.621
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00:37:01.621 --> 00:37:03.672
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00:37:03.672 --> 00:37:09.389
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00:37:09.389 --> 00:37:11.556
Once again, thanks for listening.

00:37:11.556 --> 00:37:13.954
I look forward to our next conversation.

David Libby Profile Photo

David Libby

Shining the light of the Gospel in dark places (Matthew 5:14 - 16)

Mine has been the story of a sinner saved by the grace of an awesome God, who has since dedicated his life to the service of Jesus Christ. When I was a much younger man I had no idea of the extent to which my sovereign God would put that commitment to the test.
For many years my wife and both daughters suffered intensely at the hands of an extremely painful and often debilitating chronic illness, and we were driven daily to the very brink of the breaking point. But through it all we have been refined like silver in a very hot furnace. Little did I know then how valuable those long, hard years would prove to be; it was in that boot camp where God prepared me for His work as a Christian apologist.
If there is a God who is both good and all-powerful, then how can there be so much evil and suffering in this world? Does God care? How could a perfect God have created so imperfect a world? How can we be sure that He even exists? Is it possible to really know Him?
The cliched answers that are most readily available are often satisfying only to people who have never truly suffered. It is in the fires of affliction that the hard answers to the hardest questions are refined.