How Tim Keller’s Cultural Apologetics Project Continues
Tim Keller’s talks at the Oxford missions spanned 13 years. The apologetics landscape changed significantly over that time.
Millions have read books and listened to sermons by Timothy Keller. But which people and what events shaped his own thinking and spiritual growth? Spend any time around Keller and you’ll learn what he’s reading, what he’s learning, what he’s seeing. The story of Timothy Keller is the story of his spiritual and intellectual influences, from the woman who taught him how to read the Bible to the professor who taught him to preach Jesus from every text to the philosopher who taught him to see beneath society’s surface.
With access to Keller’s personal notes and sermons—as well as interviews with family members and longtime friends—Collin Hansen gives you understanding of one of the 21st century’s most influential church leaders. Go behind the scenes to view additional pictures, watch interviews, and listen to the full sermons and lectures you read about in the book.
Tim Keller’s talks at the Oxford missions spanned 13 years. The apologetics landscape changed significantly over that time.
In today’s culture, we’re all apologists, because the dominant culture is questioning the moral goodness of the Christian way of life.
Collin Hansen and James Eglinton discuss Herman Bavinck, the Dutch theologian who strongly influenced Timothy Keller’s spiritual formation.
The progressive mainline Protestantism still in existence is no real way forward for the American church.
Neo-Calvinism was first a theological movement that tried to articulate a vision for what it could look like to be a Calvinist in the modern, ever-changing world of the 20th century and beyond.
Cultural apologetics helps our society see the essential question of our age is religious. Everyone worships.
Churches least ashamed by the gospel’s ‘offense’ will be the ones most effective at reaching unbelievers in our secular age.