31 episodes

Many Christians struggle with hard questions about faith. Thinking Matters equip Christians with thoughtful answers to defend faith, navigate culture and reach people

Thinking Matters Podcast Thinking Matters NZ

    • Religion & Spirituality

Many Christians struggle with hard questions about faith. Thinking Matters equip Christians with thoughtful answers to defend faith, navigate culture and reach people

    #18 Who's Guilty of Wishful Thinking? | Thought For Today

    #18 Who's Guilty of Wishful Thinking? | Thought For Today

    If you’re a Christian, you may have friends or family who see your faith as a crutch, as a form of wishful thinking because we want God to be real. However, what most people fail to realise is that it can often be the other way around - that those not following Christ can be resistant to it because the price they have to pay seems too high.

     

    Let’s look at atheism as an example. For the atheist, they have no one to answer to - from their perspective they are totally in control of their own lives, and deep down many would rather keep it that way. When former atheist CS Lewis became convinced that Christianity was true, he was initially very disappointed about it. He said…


    “I didn’t go to religion to make me happy. I always knew a bottle of Port would do that. If you want a religion to make you feel really comfortable, I certainly don’t recommend Christianity.”


    C.S Lewis recognised that following Christ would have consequences and it’s not always easy. In today’s culture of instant gratification, Christianity isn’t a crutch, instead it demands a price that many people are unwilling to pay. Jesus said…



    “Whoever wants to be my disciple must deny themselves and take up their cross daily and follow me.” 



    While this may not sound appealing, C.S Lewis and countless others realised that the cost was worth it. Of course, Jesus himself knows what it is to pay a high price for something, giving his very life for us. He is the one who enables us to believe and follow Him and ultimately that leads to true life. That is why Jesus said, 



    “For whoever wants to save their life will lose it, but whoever loses their life for me will find it.” 



    I’m Becky Gillespie from Thinking Matters and this has been your Thought for Today. For more reasons to believe visit thinkingmatters.org.nz

    • 1 min
    #17 Why Do We Die? | Thought For Today

    #17 Why Do We Die? | Thought For Today

    There is a lot of diversity within humanity but one thing which we all have in common is death - whether we like it or not we will all die. But why is this the case? Throughout human history, humans have constantly poured time, money and effort in attempts to lengthen life but it seems that regardless of how much scientific advancement we achieve, we will never avoid death. 



    The Bible gives a clear and simple answer as to why we all die. It tells us that sin leads to death - and as humans we have all sinned. 



    But doesn’t this seem extreme? Why does the punishment for sin have to be death? 



    First we need to remember where our life even comes from. We did not create ourselves, our lives are a gift from God. The Bible tells us that every breath we breathe is given by God whether we recognise it or not. So if God is the source and sustainer of all life, death entered the world when Adam and Eve rejected that source of life. When they disobeyed God, they turned away from the creator of life itself so the natural consequence of this was death. 



    This is the tragic history of humanity, but God does not want death to be our final destiny. He didn’t create us just to die but he wants us to live with him forever. That is why he sent his son Jesus to the earth, to take our sins upon himself and die on the cross - he paid the price of death so that we don’t have to. By rising from the grave, he defeated the power of sin and death over our lives. Jesus says “I am the resurrection and the life. Those who believe in me, even though they die, will live.”



    I’m Becky Gillespie from Thinking Matters and this has been your Thought for Today. For more reasons to believe visit thinkingmatters.org.nz 

    • 1 min
    #16 Lord, Liar or Lunatic? | Thought For Today

    #16 Lord, Liar or Lunatic? | Thought For Today

    If you went out onto the street to survey random people about who Jesus was, you’re bound to get a variety of answers. Some might say God, some might say a religious leader, but chances are many would just call him a great moral teacher and a good man. 



    But if we take the New Testament records of Jesus, which are historically reliable documents, they seem to leave us with only 3 options for who Jesus was. 



    As someone who claimed to be God, Jesus was either right or he was wrong. If he was wrong, either he knew he was wrong, in which case he was a liar, or he didn’t know, in which case he was a lunatic. But if he wasn’t a liar or lunatic, the only option left is that he actually was who he said he was. 



    CS Lewis puts it this way…

    “Either this man was, and is, the Son of God, or else a madman or something worse. You can shut him up for a fool, you can spit at him and kill him as a demon or you can fall at his feet and call him Lord and God, but let us not come with any patronising nonsense about his being a great human teacher. He has not left that open to us. He did not intend to. . . .” 



    So the next time you come across someone who sees Jesus as merely a great teacher or a good man, you can challenge them on whether that is really an option. If they’re not willing to call him a liar or lunatic, it seems the only option left is that Jesus was in fact who he claimed to be. That he really was God. 



    I’m Becky Gillespie from Thinking Matters and this has been your Thought for Today. For more reasons to believe visit thinkingmatters.org.nz

    • 1 min
    #15 Where Does Justice Come From? | Thought For Today

    #15 Where Does Justice Come From? | Thought For Today

    Most of us are quick to complain when something is unfair - maybe we’ve been cut off in traffic or someone hasn’t carried out their end of a bargain. Or maybe we’re standing up for someone else who has been discriminated against based on their race or gender.



    But where does this sense of justice come from? Why is it that as humans we all have this natural intuition that things should be fair - that equals should be treated equally and if they aren’t there’s something wrong. 



    What most people don’t realise is that the concept of justice doesn’t make any sense if there is no objective standard of right and wrong. Today it’s common to think that the individual chooses what is right and wrong for them and them alone. What’s right for me might not be right for you. However, if this is the case, then we actually have no grounds to fight for justice on - if someone treats you unfairly then that is their own decision and you can’t impose your standards of right and wrong onto them. Or if a teacher gives two students with identical answers on their tests different marks then we also can’t complain because that’s the choice the teacher wants to make. 

    Of course we all know that there is something clearly wrong in these examples - there is a sense of justice deeply embedded into our human nature. This is just one of the many reasons why there must be objective morality, a standard of right and wrong which applies to everyone. And once we realise this reality, we have to ask ourselves - where does that standard come from? Without God, there is no foundation for right and wrong, for justice and injustice. God is the only one who can give us this moral law which he has written into our hearts. 



    I’m Becky Gillespie from Thinking Matters and this has been your Thought for Today. For more reasons to believe visit thinkingmatters.org.nz

    • 1 min
    #14 How can God be Love? | Thought For Today

    #14 How can God be Love? | Thought For Today

    In every monotheistic religion, God is described as being loving. However Christianity is the only one to take this a step further in its claim that God is love. This is different to saying God is loving - instead the Bible tells us in the book of John that God is love as the essence of his very being. So what is the difference? 



    To express or feel love, there must be an object to which that love is directed. I might love my mum or love ice cream, but I can’t just love nothing. The same principle applies with God. In Islam, before Allah created the world, there was nothing for him to love. So Allah can be loving, but his love is actually dependent on the existence of his creation - love cannot be an inherent part of his being.  



    But why isn't this the same in Christianity? Well the difference here is that we believe in a Trinitarian God. This means that God is one in being but three in person. It is only this Trinitirian nature which makes it possible for God to be love as his very being. Even before He created the world, God existed as an eternal community of love, with each person of the Godhead loving the other two. Because Christianity is the only religion with a trinitarian God, it is the only religion where love can be inherent to the being of God. He does not depend on his creation or anything else to be love. 



    I’m Becky Gillespie from Thinking Matters and this has been your Thought for Today. For more reasons to believe visit thinkingmatters.org.nz

    • 1 min
    #13 What Makes Christianity Different? | Thought For Today

    #13 What Makes Christianity Different? | Thought For Today

    There are over 4000 recognised religions in the world today. So what makes Christianity different? Why would it make sense for someone seeking truth to investigate Christianity first? 



    Well to start, unlike other religions, Christianity is testable meaning it can be proven or disproven in a finite period of time. This is because the whole religion hinges on one historical event - the resurrection of Jesus. Either this did happen, in which case proving Jesus’ claim to be God, or it did not, in which case the Bible itself says that the Christian faith would be useless.



    Another reason it makes sense to investigate Christianity is because Jesus is the universal religious figure. In Hinduism, Jesus is thought by some to be the one of the incarnations of their deity. Similarly in Buddhism, some believe he is the incarnation of Buddha himself. In Islam, Jesus is seen as a powerful prophet who will one day return to judge humanity. There is no other religious figure which has found its way into every other major world religion. So it makes sense to investigate the religion where Jesus is the centre.  



    Finally, in Christianity, salvation is a free gift from God. The Bible says, “it is by grace you have been saved, through faith—and this is not from yourselves, it is the gift of God—not by works, so that no one can boast.” While there may be aspects of grace in other religions, they still require you to work for your salvation. 



    So despite all the ideas out there, there are many reasonable reasons to investigate Christianity and see if its claims are true. While it may take time and effort, the consequences for your life if Christianity is true are not something you want to miss out on.

       

    I’m Becky Gillespie from Thinking Matters and this has been your Thought for Today. For more reasons to believe visit thinkingmatters.org.nz

    • 1 min

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