Robin Schumacher
Robin Schumacher is an accomplished software executive and Christian apologist who has written many articles, authored and contributed to several Christian books, appeared on nationally syndicated radio programs, and presented at apologetic events. He holds a BS in Business, Master's in Christian apologetics and a Ph.D. in New Testament. His latest book is, A Confident Faith: Winning people to Christ with the apologetics of the Apostle Paul.
Latest
Why you’re angry with God
Admit it – you’ve been angry with God in the past, haven’t you? Maybe you’re even angry with Him right now?
Forgetting who we were
My youngest daughter is a sophomore at a very liberal university and is currently getting an up-close-and-personal view of the secular cesspool in which our unbelieving Generation Z swims.
The actual number of Christians are few
That found while 61% of American millennials consider themselves to be Christian, just 2% of them were found to hold a biblical worldview.
A 10 second argument for God
My way of stating the position is a little more personal / informal, and is something I call my “10 second argument for God”.
When Church is just an hour on Sunday
Both the clique and the crowd are foreign to many of us who grew up in more family-styled churches decades ago, but they are regrettably common in many houses of worship today.
Unlocking the apologetics secrets of the Apostle Paul
Looking at the history of Christian apologetics, I always thought it odd that no one ever undertook any in-depth research to publish a book on how God’s top evangelist outside of Christ Himself – the Apostle Paul – used apologetics to evangelize people.
The clown in the pulpit
What I’m saying is that pastors need to be careful about using the pulpit as some kind of Netflix comedy special.
The godfathers of rebellion
The heart of rebellion is pride, and when it comes to the sin of pride, the Bible makes it clear who was Patient Zero.
Right thinking on choosing the lesser of two evils
Clearly our fallen world presents us with situations where absolute laws conflict, so of the three possible Christian choices, we’re left with the Conflicting and Graded Absolutism options.
Why 'the church isn’t perfect' line has become a cop-out
Christianity isn’t the problem of evil or any other apologetics-styled objection. Instead, it’s the lives lived out by professing Christians.