Home Christian News Mohler Extols ‘Thinking as a Christian’ During ‘Ask Anything Tour’ Stop

Mohler Extols ‘Thinking as a Christian’ During ‘Ask Anything Tour’ Stop

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Albert Mohler, president of Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, speaks to participants on a stop of The Ask Anything Tour in at The Journey Church in Lebanon, Tenn. on Sept. 17. (Baptist Press/Timothy Cockes)

LEBANON, Tenn. (BP) – Before attending the upcoming Southern Baptist Convention Executive Committee meeting in Nashville, Albert Mohler made another stop on his “Ask Anything Tour,” at The Journey Church in nearby Lebanon, Tenn.

Mohler, president of Southern Baptist Theological Seminary in Louisville, Ky., spoke at The Journey Church on Saturday (Sept. 17), where he addressed a wide variety of questions from the solid Saturday night crowd after a short lecture about the importance of Christian worldview.

In response to a question from and audience member about talking to someone who is resistant to the Gospel, Albert Mohler said, “Sometimes all you can do is say, ‘Even if you will not listen to me or hear me, you know that I love you and I am here the instant you’re ready to talk to me.’” Baptist Press photo by Timothy Cockes

The event was one in a series, in which Mohler travels to various churches and college campuses to answers questions from the audience regarding Christianity and culture. Mohler also preached at the church the following day (Sept. 18).

Erik Reed, lead pastor at The Journey Church and a graduate of Southern Seminary, introduced Mohler as a “faith hero” of his and said the event was designed to help the congregation better learn how think and reason in public as Christians.

“We know in the world we’re living in today that we can’t afford to simply live in a bubble and just try to isolate ourselves in with our Christian thinking,” Reed said. “We want our Christian thinking to be public thinking.”

Mohler opened his talk by explaining that the erosion of cultural Christianity has made it more necessary than ever for Christians to understand and reason with a biblical worldview.

“Christians now must think as Christians, because nobody is going to do that work for us anymore,” Mohler said.

Apologetics can sometimes be viewed as something only “intellectual Christians” are interested in, Mohler said, adding: “Apologetics is actually the mode of Christian faithfulness in any generation. To be ready to give an answer for the hope that is in us.”

Mohler said it would be extremely arrogant for one Christian to stand up and say he could answer any questions asked of him. Instead, the purpose of the event and the tour is to learn how to work toward those answers as a Christian.

“Being always ready to give an answer doesn’t mean that you always know the answer, it means you always know that Christians can find the answer,” Mohler said.

The first step for Christians is to develop a Christian worldview and recognize that the Bible is not like a reference book, but rather God Himself speaking.

Mohler identified four questions that every worldview must answer, and how Christianity provides answer to those questions – Why is there something rather than nothing; What’s gone wrong; Is there any hope; Where is history headed. The answers to those four questions, he said, essentially align with the four basic points of biblical theology – creation, the fall or sin, redemption and restoration.