Page 213 - A Study of Theological Responses to Alvin Plantinga’s Aquinas/Calvin Model of Warranted Christian Belief - Kees van Kralingen
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CHAPTER 14
Conclusions and Applications for Apologetics
Plantinga’s concept of warranted Christian belief has been                              
             expressed their positive appreciation for Plantinga’s contribution to                                                      
                                                                                         
The main concern appears to be the need perceived to address the truth question of the Christian faith, given that Plantinga used this question only as a condition and assumption in his model. This leads critics to question Plantinga’s treatment of the role of arguments based on evidence and testimony, and in many cases to a call to give such arguments a more prominent place. This approach, however, inevitably questions the properly basic nature of theistic and Christian belief and the way it can have warrant. This in turn raises the question whether the formation and maintenance of these beliefs is described adequately by the basic and extended A/C model. This also involves issues concerning the role of the believer and of the church, and the question regarding the strength or assurance of faith.
       the objections raised against Plantinga’s basic                                     in Plantinga’s model       of Plantinga’s model itself, rather than              that Plantinga’s concept of warranted Christian belief has the                                                    
                 in Plantinga’s model                      
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