Dear Reader: Thanks for being a reader of Apologetics315. As the end of the year approaches, I'd like to ask for your support to help this ministry continue to provide daily apologetics resources. You can read about the vision here, a bit about me, as well as a few endorsements.
If you appreciate Ap315 and feel you'd like to help it grow, please consider being a supporter. You can also help out by doing your Amazon shopping through our affiliate links below:
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Thanks again for being a reader, and I appreciate your prayers.
Blog Archive
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2012
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December
(28)
- 2012 Year in Review: Apologetics 315
- Francis Schaeffer on Christian Relationships
- Book Review: He's Greater Than You Know by Phil We...
- Weekly Apologetics Bonus Links (12/21 - 12/28)
- Merry Christmas from Apologetics 315!
- Weekly Apologetics Bonus Links (12/14 - 12/21)
- End of Year Support Request
- Historian Paul L. Maier Interview Transcript
- Terminology Tuesday: Wager Argument
- 2012 Apologetics Interviews
- Morris Bender on Skepticism
- Book Review: Not God's Type by Holly Ordway
- Weekly Apologetics Bonus Links (12/07 - 12/14)
- Norman Geisler Interview Transcript
- 10 Misconceptions About the NT Canon by Michael Kr...
- Saddleback's Apologetics Weekend on Creation
- Terminology Tuesday: Teleological Argument
- J. Warner Wallace Lectures on Evidence for Christi...
- Richard Graves on the Authenticity and Genuineness...
- Book Review: Jesus and the Eyewitness by Richard B...
- Weekly Apologetics Bonus Links (11/30 - 12/07)
- Is God Just a Human Invention?
- Book GiveAway: Jesus iWitness & Resurrection iWitness
- Craig Blomberg Interview Transcript
- Terminology Tuesday: Contingency
- Apologist Interview: Douglas Jacoby
- G. K. Chesterton on Atheism
- Book Review: Was Jesus God? by Richard Swinburne
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December
(28)
1 comments :
Hey Brian, I've found an easy way to utilize the Apologetics 315 Amazon link for people like me who use bookmarks to travel the web. You can simply copy this Amazon link into your bookmark instead of the regular amazon.com url. That way whenever you use Amazon you support this cite even if you forget to come here first.
This may not be a new idea, but I thought I'd mention it just in case!
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