If God has set His sights on you, you’re done for. He’s going to save you. Not maybe. Not potentially. He’s not waiting for your permission. He’s God—He always gets His man. That’s Irresistible Grace. And once you see it in Scripture, you can’t unsee it. This article shows how God’s sovereign grace overcomes our dead hearts, answers the objections, and puts all the glory where it belongs—on Him.
Read MoreAtheism borrows tools it can’t explain. In this debate, I challenged an agnostic atheist to account for logic, science, and morality without God—and when pressed, he had to invent universe-making aliens. This article unpacks why only the Christian worldview supplies the necessary preconditions of intelligibility—and why denying that ends in absurdity.
Read MoreCan atheism account for the laws of logic? In this powerful breakdown of his debate with an atheist named Stranglewood, Joel Settecase demonstrates why logic itself demands the triune God of Scripture. Drawing from a presuppositional, Reformed framework, Joel exposes the fatal weaknesses in secular reasoning and lays out the clear, biblical foundation for truth, knowledge, and rational thought. This article isn’t a recap—it’s a rallying cry for Christians to stand firm in their worldview and challenge unbelief at its root.
Read MoreAtheists often accuse Christianity of being illogical, anti-scientific, or morally backward—but to make those claims, they have to borrow from the Christian worldview itself. In this article, Joel Settecase exposes how skeptics climb into God's lap to slap Him in the face—relying on logic, morality, and science that only make sense if the Bible is true. If you've ever wanted to understand how to push back against these challenges with confidence and clarity, this one's for you.
Read MoreWhen an agnostic tried to ground logic and knowledge in the Principle of Sufficient Reason instead of the triune God, I showed why that foundation crumbles under its own weight. Only the God of the Bible provides the necessary preconditions for intelligibility—and without Him, you’re left with floating concepts and borrowed capital. Here’s how the debate unfolded—and why presuppositional apologetics still stands undefeated.
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