harmony wrote:Then they'd best be getting themselves on the internet, in blogs or on message boards, because that's where the battle's being fought.
They're getting themselves into articles and books and symposia and articles published on line and lectures put on line and films and national and international television broadcasts. These tend to reach a fairly good audience. More remains to be done, but it's not bad.
As for this message board, there are literally one or two dozen people here, duking it out day by day.
harmony wrote:And they'd best be polite about it, because that's the direction we've heard from the GC pulpit lately. God's hammering on spiteful, mean-spirited apologists, in case you missed that talk. He likes civil discourse, not that I find that surprising. I'm sure someone will link that particular talk, should you need a reference.
I'm quite familiar with that particular talk, and those particular talks.
harmony wrote:You've been wrong before. I suppose it's possible for you to be wrong again. Please don't make assumptions based on information for which you have no foundation.
If you're at all current with the work of John Sorenson, Bob Millet, Andrew Hedges, Jack Welch, Camille Williams, Jim Faulconer, John Tvedtnes, Paul Hoskisson, Stephen Ricks, Louis Midgley, Blake Ostler, Matt Roper, David Seely, Richard Lloyd Anderson, David Paulsen, Mark Ashurst-McGee, Noel Reynolds, John Clark, Don Parry, Shirley Ricks, Jordan Vajda, Kent Brown, Steve Harper, Catherine Thomas, John Gee, Brant Gardner, and Bill Hamblin, I'll be much surprised.
Are you?
harmony wrote:Do you think 60,000 hits a month is impressive?
It's reasonably good.
Remember, we're not talking about a mere message board, where each reading or posting of a one-liner may count as a hit. The
FARMS Review publishes -- and those who read the
FARMS Review read -- lengthy and complex articles.
Sixty-thousand such encounters each month is,
meines Erachtens, not bad.
harmony wrote:You can talk about conferences and books and authors until the cows come home, but that won't change the current and future face of apologetics.
Actually, I think it will.
Dissemination of solid research and arguments is an important matter, but such arguments are constructed and such research is published not initially on message boards but via conference papers, articles, and books.
Oxford University Press, Caltech,
Nature, the American Historical Association,
Science, and the
Zeitschrift für die Alttestamentliche Wissenschaft aren't going to be replaced by message boards any time soon.
####################################################