Historical or Presuppositional Apologetics: A Henrecian Response to Michael Licona’s New Historiographical Approach
Aug 08, 2019
About this article
Published Online: Aug 08, 2019
Page range: 43 - 61
DOI: https://doi.org/10.2478/perc-2019-0021
Keywords
© 2019 William C. Roach, published by Sciendo
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 License.
Two cross-currents from the twentieth century have affected evangelical apologetics: apologetic methodology and Carl F. H. Henry. Henry was considered the dean of American evangelicalism, who shaped the movement by providing a rational and propositional apologetic. Henry also engaged the issues in the midst of a larger question of apologetic methodology, primarily, between presuppositionalists and evidentialists. This article continues to address the two cross-currents by offering a Henrecian evaluation of Michael Licona’s new historiographical approach to defending the resurrection. In particular, the article attempts to evaluate Licona’s evidentialist approach through the lens of Henry’s presuppositional approach.