APOL 220 Quiz 5
APOL 220 Quiz 5 Liberty University
APOL 220 Quiz 5 Contextualization and Inside Out
Covers all Learn materials from Module 5: Week 5.
- Which NT author provides us with some of the most immediate examples of contextualization?
- A uniquely cross-shaped approach to persuasion would include all of the follow strategies, except:
- Which basic period does this description refer to? People assumed that God or the gods had created the world.
- For Paul, “ministry” meant a synthesis of what applied to real life situations?
- This analogy was used to describe the immanent frame:
- As Christian apologists, it is important that we understand how people’s assumptions and beliefs are ___________ conditioned.
- To which culture did the apologetic method include an appeal to pragmatism?
- Settling a disagreement is often just a matter of providing enough evidence to support a claim about reality, since all people interpret evidence through the same cultural lens.
- Many of the assumptions of the pre-modern era align well with Christianity.
- Cultural plausibility structures refer to the beliefs we deem plausible because the people around us support them.
- The gospel message is true for all people for all time and is the standard by which all cultures should be assessed.
- Talk of cultural trends and traditions is something that only plagues graduate-level philosophy and should not influence our apologetic method.
- To which culture did the apologetic method include quotes from the people’s own philosophers and poets?
- “Where do competing narratives borrow from the Christian story?” is a diagnostic question from the “inside” portion of the inside-out method.
- “What can we affirm and what do we need to challenge” are questions from the inside part of the inside out model.
- The speech before Felix the governor was an example of Jewish contextualization.
- Paul was a student of Greek culture because he committed to spending time studying their culture.
- This is characterized by an overconfident picture through which to view the world
- Which basic period does this description refer to? It rejected the truth propagated by traditional authorities.
- Keller uses the analogy of stones and logs to describe A and B doctrines.
- To “contextualize the gospel” means to translate it into the language and appropriate thought forms of the culture in which it is being shared.
- Paul suggests that to contextualize is to abandon the gospel message
- Examples of “A” doctrines include which of the following:
- An Inside-Out model for apologetic conversations places the gospel at the end of the interaction, rather than weaving it into the dialogue throughout.
- The logical outworking of radical skepticism is radical nihilism – the belief that there is no meaning – but it is an impractical and inconsistent way to actually live.
Set 1
- Examples of “A” doctrines include which of the following:
- Talk of cultural trends and traditions is something that only plagues graduate-level philosophy and should not influence our apologetic method.
- An ironic effect of the culture of “spin” is that the harder a Christian attempts to persuade and win trust, the more distrustful their audience becomes.
- A uniquely cross-shaped approach to persuasion would include all of the follow strategies,
- Which NT author provides us with some of the most immediate examples of contextualization?
- An Inside-Out model for apologetic conversations places the gospel at the end of the interaction, rather than weaving it into the dialogue throughout.
- All who dislike or reject Christianity can be treated as part of one homogenous group, since they will all find the same arguments for accepting Christianity equally persuasive.
- This doctrine represents Christian beliefs that a particular culture finds difficult to accept, if not all together repulsive.
- Many of the assumptions of the pre-modern era align well with Christianity.
- The logical outworking of radical skepticism is radical nihilism – the belief that there is no meaning – but it is an impractical and inconsistent way to actually live.
- Peter reaches out to his Jewish listeners by using all of the following methods, except:
- This analogy was used to describe the immanent frame:
- As Christian apologists, it is important that we understand how people’s assumptions and beliefs are ___________ conditioned.
- When Paul said he became “all things to all people,” he meant that he would go to wherever people were most comfortable in terms of:
- To which culture did the apologetic method include an appeal to pragmatism?
- To “contextualize the gospel” means to translate it into the language and appropriate thought forms of the culture in which it is being shared.
- This is characterized by an overconfident picture through which to view the world
- Consider this point: “He relates to their belief in supernatural beings.” Which audience was this contextualization directed to?
- The speech before Felix the governor was an example of Jewish contextualization.
- Cultural plausibility structures refer to the beliefs we deem plausible because the people around us support them.
- Which basic period does this description refer to? It rejected the truth propagated by traditional authorities.
- “Where do competing narratives borrow from the Christian story?” is a diagnostic question from the “inside” portion of the inside-out method.
- The hopes of Pre-modernism were dashed when it eventually became apparent that human reason alone was unable to curb violence or provide a universal system of morality.
- “What can we affirm and what do we need to challenge” are questions from the inside part of the inside out model.
- Whenever the gospel is being presented in any culture, it is being contextualized.
Set 2
- Whenever the gospel is being presented in any culture, it is being contextualized.
- This is characterized by an overconfident picture through which to view the world
- Talk of cultural trends and traditions is something that only plagues graduate-level philosophy and should not influence our apologetic method.
- Many of the assumptions of the pre-modern era align well with Christianity.
- Which basic period does this description refer to? It rejected the truth propagated by traditional authorities.
- Consider this point: “He relates to their belief in supernatural beings.” Which audience was this contextualization directed to?
- Which NT author provides us with some of the mostimmediate examples of contextualization?
- Paul was a student of Greek culture because he committed to spending time studying their culture.
- Which basic period does this description refer to? People assumed that God or the gods had created the world.
- Cultural plausibility structuresrefer to the beliefs we deem plausible because the people around us support them.
- Paul suggests that to contextualize is to abandon the gospel message
- “What can we affirm and what do we need to challenge” are questions from the insidepart of the inside out model.
- This analogy was used to describe the immanent frame:
- This doctrine represents Christian beliefs that a particular culture finds difficult to accept, if not all together repulsive.
- To which culture did the apologetic method include quotes from the people’s own philosophers and poets?
Set 3
- Which NT author provides us with some of the most immediate examples of contextualization
- This doctrine represents Christian beliefs that a particular culture finds difficult to accept, if not all together repulsive.
- The speech before Felix the governor was an example of Jewish contextualization.
- Consider this point: “He relates to their belief in supernatural beings.” Which audience was this contextualization directed to?
- Cultural plausibility structures refer to the beliefs we deem plausible because the people around us support them.
- This analogy was used to describe the immanent frame:
- Keller uses the analogy of stones and logs to describe A and B doctrines.
- The hopes of Pre-modernism were dashed when it eventually became apparent that human reason alone was unable to curb violence or provide a universal system of morality.
- To which culture did the apologetic method include quotes from the people’s own philosophers and poets?
- Paul suggests that to contextualize is to abandon the gospel message
- Which basic period does this description refer to? People assumed that God or the gods had created the world.
- Which basic period does this description refer to? It rejected the truth propagated by traditional authorities.
- This is characterized by an overconfident picture through which to view the world
- Whenever the gospel is being presented in any culture, it is being contextualized.
- “What can we affirm and what do we need to challenge” are questions from the inside part of the inside out model.
Set 4
- According to Keller, with time and perspective most of us can see good reason for at least some of the tragedy and pain that occurs in life.
- According to Habermas, one of the dilemmas plaguing ____________ is this: either you have laws with no cause or you have no laws, in which case you have no objection.
- Four points of engagement with religiously lethargic people are everyday life opportunities, beauty, the good life, and birth.
- is often described as the rock of atheism
- According to Habermas, instead of asking the question “why do we have to go through evil,” the question might be, “why didn’t the Father remove his son from evil?”
- Critics argue that Christianity is socially divisive because of its
- Because late modernism is largely biblically illiterate, it is the job of the apologist to
- According to Guinness, in the Atheist view existence itself is the problem whereas moral disobedience is the problem in the _________ view
- According to “Engaging in the Western World,” biblical categories and concepts can be assumed for only the next ten years if our culture continues the way it is going.
- Skeptics believe that any exclusive claim to a superior knowledge of spiritual reality cannot be true.
- The “tri-lemma” consists of the questions: is evil evil, is God good, and is God eternal?
- Freedom can easily be defined as the absence of confinement and constraint.
- Any community that ______________ would not really be a community at all.
- At the heart of the “condemn religion” approach is
- In C. S. Lewis’ opinion, being blessed by God provided a better argument for God’s existence than an argument against it.
Set 5
- The “tri-lemma” consists of the questions: is evil evil, is God good, and is God eternal?
- Any community that ______________ would not really be a community at all.
- is often described as the rock of atheism
- According to “Engaging in the Western World,” biblical categories and concepts can be assumed for only the next ten years if our culture continues the way it is going.
- Four points of engagement with religiously lethargic people are everyday life opportunities, beauty, the good life, and birth.
- Most people who assert the equality of religions have in mind major world faiths as well as splinter sects.
- Explaining idolatry in relatable modern terms can serve as an introduction to the concept of
- At the heart of the “condemn religion” approach is
- Because late modernism is largely biblically illiterate, it is the job of the apologist to
- Modern pluralism in a university setting teaches that in our modern culture, everyone basically believes the same thing.
- According to Keller, with time and perspective most of us can see good reason for at least some of the tragedy and pain that occurs in life.
- Embracing the Christian doctrines of the incarnation and ____________ brings profound consolation in the face of suffering.
- According to Habermas, instead of asking the question “why do we have to go through evil,” the question might be, “why didn’t the Father remove his son from evil?”
- Freedom can easily be defined as the absence of confinement and constraint.
- Judaism, Christianity, and ____________ all believe in a God that holds people accountable for their beliefs and practices.