
The following is a wonderful article on Defense of the Gospel and Apologetics.
An exerpt:
While the Bible maintains that the Christian apologist is prohibited from adopting the starting point of unbelieving thought, he is encouraged to show the unbeliever the end result of his foolish philosophical principles if they are followed to their consistent end. As defenders of the only true faith, we are to "answer a fool as his folly deserves, lest he be wise in his own eyes" (Prov. 26:5). That is, we are to put the unbeliever's worldview to the test, showing how absurd it is when followed consistently. A world without God and moral absolutes leads to despair and moral anarchy. For example, Ted Turner, founder of CNN, is a good example of when he said the following about the Ten Commandments: "We're living with outmoded rules. The rules we're living under [are] the Ten Commandments, and I bet nobody here even pays much attention to 'em, because they are too old. . . . Nobody around likes to be commanded."
Does Ted Turner really believe that laws against theft (the eighth commandment) and murder (the sixth commandment) are "outmoded rules"? I wonder how he would respond if he had been scammed by the Ponzi schemer Bernard Madoff. An outdated law, indeed! What if one of his children had been killed by the "Santa Claus" gunman, Bruce Pardo? According to atheists, the evolution of man was made possible by millions of years of intra-species killing. Get rid of the God factor, and there is no way that atheism can account for a commandment that states "You shall not murder." Commandments aren't just "outmoded"; there is no way to account for their validity given evolutionary assumptions. When Carl Sagan wrote "The cosmos is all that is or ever was or ever will be,"[3] he was making a declaration of faith that makes it impossible to make a claim for any kind of moral obligation or ultimate meaning.
The modern personification of the atheist is Dr. Gregory House, the exceedingly impolite, acerbic, but brilliant diagnostician played by Hugh Laurie on the television series House, M.D. (The character parallels that of Sherlock Holmes: Homes=House, Dr. Wilson=Dr. Watson as his only confidant, masterful diagnostician, uses music to help him think, and drug addict.) Dr. House claims repeatedly that there is no life after death, and life this side of the grave is meaningless, and yet he lives and breathes in a world of laws, cause and effect, and purpose. He craves love and meaning and pursues them in the confines of his self-imposed solitude. The creators of the show have made House a flawed character; he's not as smart as he thinks he is, especially about things that matter to most people. The same is true about all atheists. They love to attack the notion of God, and yet He "gives to all life and breath and all things" (Acts 17:25). The high-minded atheist can't account for life, air, or the means to breathe it. Like House, atheists limp through life with a cane and popping Vicodin, all the time denying they are lame and in a perpetual drug-induced haze to hid what they know is true (Rom. 1:18-23).











