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How to Answer Hard Questions about Believing in God

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How to answer objections while sharing your faith

“What if I don’t know how to answer an objection about my faith in Jesus?”

This is a top fear people face when seeking to introduce a friend or loved one to Jesus. Sadly, it will stop many Christ followers in their tracks while sharing their faith this year. But it doesn’t have to be this way.

First, we should get one thing settled – if you are actively sharing your faith, you will eventually be stumped by an objection about the Bible, Jesus, or Christian beliefs. Unless, of course, you have an immediate answer to every potential question someone may ask about our infinite, all-knowing God. If that’s the case, I need to be reading your blog. However, if you’re more like the rest of us, the question really isn’t “what if I get stumped?”; instead, the question is “when I get stumped, how should I respond?”

Here are three things to do and one very important thing to remember when you run into an objection that quickens your pulse and makes you want to exit stage left.

Ask a clarifying question

Many Christians falsely believe that when an objection is raised while sharing their faith, the clock starts ticking, and they must provide an answer immediately. If that’s your understanding as well, I want you to read this next sentence carefully. When someone makes an objection, you are not on the hook to answer it; they are on the hook to explain more. You can invite them to do so with a clarifying question like, “What do you mean by that?” An example will be helpful here:

Joanne: “Tina, I appreciate your beliefs, but I really don’t see any good reason to believe in God.”

Tina: “Thank you for being honest. However, may I ask what you mean when you say ‘God’?”

Joanne: “Well, I just don’t think there’s an old bearded guy up there watching our every move.”

Tina: “Actually, I don’t believe in an old bearded guy either – can I share what the Bible says about God?”

Tina politely asked a what do you mean question, and that did a couple things. It took all the pressure off Tina and allowed Joanne to see that she was mistaken about who God is according to the Bible.

Another scenario could be, “…the Bible is full of errors.” Instead of replying “No it’s not!” just ask a question like, “which specific errors are you talking about?” Suddenly, the pressure is off you to prove them wrong, and the spotlight is on them to give specific examples (which almost never happens). Remember, if they make an objection, they need to do the work and explain more.

Acknowledge the objection and advance the conversation

Consider this brief exchange:

Jonathan: “I just don’t think there is any evidence that Christianity is true.”

Craig: “I definitely want to hear your thoughts about that, but can I briefly share what I believe about Jesus?”

In this short conversation, Craig isn’t interested in proving Jonathan wrong, and he isn’t avoiding the objection. In fact, he makes it clear he wants to hear Jonathan’s thoughts. He’s only seeking permission to push the objection to the end so he can share about his faith in Christ. This can be very effective, because in many cases, someone like Jonathan has been bringing up this objection for years and has heard 1,000 reasons why Christianity makes sense (and continues to ignore them), but what he’s never heard is the gospel of Jesus Christ.

“But,” you may be thinking, “what happens when they bring up the objection again and I don’t know how to respond?” Well, that leads us right into the next suggestion.

 Use Your 5-word ace Card: “Let me think about that”

If you ever feel pinned down by an objection, these five words will get you off the hook 100% of the time: “let me think about that.” Here are four reasons this phrase is so powerful:

  1. It lets the other person know you appreciate their objection and want the time it deserves to think about it
  2. It removes all pressure to provide an immediate answer
  3. It allows you the opportunity to set up a future time to talk
  4. It gives you the chance to meet with a pastor, mentor, etc about the topic at hand so you can come prepared to the future discussion

You can simply say, “I’ve never heard that before. Let me think about that and let’s plan to meet up again to chat about it.” It’s that easy.

One critical thing to remember

Now that you know some helpful ways to address objections while sharing your faith, there is one last thing to remember – and it’s vitally important.

Our job is to honor God while sharing our faith, not win arguments.

Too often people read articles like this with the goal to “not look foolish” or “to get the best of someone.” If your honest intention is to win arguments instead of souls, then your intention has more to do with glorifying your intellect than glorifying God. Sit with that for a moment before you depart to put these into action. Then, ask God to make these a part of your efforts to honor Him as He opens opportunities for you to share the wondrous message of the cross.

Copyright © 2021 Brock Anderson of Evantell, used with permission.

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About The Author

Brock
Anderson

Brock Anderson is the Director of Digital Communications for EvanTell. Headquartered in Dallas, TX, EvanTell specializes in training Christians around the world to share the gospel with confidence, clarity, and kindness. In the last 47 years, EvanTell has held more than 800,000 trainings and facilitated more than 42 million gospel presentations. Brock has held several senior leadership roles in the communications field over the past 17 years. He has worked in ministry for nearly 20 years and has held multiple leadership positions across several ministries including AWANA, youth groups