Social Media, You and Your Family

Arts, Media and Culture bookProbe Ministries hosted a presentation by Kerby Anderson on “Social Media, You and Your Family” on October 16, 2018 at the Hope Center in Plano, Texas. All attendees received a free copy of the new book Arts, Media, and Culture: A Biblical Point of View. (You can order it from our online store here.)

You can download a recording of Kerby’s message here.

We are all the beneficiaries of the information on the Internet. But scientists have also been able to document that our digital devices and social media are altering the way we think and altering our ability to concentrate.

As one psychologist at Tufts University explains, “We are not only what we read. We are how we read.” The style of reading on the Internet is different and profoundly changing the way we read and acquire information. Our brains are able to reprogram themselves on the fly through a process called “neuroplasticity.”

There is a crucial need for Christians to evaluate the impact of media in their lives. We need to develop discernment and pass those biblical principles to our children and grandchildren.

The new media represents an even greater threat to our discernment processes and can easily conform us to the world (Romans 12:2). Media is powerful tool to conform us to group think and thus to a secular worldview taking us captive to the false philosophies of the world (Colossians 2:8).

Let’s look at how we can harness social media to use for good while, at the same time, protecting ourselves and our children from potentially harmful effects.


Dr. Ray Bohlin Publicly Debates in Belarus

Something wonderful and heretofore-unseen happened in March 2018 in the formerly Communist country of Belarus, part of the Soviet Union until 1990. The capital city of Minsk was the site of a public debate between two scientists: Dr. Mikhail Gelfand, an atheist biology professor at Russia’s Moscow State University, and Probe’s own Dr. Ray Bohlin, a Ph.D. in molecular biology.

Ray had submitted a number of intelligent design-related topics to Dr. Gelfand who refused them all, deciding instead on the topic “Evolution or Creationism?” It was clear he was expecting a religious rather than a scientific argument from Ray, who presented “Is intelligent Design Science?” with the primary evidence that the DNA genetic code requires an intelligence. Dr. Gelfand did not respond to any of Ray’s points.

Belarus debate

Following their presentations, the debaters responded for an hour to written questions submitted by the audience. One question was, “Would either of you consider changing your mind if shown sufficient evidence of the other side?” With clear contempt, Dr. Gelfand dismissed the possibility that there was evidence for anything other than evolution. Ray related how, in his graduate studies in evolutionary biology, he continually asked, “Show me the evidence for evolution. Please convince me.” By the end of his studies, he was more of a skeptic of evolution than ever before.

Belarus debate - Shaking handsConcerned about making his flight back to Moscow, Dr. Gelfand gathered up his things. He was very surprised when Ray came over and, smiling, shook his hand after having been insulted several times during the debate. Christian kindness and compassion is its own kind of culture.

Following the debate, 55% of participants in an online vote chose Ray as the winner. The debate was uploaded to Russian YouTube with over 1000 views that weekend  (Link to English YouTube video is here). There was quite a bit of social media buzz about it, including requests to bring Ray back to Belarus in November for another debate.

The following weekend, along with his Probe colleague Todd Kappelman, Ray traveled several hours by train to Brest (on the border of Belarus and Poland) for another debate, this time with a professor of the history of Slavic people, Dr. Alexander Svirid. In his presentation Ray pointed out that the fossil evidence for human evolution is sparse and open to many interpretations. His opponent was not able to refute what Ray said, but suggested that the way information has “evolved” from the early computer software to what we have today is evidence of evolution. Ray pointed out that it takes an intelligent mind to rewrite and update software. Dr. Svirid was quite gracious and complimentary of Ray, remarking that “each of us would have been a good student of the other.” (Link is here.)

Monday through Friday for two weeks, Ray and Todd spent time with friends and potential church leaders. (Feel free to ask us for more information about that.)

Churches

This was Ray’s 14th trip to Belarus, and every time he goes, he speaks in the churches of people who have become friends. The first Sunday (of three), he preached in a church outside Minsk where one of his excellent translators is a teaching elder. He preached on Romans 1:18-20 in every church he spoke at, because after the previous day’s debate, many young people asked why the belief in creation mattered. Drawing on his worldview perspective sharpened by 40+ years of speaking and writing for Probe, he said that if there is no God, there is no purpose or meaning to any living thing—especially humans. Romans 1 assures us that we all know there is a Creator, so maybe the Creator’s intended purpose and meaning for us gives us worth and value. This is especially good news in a country that was recently Communist, which denies the worth and value of people. Questions continued through lunch, turning Sunday into another four-hour marathon like the (debate) day before.

The second weekend was jam-packed with ministry opportunities. On Friday night, Ray answered questions at an English club (for those working on learning to speak English). He heard the one question he can always count on: “What do you like about Belarus?” People always love his go-to answer: “Chocolate!”

On Saturday afternoon, he spoke at a student conference sponsored by CRU (formerly known as Campus Crusade for Christ). Both the Christians and the seekers in attendance were interested in hearing Todd address problems and issues in technology, and Ray was asked to address the problem of evil. Todd and Ray, along with their translator Sasha and his wife, took the train to Brest, arriving very late at night.

Brest debateThe next morning was the second debate, arranged by the pastor of Brest Bible Church, who had seen the YouTube videos of Ray’s 2016 debate and 2017 lecture, and really wanted him to come to his city.

The third weekend, with both men very tired, meant being driven to Brest and back the same day, to speak at a conference in another church. Todd, who doesn’t use a cell phone or wear a watch, spoke to the issues and challenges of technology, particularly smartphones and computers.  Ray, playing “good cop” to Todd’s “bad cop,” explained how helpful technology is to him as he tries to explain science to students and various audiences, especially the visual component of technology. Powerpoint is invaluable to him for showing graphs, tables and pictures, as well as showing videos using animation to demonstrate molecular machines inside the cell. Getting personal, he also explained that his wife Sue, a polio survivor who is no longer able to walk (and thus can no longer accompany him to handicap-unfriendly Belarus), needs the technology of her scooter to be mobile at all. Otherwise she would be bedridden, or unable to leave their home—which is what happens to most disabled Belarusians.

On Sunday, their last day, both Todd and Ray gave a short 20-minute talk in the small house church of a pastor and his wife who have become good friends of the Bohlins. That night at another small church, Ray answered lots of questions about the Minsk debate.

He was especially glad for the question, “Why bother?” Why, indeed, would anyone from Probe go 5500 miles to the former Soviet Union, giving time, energy and passion to the point of utter exhaustion, year after year?

It’s an opportunity to provide unbelievers with a reasoned, rational response to evolution.

It’s an opportunity to model to Christians how to engage in controversial issues without defensiveness or anger.

We pray something sticks, planting a “pebble in people’s shoes,” so to speak, sowing seeds of new information and a different perspective by asking questions for which the listeners have no answers. It starts a journey.

For over forty years, that’s what Probe Ministries has been doing. Sowing seeds, asking questions, planting pebbles in people’s shoes so they think.

In 1973, when Probe was founded, there was no glimmer of hope for debates like these behind the Iron Curtain, much less in the Soviet Union. But look what God did in March 2018! There is a great hunger for honest answers to honest questions in Belarus. The debates are possible because they are about science, not religion . . . because true science—the study of what God created—is the truth that points to Romans 1.

And for that, we thank and praise God.

 

Note: The funding for this trip is several thousand dollars short of what was needed to cover expenses. There is still an opportunity to invest eternally in what God is doing through Probe in Belarus! You can donate here and designate Dr. Ray Bohlin. All gifts will receive a tax-deductible receipt.

©2018 Probe Ministries


Mind Games 2017 Daily Schedule

 

 

SUNDAY

MONDAY

TUESDAY

WEDNESDAY

THURSDAY

FRIDAY

SATURDAY

7:30

 

Devotions

Devotions

Devotions

Devotions

Devotions

 

8:00

Breakfast

Breakfast

Breakfast

Breakfast

Breakfast

Breakfast

 

Clean
up, pack up, pick up and GO

9:00

Worship

Worship

Worship

Worship

Worship

9:15

 

 

 

Worldviews
1

 

 

 

Apologetics
1: God

 

 

Apologetics
3: Jesus

 

Alumni:
Gay Theology (SB)

 

Science
and Earth History

 

Alumni:
Technology (TK)

Genetic

Engineering

 

Alumni: EMOTIONS:

8
Tools for Living (Hannah Gleghorn)

10:30

Break

Break

 

Break

Break

Break

10:45

 

Worldviews
2

Apologetics
2: The Bible

Grace
and Truth About LGBT

Problem
of Evil and Suffering

Flow
of Western Culture

12:00

Lunch

Lunch

Lunch

Lunch

Lunch

1:00

 

 

Free
time

Pool
open 1:00-2:00

Free
time

Pool
open 1:00-2:00

Free
time

Pool
open 1:00-2:00

Free
time

Pool
open 1:00-2:00

Free
time

Pool
open 1:00-2:00

3:00

 

 

Check
in

Human
Nature

Origin
of the Universe and Life

Is
Jesus the Only Way?

 

Alumni:
Climate Change (RB)

The
Value of Suffering

Campus
Christianity

4:15

Break

Break

Break

Break

Break

4:30

Small
Groups

Small
Groups

Small
Groups

Small
Groups

Small
Groups

5:30

Dinner

Dinner

Dinner

Dinner

Dinner

Free
time

6:30

 

Orientation

 

Worship

Worship

Worship

Worship

6:45

 

Ethics
101

 

Islam

Gender Is Over!
Or Is It?

How
to Watch a Movie + Film

Dinner

Film

 

Free
time

8:15

Break

 

Free
time

 

Free
time

 

Free
time

 

Free Time

8:30

Orientation

10:30

In
Dorms

In
Dorms

In
Dorms

In
Dorms

In
Dorms

In
Dorms

11:00

Lights
Out

Lights
Out

Lights
Out

Lights
Out

Lights
Out

Lights
Out


Probe Responses to “The Shack”

Probe staff members are not unanimous in their responses to The Shack. Sue Bohlin enjoyed it as “a good book with problems,” and former staffer Pat Zukeran sees value in the book but is concerned enough about the theological problems to give it a “thumbs down.” Those of us who have read the book have a difference of opinion with each other, but we remain friendly and mutually respectful even as we disagree.

The movie is faithful enough to the book that our takeaways still stand.

thumbsup-sm Sue Bohlin’s Response to The Shack
Thumb down Patrick Zukeran’s Critique of The Shack

Originally published in 2008.


What is Probe?

Probe Ministries is a non-profit ministry whose mission is to assist the church in renewing the minds of believers with a Christian worldview and to equip the church to engage the world for Christ. Probe fulfills this mission through our Mind Games conferences for youth and adults, our 3-minute daily radio program, and our extensive Web site at www.probe.org.

Further information about Probe’s materials and ministry may be obtained by contacting us at:

Probe Ministries
Suite 2000
2001 W. Plano Parkway
Plano, TX 75075
(972) 941-4565
[email protected]
www.probe.org
Copyright information

 

 

 

 


Politically Incorrect Guide to Islam and Terrorism

Although the war on terror has become a household subject since September 11, 2001, we still hear many politically correct phrases. Do Muslims and Christians worship the same God? Is Islam a religion of peace? What is the true meaning of jihad? Kerby Anderson offers an honest, biblically-based discussion of Islam and terrorism.

Politically Incorrect Guide to Islam and Global Terrorism MP3
Download
Kerby’s PowerPoint presentation from this lecture can be viewed or downloaded Here
See also our articles:

Probe Answers Our Email:

 

 

 


Mind Games 2016 Schedule

Mind Games 2016 Schedule

 

SUNDAY

MONDAY

TUESDAY

WEDNESDAY

THURSDAY

FRIDAY

SATURDAY

7:30

 

Devotions

Devotions

Devotions

Devotions

Devotions

 

8:00

 

Breakfast

Breakfast

Breakfast

Breakfast

Breakfast

Breakfast

 

Clean
up, pack up, pick up and GO

9:00

 

 

Worship

Worship

Worship

Worship

9:15

 

 

 

Worldviews
1

 

 

Apologetics
1: God

Apologetics
3: Jesus

 

Alumni:
The Signature in the Cell

Science
and Earth History

 

Alumni:
Postmodernism

Genetic

Engineering

 

Alumni:
What Difference Did Mind Games Make This Year?

10:30

 

Break

 

Ropes
Course

Free
time

 

Break

Break

Break

10:45

 

 

Worldviews
2

Grace
and Truth About LGBT

Problem
of Evil and Suffering

Flow
of Western Culture

12:00

 

Lunch

Lunch

Lunch

Lunch

Lunch

1:00

 

 

 

Free
time

Pool
open 1:00-2:00

Free
time

Pool
open 1:00-2:00

Free
time

Pool
open 1:00-2:00

Free
time

Pool
open 1:00-2:00

Free
time

Pool
open 1:00-2:00

3:00

Human
Nature

Apologetics
2: The Bible

Is
Jesus the Only Way?

 

Alumni:
Kierkegaard for Beginners

The
Value of Suffering

Campus
Christianity

4:15

Check
in

Break

Break

Break

Break

Break

4:30

Small
Groups

Small
Groups

Small
Groups

Small
Groups

Small
Groups

5:30

Dinner

Dinner

Dinner

Dinner

Dinner

Dinner

6:30

 

 

Orientation

 

Worship

Worship

Worship

Worship

Worship

6:45

Ethics
101

Origin
of the Universe and Life

Islam

How
to Watch a Movie

Film

8:15

Break

 

Free
time

Break

 

Free
time

 

Free
time

 

Free
time

8:30

Orientation

Gender
Differences: Mars and Venus

10:30

In Rooms

In
Rooms

In
Rooms

In
Rooms

In
Rooms

In
Rooms

11:00

Lights
Out

Lights
Out

Lights
Out

Lights
Out

Lights
Out

Lights
Out


First Dallas Series “How Can I Know?”: Links to Apologetics Articles

How Can I Know? First Baptist Dallas Apologetics Series

We are pleased and honored to suggest these articles and answers to email as helpful additions to Dr. Robert Jeffress’ 2012 apologetics series at First Baptist Church Dallas (Texas).
Aug. 26 How Can I Know How To Start Over When I’ve Blown It?
Grappling with Guilt
“Will God Punish Me Forever for My Mistakes?”
“Will Jesus Still Forgive Me?”
The Sinfulness of Humanity
Sept. 2 How Can I Know How To Forgive Someone Who Has Hurt Me?
Forgiveness, Reconciliation, and You
The Keys to Emotional Healing – Part 2
“How Do I Overcome My Hurts and Disappointments From My Church?”
Sept. 9 & 16 How Can I Know There Is a God?
Evidence for God’s Existence
There is a God
Does God Exist?
Answering the New Atheists
No Reason to Fear: Examining the Logic of a Critic
Sept. 23 & 30 How Can I Know The Bible Is True?
Are the Biblical Documents Reliable?
The Historical Reliability of the Gospels
Authority of the Bible
Bart Ehrman’s Complaint
The Christian Canon
Oct. 7 How Can I Know God Is Good With All The Suffering in the World?
The Problem of Evil
“I Doubt the Existence of a Good God Who Allows a Baby to Suffer and Die”
Where Was God on Sept. 11? The Problem of Evil
Hope For a World Gone Bad
The Value of Suffering
Oct. 14 & 21 How Can I Know Christianity Is The Right Religion?
Do All Roads Lead to God? The Christian Attitude Toward Non-Christian Religions
Is Jesus the Only Savior?
Christianity and Religious Pluralism
“How Can I Teach Pluralism Wisely?”
Will Everyone Be Saved? A Look at Universalism
Oct. 28 & Nov. 4 How Can I Know I’m Going To Heaven When I Die?
“How Can I Know I’m Going to Heaven?”
Dealing with Doubt
“Can a Christian Lose His Salvation?”
“Can a True Believer Commit the Unforgiveable Sin?”

 

 


Now I’m Bound

“Now I’m Bound”

 

 

Download the title song from our new album from our OnceCaptive label here.

 

 

 

 

Now I’m Bound By Jennie Riddle, Don Johnson, Matt Boswell (adapted lyrics on bridge by Isaac Watts) © 2011


Mind Games Conference Overview

How can we equip high school students to withstand the assaults on their faith that await them in college?

How can we keep them from “graduating from God” after they graduate from high school?

How can we keep our teens from becoming sad statistics of spiritual shipwreck?

A recent study by Fuller Seminary found one factor that proved most effective in helping young people retain their Christian convictions during high school and after graduation: having a safe place to wrestle with doubts and questions before leaving home. The study concluded, “The more college students felt that they had the opportunity to express their doubt while they were in high school, the higher [their] levels of faith maturity and spiritual maturity.”{1}

Mind Games Camp is tailor-made for giving students this safe place to ask questions and express doubts. Probe teachers delight to reassure students that not only is this good and important for spiritual health, it is one way we can love God with our minds!

Loving God with our minds is the most ignored part of the greatest commandment, to “love the Lord your God with all your heart, and with all your soul, and with all your strength, and with all your mind” (Luke 10:27). We believe that the same God who invites us to “Come, let us reason together” (Is. 1:18) welcomes us to discover that His word is trustworthy, that biblical teaching is intellectually robust, and that there are good answers for our questions.

This 6½-day conference (Sunday evening to Saturday morning) is a total immersion, give-it-all-we’ve-got experience for high school and college students that changes minds and hearts forever. We lay a foundation of biblical worldview, which equips students to recognize truth and error in both the classroom and the culture. They are able to discern the explanations of life offered by their college professors, media figures and entertainment producers.

Then we build confidence in their faith through classical and cultural apologetics. They learn the evidence that Jesus is God and their Bibles are trustworthy. They grow in a biblical understanding of science, sexuality, human nature, art, evil and suffering, and world religions.

• Instructors engage in lively conversations, eating all meals with students and not each other.

• Daily small-group discussion times assure the opportunity to process what students are learning and how they are challenged.

• Instruction and discussion in how to watch a movie. It’s not just entertainment; there are always worldview and value issues behind every film and movie. Students won’t ever watch a movie the same way again.

• Probe staff members engage in recreation time and informal conversations with students.

• Morning devotionals and prayer time

• Not just lecture: teachers use video clips, role play, Q and A, and other teaching techniques

• Questions and doubts are met with respect and engagement; if we don’t know the answer, we’ll find it out.

• Plenty of free time is built into the schedule!

Instructors build confidence in Christianity as a reasonable faith, not one dependent on warm and fuzzy feelings. We believe there is no “silver bullet” evidence that will blow away objectors, but we can equip students to defend their faith with gentleness and respect (1 Pet. 3:15).

Mind Games Camp doesn’t just build confidence—it builds leaders. Alumni of Mind Games have gone on to become leaders on campus, in business, in politics, in ministry and in the military. Many students make lasting friendships with other Christ-followers from around the country who are serious about their faith.

Location: Camp Copass in Denton, Texas, a 45-minute drive northwest of Dallas.
Cost: $495.00 for lodging, meals, notebook and instruction.
Time: 4:00 p.m. Sunday, June 13 to 9:00 a.m. Saturday morning, June 19, 2021
Age guidelines: Completion of sophomore year of high school. Mind Games is geared for high school juniors and seniors, and college freshmen and sophomores. (Especially motivated younger students are welcome, though!)

Typical schedule here.

Online Registration

Mail-in Registration Form

For more information:
email Sue Bohlin at [email protected]
or call her at 972-977-8301.

 

Note

1. Lillian Kwon, “Survey: High School Seniors ‘Graduating From God’,” The Christian Post, 10 August 2006.


National Student Mind Games


 

Students don’t have to “graduate from God” after high school! This total immersion week of worldview and apologetics, with lots of discussion and recreation built in, builds confidence that Christianity is true and it makes the most sense.

National Student Mind Games
Conference 2021

Camp Copass, Denton TX (Dallas/Ft. Worth area)
4:00 p.m. Sunday, June 13
to
9 a.m. Saturday, June 19
$495.00 (Optional $20 recreation fee for Ropes Course)
$425.00 for alumni ($445 with Ropes Course)
Online Brochure Typical Daily Schedule
Register Online Mail-in Registration Form
Scholarship Application Mind Games Camper Forms

 

More Information

Conference Overview
Mind Games Conference Radio Program Transcript
2015 Camp Pictures
2013 Video
Contact Us: Email Sue Bohlin     Call Sue: 972-977-8301

 

  • Please arrange transportation to arrive before 3 p.m. on Sunday, June 13 and depart after 1 p.m. on Saturday, June 19.
  • Dallas has two airports you can fly into: Dallas/Ft. Worth (DFW) and Dallas Love Field (DAL).
  • Email Sue Bohlin ([email protected]) with your itinerary so that she can coordinate your transportation to and from the camp.
  • You will get travel confirmation from her about pickup time and directions in mid-May.
  • Feel free to contact her with further questions by email or phone, 972-977-8301

 

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