In this powerful campus conversation, Stuart & Cliffe Knechtle engage university students in an honest, respectful debate about God, truth, morality, and Jesus Christ. Students raise deep questions about spirituality vs religion, mysticism, free will, historical Christianity, church abuse, war and military service, and whether faith can be shaped by personal experience alone.
The discussion challenges the idea of “spiritual but not religious,” explores whether Jesus is a historical figure or symbolic metaphor, and asks whether objective truth exists at all. From the ethics of combat and government authority to the dangers of weaponizing religion, this debate pushes beyond surface-level answers and calls students to wrestle seriously with reality, evidence, and responsibility.
If you’ve ever wondered:
Can God be defined personally?
Is Jesus the only way?
Does free will explain evil and suffering?
Can Christians serve in the military?
Has religion been used to harm more than help?
This conversation is for you.
Watch as students think critically, challenge assumptions, and explore whether faith in Christ is a leap into fantasy—or a commitment to truth.
Keywords (for SEO, embedded naturally):
Christian debate, Stuart Knechtle, Cliffe Knechtle, campus ministry, student debate, define God, spiritual but not religious, Jesus Christ, Christianity vs spirituality, moral relativism, objective truth, free will, problem of evil, historical Jesus, Bible reliability, faith and reason, Christianity and war, military and faith, religious hypocrisy, weaponized religion, Christian apologetics, college campus debate, God and morality, truth and reality
Информация по комментариям в разработке