First, my thanks to Richard Swinburne for his probing and thoughtful review
of my book Warranted Christian Belief (WCB). His account of the book's mainline of
argument is accurate as far as it goes; it does contain an important lacuna, however.
The focus of the book is twofold; it is aimed in two directions. First, just as
Swinburne says, I argue that there are no plausible de iure objections to Christian
belief that are independent of de facto objections; any plausible objection to the
rationality of Christian belief, or to its warrant (the property that distinguishes
knowledge from mere true belief), or its justification, will either be obviously
mistaken or will (as with Freud, and Marx and a thousand others) presuppose one
or more de facto objections. This is intended as a contribution to apologetics; it is
important, because many or most objections to Christian belief are of just the sort
I attempt to discredit. (‘I don't know whether Christian belief is true or not – who
could know a thing like that? – but I do know that it is irrational, or unwarranted,
or not rationally justified, or…’.) Second (and this is the focus Swinburne fails to
mention), I proposed the extended A/C (Aquinas/Calvin) model as, from the
perspective of Christian belief, a plausible account of the way in which Christian
belief is, in fact, justified, rational and warranted. So the book is aimed in two
directions: first towards readers generally, whether Christian believers or not, and
second towards Christian believers.