Robin Schumacher

Robin Schumacher

Exclusive Columnist

Robin Schumacher is an accomplished software executive and Christian apologist who has written many articles, authored and contributed to several Christian books, appeared on nationally syndicated radio programs, and presented at apologetic events. He holds a BS in Business, Master's in Christian apologetics and a Ph.D. in New Testament. His latest book is, A Confident Faith: Winning people to Christ with the apologetics of the Apostle Paul.

Latest

  • Beware the counterfeit Christ

    Beware the counterfeit Christ

    Suppose I pulled the label off a can of your favorite soda and affixed it to a can of the deadliest poison imaginable. You then took it from me and quickly downed it. Would your false belief of it being soda save you?

  • God’s mercy isn’t just mercy  

    God’s mercy isn’t just mercy  

    One of the key distinctives of Christianity over all other religions is how the God of the Bible handles the important relationship between compassion and justice.

  • What do the Taliban believe?

    What do the Taliban believe?

    With the recent meteoric fall of Afghanistan to the Taliban, fears of an “ISIS 3.0” are rising, with many asking questions about the global plans of the Taliban and what will happen next.

  • UFOs, aliens and Jesus, oh my!

    UFOs, aliens and Jesus, oh my!

    Christians are now revisiting discussions about the theological implications of extraterrestrial life. For example, if they exist, what impact does that have on God’s plan of salvation through Christ?

  • Why you can’t lose your salvation

    Why you can’t lose your salvation

    Once you become a Christian, you cannot ever lose your salvation for one simple reason: God doesn’t just purpose the beginning of your salvation; He also purposes its end.

  • Are you a theologian or a geologian?

    Are you a theologian or a geologian?

    At first blush, you may think Catholic scholar Thomas Berry, who is credited with redefining the term "geologian," is describing naturalism/atheism, but you’d be wrong. Instead, he’s advocating for what may be the oldest pagan religion — pantheism.

  • Making sense of the world in madness

    Making sense of the world in madness

    Poles and Jews had been living peacefully side by side for many years in Jedwabne until the Nazis arrived. Just after the German occupation, a simple question was raised by the Poles: “Is it now permissible to kill the Jews?”

  • Stirring up the crowd: Jesus' time and today

    Stirring up the crowd: Jesus' time and today

    It was the same back in Jesus’ day. His enemies didn’t have Twitter or other social media vehicles to instantly demonize a person so they had to do it the old fashioned way.

  • Is racism wrong?

    Is racism wrong?

    Russian philosopher Vladimir Solovyov once said, “Modern people believe this: man descended from apes. Therefore, let us love one another.”

  • The spirit behind defund the police

    The spirit behind defund the police

    What a difference a year makes. With the defund-the-police movement horribly blowing up in their face amidst the rapid rise in crime, politicians are scrambling to accuse their rival parties of being the ones wanting to cut funding for law enforcement.

  • Exposing the false religion of the Great Awokening

    Exposing the false religion of the Great Awokening

    Twisting the path of Christian revelation, most all false religions follow the same five steps. It starts with (1) a false prophet who then writes or uses, (2) a false authority to then proclaim, (3) a false god, (4) a false savior and, (5) a false salvation.

  • Doubting John

    Doubting John

    Except for the content contained in Scripture on the trials and crucifixion of Jesus, no chapter in the Bible makes me grit my teeth more than Mark 6 that details the murder of John the Baptist. The man God calls the greatest “born of women” seems to fall as a meaningless casualty to evil people.

  • How really free are you where God is concerned?

    How really free are you where God is concerned?

    It’s my opinion that, once the domino of total depravity falls, all the other supposed hard-to-accept teachings of reformed theology (including limited atonement) become easy to accept. Let me explain.  

  • Will Christ say He never knew you?

    Will Christ say He never knew you?

    Having just listened to John MacArthur s message entitled The Damning Deception of Empty Words and Empty Hearts, which covers the end of Matthew 7 and Christ s judgment on those who thought they were truly saved but were not, a man called into MacArthur s Q A line and nervously asked the pastor teacher a question

  • Responding to the 'don’t know, don’t care about God' crowd

    Responding to the 'don’t know, don’t care about God' crowd

    Take agnosticism and tack on a sense of insignificance to the idea of God and you have the apatheist. Surprisingly, there are a lot more of them than you may think.  

  • Why you should (and probably already do) believe in limited atonement

    Why you should (and probably already do) believe in limited atonement

    When it comes to which of the five points of Calvinism that irk non-reformed Christians the most, my money is on limited atonement. The doctrine of limited atonement teaches that Christ's redeeming work on the cross secured an actual salvation for only the elect of God.

  • Today’s injustice is God’s justice

    Today’s injustice is God’s justice

    It’s a pattern recorded time and again in Scripture and felt throughout history. God judges sinful people with the actions of even more sinful people.

  • We don’t have a gun violence problem

    We don’t have a gun violence problem

    It’s time everyone stops saying that America has a gun violence problem. Our situation is nowhere near as superficial as that. We have a violence problem, period, irrespective of what instrument is used in the commission of a crime

  • Asking for Barabbas is a supremely bad idea

    Asking for Barabbas is a supremely bad idea

    The stark comparison between Christ and Barabbas becomes even more spiritually significant when one discovers the meaning behind the latter’s name. Bar means “son of” and abba is “father” in the Greek.

  • Ravi Zacharias and the third level of truth

    Ravi Zacharias and the third level of truth

    The Danish philosopher Søren Kierkegaard was the greatest apologist for the third level of truth. Demanding that Christianity be interpreted as living truth rather than just a system of thought, he forged a unique path within the philosophy of religion by saying that no person has a right to claim truth until they first are the truth.