Lessons are designed as responses to the reading, with a section of class discussion questions, research questions which students are supposed write an outlined response on and give a 2-minute in-class response; and a "respond" section for students to orally present answers to the research questions and develop a personal testimony. In an -class lesson activity is also included, as are optional assignments.
Lessons cover the definition and significance of apologetics, Peter & Paul's speeches as apologetic examples, why apologetics are important, how to articulate the difference between evidentialism & presuppositionalism, the relationship between philosophy, theology and apologetics, why scriptural authority is a fundamental issue, how history & apologetics are related, and more. 166 pages, softcover.