I was reminded by the amount of questions students have related to the Trinity after teaching through the Doctrine of God in my high school class. Because of this, I decided to put out a short YouTube series addressing if the Trinity is logical, biblical, and responding to bad analogies. This short series became the topic of a recent podcast.
Listen to the podcast below and check out the posted YouTube videos to better prepare yourelf to defend the doctrine of the Trinity.
Full Video Podcast:
Is the Trinity logical?
Is the Trinity biblical?
What are some bad analogies for the Trinity?
You can follow the Coffeehouse Questions Podcast and have it automatically downloaded to your device by subscribing on iTunes. If you don’t have iTunes, find the podcast and follow on SoundCloud or search “Coffeehouse Questions with Ryan Pauly” on your Android podcast player. Finally, if you’d rather stick to the radio, you can listen to the show on 100.1 KGBA every Saturday night from 9-9:30 PT.
Like the Facebook page or follow on Instagram to interact with Ryan and his guests on future shows. Your questions and comments help to make the show more interactive. Go ahead and send in those questions to contact@coffeehousequestions.com, Facebook, Twitter, Instagram (@ryanpauly3), or by text at (714) 989-6927 (Google Voice number for texts only). Finally, don’t forget to give it a rating on your podcast app and find me on Patreon if you enjoy what you hear!
Ryan Pauly is the founder and president of Think Well and the Director of Immersive Experiences at MAVEN. He has been working with junior high, high school, and college students for over a decade as a missionary, school teacher, field guide and speaker.
After graduating from college he became a missionary in the Dominican Republic where he spent four years teaching English, Worldview, Apologetics, and Leadership to junior high and high school students. Ryan moved back to Southern California in 2015 and started teaching Historical Christian Doctrine and Apologetics, Comparative Religions and Worldviews, and Philosophy of Ethics at a Southern California Christian high school. He taught high school full-time for 12 years until 2023 when he left to work with Think Well and MAVEN.
Ryan started in the apologetics world back in 2015 with his blog, Coffeehouse Questions. This led to the podcast in 2016 and YouTube in 2020. Think Well was officially launched in June of 2022. Ryan joined MAVEN as a field guide in 2017 and was promoted to Director of Immersive Experiences in 2023. He also serves as a faculty member at Summit Ministries, a member of the Evangelical Theological Society and the Reasons to Believe Scholar Community, and a volunteer at www.talkaboutdoubts.com.
Ryan received a Bachelor’s degree in Theology with an emphasis in youth leadership from Vanguard University. He completed his Master’s degree in Christian apologetics from Talbot School of Theology and is currently working toward a Doctor of Ministry in Practical Theology. His research is focused on what Scripture says about the most pressing practical issues of our day like gender and sexuality, race, technology, politics, deconstruction, and more. He also holds a certificate in Science Apologetics from the Reasons Institute.
The Trinity isn’t just defensible in Scripture, it’s absolutely provable. Every argument I’ve seen against the Trinity has some kind of fatal flaw to it that usually comes down to one thing: people simply don’t want the accountability that comes with true faith in the One True God.
November 27, 2019 at 10:17 am
The Trinity isn’t just defensible in Scripture, it’s absolutely provable. Every argument I’ve seen against the Trinity has some kind of fatal flaw to it that usually comes down to one thing: people simply don’t want the accountability that comes with true faith in the One True God.
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November 27, 2019 at 11:54 am
I would agree. Thanks for the comment!
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