Faith isn't always easy to come by, even for people who desperately want it.
Some people hunger for spiritual certainty, yet something blocks them from experiencing it. They wish they could taste that kind of freedom, but obstacles clutter their paths. Objections pester them. Doubts mock them. Their hearts want to soar to God; their intellects keep them on terra firma.
Lee Strobel started out as an atheist, utterly convinced God didn't create people, but people created God in an effort to explain the unknown and soothe their fear of death. In The Case for Christ, he described his nearly two-year examination of historical evidence that pointed him toward the verdict that God really exists and Jesus actually is his unique son.
But he still struggled with nagging objections and concerns about emotionally charged issues that plague many who would otherwixe embrace faith. Not just theoretical problems, historical problems, or intellectual problemsthe issues that bothered Strobel pack an emotional punch. They are the kinds of conundrums that canand havestopped people in their tracks when they consider becoming a Christian. In The Case for Faith, Lee Strobel probes the most thorny of questions, what he calls "The Big Eight." including: