About Harry Edwards

Harry Edwards is married to Minerva and has the wonderful privilege of raising two young men, Chase and Jonathan, both of whom are in college. He is the founder and director of Apologetics.com, Inc., an organization dedicated to defending the truth claims of Christianity on the internet, radio and other related activities. He received his Bachelor of Arts degree in Christian Education and a Masters of Arts degree in Christian Apologetics from Biola University where he, until recently, worked as the Associate Director of the graduate programs in Christian Apologetics and Science & Religion. Harry earned his doctorate (DMin in Leadership & Global Perspectives) from George Fox University where his research resulted in writing his dissertation on Contextualizing and Defending the Gospel for GenZ: A Chastened Rationalistic Approach to Christian Apologetics. In his spare time, Harry enjoys doing things with his family and friends, i.e., tennis, camping/backpacking, and mentoring others to realize their full potential in the service of our Lord.

Church Reimagined

Save for the author’s ardent commitment to Darwinian evolution, there is much to learn and appreciate from Jonathan Haidt’s book The Righteous Mind: Why Good People Are Divided by Politics and Religion. I also wished he addressed an important corollary of his project, namely, the grounding of morality. But that may be exclusively in [...]

By |2021-09-15T23:28:29+00:00April 3rd, 2019|Books|0 Comments

Where is the Hope?

Ross Douthat, writing in 2012, could have waited just a few more years before penning Bad Religion: How We Became a Nation of Heretics to include forthcoming distressing events, nicely rounding off his jeremiad observation of Christian decline in the United States. In a few years he could have included on his list the increased [...]

By |2021-09-15T22:15:55+00:00March 21st, 2019|Books, culture|0 Comments

Undulating VUCA

Reading Jennifer G. Berger and Keith Johnston’s Simple Habits for Complex Times brought back bad memories and good ones as well. Bad because of the avoidable mistakes and anxieties in leadership I had made years ago when I managed a university campus bookstore; good because of the lessons learned. At the height of my [...]

By |2021-09-15T02:26:29+00:00March 7th, 2019|Books, Leadership|0 Comments

Charting a New Way Toward Culture Change: The Gospel Revisited, Part 2

In my last blog post I sought to bring to the fore some of what ails our beliefs and behaviors of Christianity in the West but more specifically in the United States today. In this post I would like to continue where I left off; and that is to offer a hopeful way forward [...]

By |2021-09-15T02:13:56+00:00February 28th, 2019|Books, culture, Leadership|0 Comments

Charting a New Way Toward Culture Change: The Gospel Revisited

Neil Postman, an American social critic, professor and author, best known for his book Amusing Ourselves to Death, compared two dystopian visions of the future. The famous version is from George Orwell. He saw a future in which totalitarian states ruled with fear and control. His classic novel 1984 created a world in which [...]

By |2021-09-14T22:51:28+00:00February 21st, 2019|Books, culture, West|0 Comments

Leadership Lessons from George Washington and Jesus

This hit close to home. The study of leadership, leaders and what makes them tick has fascinated me for a number of years. I mean, who doesn’t t get excited to hear the latest developments from Apple each time Steve Jobs was on stage and utter his famous words, “… there’s one more thing.” [...]

By |2021-09-13T20:46:14+00:00February 7th, 2019|Books, Leadership|0 Comments
Go to Top