The Case For Christ: A Journalist's Personal In... -

Since its release in 1998, The Case for Christ has sold millions of copies and was adapted into a major motion picture in 2017. It redefined the "apologetics" genre, moving it away from dry academic textbooks and into the realm of fast-paced, investigative journalism.

In 1980, Lee Strobel was a staunch atheist. When his wife, Leslie, announced she had become a Christian, Strobel didn't celebrate; he feared he was losing the woman he married to a cult-like delusion. Armed with a "brash, cocky" attitude and a background in legal reporting, he decided to rescue her by proving that the Resurrection of Jesus was a historical myth. The Methodology: A Courtroom on Paper The Case for Christ: A Journalist's Personal In...

Lee Strobel’s The Case for Christ isn’t just a book; it’s one of the most successful "detective stories" in modern publishing. It chronicles the journey of a Yale-educated, award-winning legal editor for the Chicago Tribune who set out to use his journalistic skills to debunk Christianity, only to find himself converted by the very evidence he tried to dismantle. Since its release in 1998, The Case for

For believers, it provides a rational framework for their faith. For skeptics, it offers a respectful, evidence-based challenge that speaks the language of the courtroom rather than the pulpit. When his wife, Leslie, announced she had become

Did Jesus actually die on the cross, or did he just faint?