
The Cold-Case Christianity Podcast The Most Dangerous Kind of Faith in the Church Today
22 snips
May 6, 2026 A detective-turned-apologist critiques blind and reckless versions of faith and defines three types of belief. He compares Christian trust to courtroom reasoning and explains why a forensic, evidence-friendly faith matters. The conversation warns against relying solely on experience, examines Hebrews 11 and Doubting Thomas, and urges believers to investigate historical claims to protect the next generation.
AI Snips
Chapters
Books
Transcript
Episode notes
Churches Often Discourage Evidential Faith
- Many churches treat faith as blind or purely personal, which discourages evidence-based examination and leaves members vulnerable to false worldviews.
- J. Warner Wallace discovered this gap after writing apologetics books and noticing pastors rarely invite evidential speakers to churches.
Avoid Using Faith As An Excuse To Skip Evidence
- Don't use “just have faith” as an excuse to avoid studying evidence; that mentality licenses intellectual laziness.
- Wallace warns this attitude prevents mastering history, scripture, and apologetics needed to defend Christianity.
Three Types Of Faith And The Jury Analogy
- Wallace defines three faith types: unreasonable (contradicted by evidence), blind (untested), and forensic/evidential (trust based on evidence).
- He argues forensic faith mirrors jury reasoning: infer unseen events from available evidence beyond reasonable doubt.






