“True for You, But Not for Me” Deflating the Slogans That Leave Christians Speechless
Paul Copan, (Bethany House Publishers, 192pp., paperback)

“Well, that may be true for you, but it’s not for me” is the rallying cry of our culture. It’s one of many popular saysings put forword with no evidence:
“All religions lead to God.”
“Who are you to judge others”
“Jesus was just another great religious leader.”
“Christians are so intolerant.”
Most Christians are left grasping for a response, and the conversation moves on without them. “True for You, But Not for Me” is a ready-reference handbook for answering our culture’s latest objections to Christianity. It features:
- brief answers to each argument.
- readable explanations on each subject.
- helpful introductory material to sets of similar anti-Christian slogans.
- study questions for individual or group use.
Copan wrote “True for You, But Not for Me” to “make a case for the existence of objective truth and morality and to defend the claim that Jesus is indeed the unique and sole Savior of the world.” This book will help pastors and their church members provide a concise response to society’s slide into relativism and religious pluralism.






