Professor Craig Hazen gave a lecture to a packed room inside the Capitol building in Washington, D.C., on Friday, June 8, 2011.聽 Representatives from a range of House and Senate offices were in attendance, including about a dozen alumni and friends from 黑莓视频 who work in or near Capitol Hill.聽

Hazen, founder and director of the Christian Apologetics Program, lectured on 鈥淩easonable Religious Ideas that Sound Ridiculous in Modern Secular Settings.鈥澛 He addressed key worldview issues that undergird so much of the United States public policy, making the case that 鈥測ou cannot make effective legislation governing human beings or human rights if you are really confused about what a human being is.鈥澛 He went on to give arguments for the existence of the soul and the plausibility of the afterlife.聽 Hazen also made the case that we can have real moral knowledge; our moral ideas are not just preferences鈥攁kin to preferring peanuts over almonds鈥攂ut are real, objective and knowable, he said.

He said this is crucial because every bill introduced in Congress has a moral component.聽

鈥淲e do indeed legislate morality every day,鈥 said Hazen, 鈥渟o we need to have a foundation of real knowledge about what鈥檚 right and what鈥檚 wrong鈥攁nd that knowledge is available to us.鈥

Hazen took questions from the floor for about 20 minutes and addressed everything from the nature of marriage to how to make a case for the Christian worldview in difficult public settings. Hazen鈥檚 talk was carried live as a Twitter-cast through Biola鈥檚 Christian apologetics feed .

Hazen was able to arrange several more lectures on Capitol Hill in the coming months in order to give elected officials more opportunities to hear high caliber Christian thinkers speak to issues that matter today.聽 He has enlisted the help of his colleagues, Biola professors J.P. Moreland and Tim Muehlhoff, who will also give lectures on the Hill in the fall and meet with dignitaries and officials in D.C. with Hazen.