The Case for a Creator is mostly in the form of an interview, where Strobel interviews a leading scientist in each chapter on particular areas in science relating to evidence pointing to a Creator.
While most of the text is from the interviews, Strobel also fills in information where necessary to help the reader in understanding the picture. This is in addition to the introduction and conclusions.
The best thing is that Strobel doesn't just interview the scientist; he cross-examines them, mercilessly attacking the ideas like any commited and skeptical atheist would. The good defenses from the scientists make the case for a Creator even more convincing.
The main feature of this Greek New Testament is the footnoted definition of every word that occurs less than *30 times* (not 50) in the text. Thus, as its name suggests, this work is most helpful for those who have not mastered the full vocabulary of the GNT, but know enough Greek to want to just read it. If you fit the category, you'll find this an absolute joy to use, not having to waste time and break the flow too much by referring to other aids (like lexicons etc.).
A superscripted number follows every occurrence of a below-30 word, pointing to the definition at the footnote. The superscript is generally unobtrusive, but for longer chapters with many rare words, the number can go up… Read more