I appreciate seeing people offer up logical conclusion made about our Lord based upon the Scriptures and study. But is that a "Christ Centered Approach"?
It is really more of a "Scripture Centered Approach?" Which is fine because all Scripture is inspired by God and good for study, reproof, learning, etc. Still the Scriptures are not Christ but sacred writing meant to lead us to Christ, and help us in our walk with Him. He is the "Truth" and that because He really does exists, and as fully God He has all the attributes of God. That is to say He is Omni-present. He never leaves us.
So a "Christ Centered Approached" would be an approached based upon what we are hearing from Him, via the Holy Spirit. So I personally feel the best way to cover "Apologetics" would be to hear from the Lord, present that, and then back it up with Scriptures. That is to say, I do prefer a truly Christ Centered Approached backed up with the Scriptures. In fact I believe that is an approach we so often see in the Bible. Although it may not always be clear that the writers of Scriptures were presenting what they are heard and backing it up with Scripture.
For example in 2 Tim 3:14-16 We see Paul write "You, however, continue in the things you have learned and become convinced of, knowing whom you have learned them..... (and goes on to write) ... All Scripture is inspired by God and profitable for teaching, for reproof, for correction, for training in righteousness.
By writing "knowing whom you have learned them", it should be evident that Paul was learning from our Lord Jesus Christ. That is to say Paul had been hearing the Lord teach Him. So Paul had concluded that all Scripture is inspired by God based upon what the Lord had said to him and not what other people had said to him, otherwise he would not have written "become convinced of, knowing from whom you have learned them.
We hear the small calm spiritual voice of the Lord speak to us and we must become convinced ( have faith in) of knowing it is Him our Lord talking to us.
And note: just a few verses later Paul is writing that "they will accumulate for themselves teachers in accordance to their own desire, and will turn away their wears from the truth...
Jesus Christ is the Truth. He explained that and continues to explain that today to those who listen and are convinced of knowing whom they have learned from. Still when He came He had to explain to the Jews that they were searching the Scripture thinking in them they had eternal life instead of coming to Him. (Jn 5:39)
When we start calling the Scriptures the "the Truth" instead of calling Him "the Truth" are we not doing exactly what Jews did?
Are we really convinced of knowing whom we have learned from?
And if we are not listening to Jesus Christ, have we not indeed turned our ears away from "The Truth", seeing how Jesus Christ is "The Truth"?
Paul was right. The Scriptures are good for reproof. They are good for pointing people back to Jesus Christ. They are good for showing the He is the Truth. They are good for encouraging people to become convinced of knowing from whom they are learning from. And they are good for pointing out they people tend to ears their ears away from Him. He really does exists, and He really does teach us and talk to us today.
He once told me, "Karl, how come they say, 'Listen to me, listen to me'? Isn't it because they are not listening to Me?"
If we are really going to say we use "A Christ Centered Approach to Apologetics", shouldn't it really be that? Should it be about be listening to what He teaches us first and then back it up with Scriptures? We are not just trying to present our understanding of the Scriptures apart from hearing from Him are we? If so, it is not Christ Centered at all. Admit it. It is us centered. It is about what we think if we are not first hearing from Him. It is listen to me, listen to me, instead of listen to Him our Lord Jesus Christ. If that is the case we need to apologize for our apologetics.
Yet if I am leading them to our Lord and telling them to listen to Him, then I don't need to apologize for that, because He is there at the door and is indeed willing to come into anyone willing to open the door and let Him in. Then they will indeed know the Truth.