Each part opens with an Introduction and ends with Suggestions for Further Reading
Introduction
PART ONE: RELIGIOUS EXPERIENCE
Religious Experiences, Saint Teresa of Jesus
Religious Experience as the Root of Religion, William James
Religious Experience as Perception of God, William P. Alston
Religious Experiences as Interpretative Accounts, Wayne Proudfoot
Critique of Religious Experience, Michael Martin
A Phenomenological Account of Religious Experience, Merold Westphal
PART TWO: FAITH AND REASON
The Harmony of Reason and Revelation, Thomas Aquinas
The Harmony of Philosophy and the Qur'an, Ibn Rushd
The Wager, Blaise Pascal
The Ethics of Belief, William Clifford
The Will to Believe, William James
Truth is Subjectivity, Soren Kierkegaard
Soft Rationalism, William J. Abraham
PART THREE: THE DIVINE ATTRIBUTES
God's Necessary Existence, John Hick
Negative Theology, Moses Maimonides
God is Omnipotent, Thomas Aquinas
Some Puzzles Concerning Omnipotence, George I. Mavrodes
Divine Omniscience and Voluntary Action, Nelson Pike
God is Timeless, Boethius
God is Everlasting, Nicholas Wolterstorff
God is Creative-Responsive Love, John B. Cobb and David Ray Griffin
Atman is Brahman, The Upanishads
The Concept of God and Feminist Critique, Sarah Coakley
PART FOUR: ARGUMENTS ABOUT GOD'S EXISTENCE
The Classical Ontological Argument, Saint Anselm
Critique of Anselm's Argument, Gaunilo
A Contemporary Modal Version of the Ontological Argument, Alvin Plantinga
The Classical Cosmological Argument, Thomas Aquinas
A Contemporary Version of the Cosmological Argument, Richard Taylor
The Kalam Cosmological Argument, J.P. Moreland
Critique of the Cosmological Argument, J.L. Mackie
The Anthropic Teleological Argument, L. Stafford Betty with Bruce Cordell
A Naturalistic Account of the Universe, Paul Davies
The Moral Argument, C.S. Lewis
PART FIVE: THE PROBLEM OF EVIL
Evil is Privation of Good, Saint Augustine
Evil Makes a Strong Case Against God's Existence, David Hume
Evil and Omnipotence, J.L. Mackie
The Free Will Defense, Alvin Plantinga
Soul-Making Theodicy, John Hick
The Evidential Argument from Evil, William Rowe
PART SIX: KNOWING GOD WITHOUT ARGUMENTS
The Reformed Objection to Natural Theology, Alvin Plantinga
Experience, Proper Basicality, and Belief in God, Robert Pargetter
The Case of the Intellectually Sophisticated Theist, William Hasker
Reformed Epistemology and Hick's Religious Pluralism, David Basinger
Feminism and Religious Epistemology, Sarah Coakley
PART SEVEN: RELIGIOUS LANGUAGE
The Doctrine of Analogy, Thomas Aquinas
The Falsification Debate, Antony Flew and Basil Mitchell
Religious Language as Symbolic, Paul Tillich
Sexism and God-Talk, Rosemary Radford Ruether
Speaking Literally of God, William P. Alston
The True Tao is Unspeakable, Lao Tsu
PART EIGHT: MIRACLES
The Evidence for Miracles is Weak, David Hume
Miracles and Historical Evidence, Richard Swinburne
Miracles and Testimony, J.L. Mackie
PART NINE: LIFE AFTER DEATH
The Soul Survives and Functions After Death, H.H. Price
The Soul Needs a Brain to Continue to Function, Richard Swinburne
Problems With Accounts of Life After Death, Linda Badham
Resurrection of the Person, John Hick
Rebirth, Sri Aurobindo
PART TEN: RELIGION AND SCIENCE
Two Separate Domains, Stephen Jay Gould
Science Discredits Religion, Richard Dawkins
Theology and Scientific Methodology, Nancey Murphy
PART ELEVEN: RELIGIOUS DIVERSITY
Buddhism and Other Religions, Dalai Lama
The Uniqueness of Religious Doctrines, Paul Griffiths
Religious Inclusivism, Karl Rahner
Religious Pluralism, John Hick
PART TWELVE: RELIGIOUS ETHICS
Which God Ought We to Obey?, Alasdair MacIntyre
Ethics Without Religion, Kai Nielson
Ethics and Natural Law, Thomas Aquinas
PART THIRTEEN: PHILOSOPHY AND THEOLOGICAL DOCTRINES
Jesus Christ Was Fully God and Fully Human, Thomas Morris
The Concept of Revelation, George Mavrodes
Why Petition God?, Eleonore Stump