Ratio Christi - South Quay Chapter

Ratio Christi - South Quay Chapter Training students to keep their faith as they prepare for college by engaging their hard questions.

Pastor Mark Warren has been teaching others to read, understand, and obey God's Word for over 35 years. He is passionate about preparing called young men for the work of the ministry. He holds a bachelor's degree from Columbia International University in Bible Education, a Master of Arts Degree in Christian Apologetics with studies in church planting/growth, and is completing his studies toward a

Master of Divinity degree. Pastor Mark has taught high school Math and Bible, writes Bible curricula, and is on the Board of Directors for The Shepherd's Calling, a missions organization to Moldova. Amaris “Amy” Warren has an undergraduate degree in Christian ministry and a master's degree in religion from Southern Evangelical Seminar. She is currently pursuing their master of arts degree in theology and Christian apologetics. She is a commissioned fellow with the Colson Center for Christian Worldview and a graduate of Frank Turek's Cross Examined Instructor's Academy. Her new podcast, Pass it On with Amy Warren, engages parents, Christian thinkers, and teenagers to discuss cultural obstacles to the faith. Amy is the chapter director for Ratio Christi College Prep in Suffolk. The goal of this chapter is to equip high school students with historical, philosophical, and scientific reasons for following Jesus Christ. Mark and Amy have two teenage daughters who follow Christ and serve in their local church.

05/12/2026

Link to The Mysterion Files: https://www.youtube.com/ Most people assume that discovering intelligent alien life would destroy belief in Go...

04/15/2026

Dr. James Tour
Dr. James Tour is a world-renowned nanochemist, professor at Rice University, and outspoken Christian apologist. Known for his groundbreaking work in nanotechnology and synthetic chemistry, he also speaks and writes on the relationship between science and faith, often addressing questions about the origin of life and the limits of scientific explanations.

Os Guinness
Os Guinness is a respected author, social critic, and Christian thinker known for his work on culture, faith, and religious freedom. A frequent speaker and former advisor in public policy circles, he has written extensively on the role of Christianity in shaping society and the importance of preserving freedom of conscience.

We look forward to having a Ratio Christi family cookout and bonfire next Sunday. Teens, please plan to bring your favor...
04/13/2026

We look forward to having a Ratio Christi family cookout and bonfire next Sunday. Teens, please plan to bring your favorite side dish/dessert to share and a lawn chair.Please contact Mrs. Amy with how many in your family plan to join us.

Teens, join us this Sunday as we continue our study of the 12 Points that Show Christianity Is True!
04/10/2026

Teens, join us this Sunday as we continue our study of the 12 Points that Show Christianity Is True!

Be sure to invite your friends to our discussion nights!
03/31/2026

Be sure to invite your friends to our discussion nights!

Many students today don’t reject Jesus because they’ve studied Him deeply—they reject a version of Him filtered through ...
03/17/2026

Many students today don’t reject Jesus because they’ve studied Him deeply—they reject a version of Him filtered through culture, confusion, and incomplete teaching.

When teens say Jesus has a “God complex,” they’re closer to the truth than they realize—because Jesus did claim to be God. The real issue isn’t misunderstanding culture… it’s a lack of discipleship.

That’s exactly why programs like Ratio Christi College Prep matter. We’re not just teaching students what to believe—we’re equipping them to understand why it’s true, think critically, and stand confidently in a world that often gets Jesus wrong.

Yes, Jesus Had a God Complex

According to an article by Patrick West in The Spectator, many young people find Jesus annoying. West pointed to a survey of UK teens, ages 14 to 17, entitled “Troubling Jesus.” This joint project of the Scripture Union and the Bible Society sought to understand how non-Christian kids think about Scripture. According to the study’s authors,

“What they shared was sometimes deeply uncomfortable, unsettling interpretations we may be overly familiar with and offering fresh perspectives on God and Jesus that can sound almost heretical at first.”

These students had the impressions that the God of the Bible was “really violent and aggressive,” practiced “mansplaining,” and had an “unequal power dynamic.” God the Father came across as a bully. God the Son was “arrogant, powerful, religiously motivated, and male.” The most telling claim was that Jesus had a “God complex.”

According to West, the reaction is understandable:

“Young people raised in a world without authority figures who command respect, in a society bereft of didacticism, are naturally going to regard the teachings in the Bible as hostile and aggressive. In a world where everyone is reduced to having their “own truth,” many will find the idea of Christianity simply incomprehensible.”

That’s an understatement. The dominance of the “Critical Theory mood” over the U.K. and other western nations, invented and normalized new moral absolutes. A generation fully catechized in these absolutes will judge everything else by them, especially anything that smacks of tradition or what they consider to be the oppressive past.

But there’s another factor, too. As West went on to say:

“Over the years, the Church of England and nearly all Christian denominations have merely gone with the flow of society and even helped to hasten Christianity’s descent into relativism and ignorance.”

In other words, the experiment to win the lost through strategies of cultural relevance has failed. In fact, it has failed in two ways. First, too many churches and too many Christians lost their own theology in the process of remaining relevant. Second, we failed to make disciples, which is the primary task our Lord gave to us.

How fascinating that so many thought Jesus had “a God complex,” that He acted like He was God. They meant it as an insult, but they’re not wrong. Jesus did act like God. He talked as if every person’s eternal destiny depended on Him. He said, “I am the way, and the truth, and the life. No one comes to the Father except through me.” He affirmed the formerly doubting Thomas when he called Jesus “(m)y lord and my God!” Jesus regularly used the phrase “I am” about Himself, and often in unusual ways. Most notably, as reported in John 8, He said, “Before Abraham was, I am.” His opponents immediately took this as blasphemy, in reference to God’s self-disclosure to Moses at the Burning Bush as “I am.”

Christ identified Himself as the greater fulfillment of Old Testament events. Like Moses, He provided food for the people in the wilderness and brought the Law down from the mountain. Like Elijah and Elisha, He raised a mother’s son from the dead. And He said and did these things as though He had the power and authority Himself. Unlike the older prophets, Jesus didn’t say the classic line, “Thus saith the Lord!” He spoke on his own authority, saying, “Truly, truly, I say to you.”

After all, Christ wasn’t killed because He was such a nice guy or stood up for the poor. He was killed because the powers that be found Him dangerous. He wasn’t the Messiah they were looking for, so they rejected Him. John the Evangelist quoted Jesus as affirming, “If the world hates you, know that it has hated me before it hated you.” Alluding to Isaiah, the Apostle Peter wrote of its message as, “A stone of stumbling, and a rock of offense.”

Ironically, even in their ignorance, these UK teens recognized a truth of Scripture that the Church of England has too often downplayed or downright rejected. And better to be offended by Him than to remake Jesus into something He was not.

As C.S. Lewis famously wrote in Mere Christianity:

“You can shut Him up for a fool, you can spit at Him and kill Him as a demon; or you can fall at His feet and call Him Lord and God. But let us not come with any patronising nonsense about His being a great human teacher. He has not left that open to us. He did not intend to.”

Can you defend what you believe?Last week, some of our teens had the opportunity to hear Dr. Frank Turek speak at Christ...
03/17/2026

Can you defend what you believe?

Last week, some of our teens had the opportunity to hear Dr. Frank Turek speak at Christopher Newport University — and he walked through 4 powerful facts that show why Christianity is true.

But that’s just the beginning…

Now we’re diving into ALL 12 points from his book, I Don’t Have Enough Faith to Be an Atheist — and you’re invited.

This is your chance to ask questions, grow in your faith, and learn how to confidently stand for truth in today’s culture.

Bring a friend — seriously, don’t come alone!

We will be ending this series on Sunday, March 15. Teens 13-19 are invited to join us for dinner, games, and discussions...
03/15/2026

We will be ending this series on Sunday, March 15. Teens 13-19 are invited to join us for dinner, games, and discussions about things that matter. Bring a friend!

We look forward to continuing this discussion with our Ratio Christi teens. Dinner will be chicken alfredo. Free for tee...
03/08/2026

We look forward to continuing this discussion with our Ratio Christi teens. Dinner will be chicken alfredo. Free for teens 13-19! Bring a friend.

TEENS join us for dinner, games, and this important discussion with Pastor Mark and Amy Warren.
03/01/2026

TEENS join us for dinner, games, and this important discussion with Pastor Mark and Amy Warren.

Address

South Quay Baptist Church, 9617 S Quay Road
Suffolk, VA
23437

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