In the present work, while presenting the Aquinas/Calvin model as a framework that demonstrates the epistemic value and rationality of religious beliefs, an attempt is made to defend this model by relying on the common intellectual framework of postmodernism. For this purpose, the epistemic theory and religious epistemology of Alvin Plantinga, who proposed the Aquinas/Calvin model, are briefly analyzed. Then, the model is defended as a conditional proposition that assumes the truth of religious beliefs in defending the rationality of faith, drawing on postmodern epistemic characteristics. It seems that the success of Plantinga's religious epistemology is more plausible when considered within the postmodern epistemic context. Regarding this period, it becomes clear that "rationality," unlike the common intellectual framework of the modern era where it was equated with truth, loses this status. Postmodern thinkers, relying on Kantian considerations regarding the distinction between noumenon and phenomenon and the impossibility of accessing the noumenon, as well as linguistic considerations from thinkers like Wittgenstein regarding language uses, offered a different understanding of rationality than that of the modern era. In such a context, the Aquinas/Calvin model seeks to demonstrate the rationality of faith. Understanding the prevalent notion of rationality in postmodernism, on one hand, and Plantinga's alignment with postmodern philosophers in criticizing classical foundationalism, on the other, are fundamental in affirming the success of this model.