“The Bible Clearly Says”
If the Bible “clearly says,” why do faithful readers disagree so deeply about what it says? A reflection on Scripture, interpretation, humility, and what it means to actually read the Bible honestly.
If the Bible “clearly says,” why do faithful readers disagree so deeply about what it says? A reflection on Scripture, interpretation, humility, and what it means to actually read the Bible honestly.
What if the life God promises is not the one culture sells us, but something deeper: forgiveness, compassion, and access to Him?
“Christ died for our sins” is one of the most familiar phrases in Christianity, but many people have never had it explained clearly. This piece looks at what the cross was actually doing, why forgiveness is never costless, and how the gospel says God paid that cost Himself.
You cannot out-good your conscience. This piece explores why guilt lingers, why effort cannot erase it, and why only the gospel can finally speak the verdict the conscience is waiting to hear.
Christianity certainly changes lives, but it is not a self-improvement program. It is the good news that Christ saves sinners by grace.
The thief on the cross has no future, no defense, and nothing left to leverage. All he can do is ask for mercy. This reflection looks at why that makes him one of the clearest pictures of grace in all of Scripture.
The love of God is not abstract. In Christ, it makes us alive—bringing us into God’s family, giving us what we could never earn, and raising us from death to life.
The line “the wrath of God was satisfied” has stirred strong reactions in listeners of “In Christ Alone.” This article explains the main biblical pictures of the cross—substitution, sacrifice, victory, reconciliation, and exchange—and why they belong together in the Gospel.
At Simon’s dinner table, a sinful woman makes a scene with tears, perfume, and love. Simon sees a category. Jesus sees a person. This reflection explores what belonging looks like when mercy meets someone whose story is already public.
Is Easter really pagan? A clear look at the history behind Passover, Eostre, Ishtar, Constantine, eggs, and bunnies—and why the common claims don’t hold up.