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Why God Lets Good People Suffer

You didn't deserve this. That's what your heart keeps whispering in the quiet moments when the pain feels overwhelming. The illness that came without warning. The betrayal by someone you trusted. The loss that shattered your world. The prayers that seemed to echo back unanswered. The faithful life you've tried to live that somehow still led here, to this place of suffering. You didn't deserve this. And you're right. But there's something you need to know, something that might not take away the pain but could transform how you carry it. There's a reason for your suffering that doesn't make God cruel or absent. There's a purpose woven through your tears that doesn't diminish their reality or your right to shed them. Let me tell you a different story about why good people suffer. Not a simple story with easy answers, but a true one. A story that honors your pain while offering something more precious than explanation: hope. We Came Here Knowing It W...

The Case for Christianity: A Faith That Bears Good Fruit

Finding truth can feel overwhelming with many faiths teaching different ideas about God. But across virtually every faith tradition, one principle remains constant. Whether it’s Proverbs 12:19, Matthew 7:16-20, the Quran 17:81, Mahatma Gandhi, or Buddha’s teachings on enlightenment, the message is clear: truth is recognized by the fruit it produces. Christianity makes bold claims about reality, about meaning, about the nature of the universe itself. But perhaps the most compelling evidence for its truth lies not merely in philosophical arguments, but in what it has produced: the fruits it has borne across two thousand years of human history. The Revolutionary Ethics That Changed the World Before Christianity spread through the Roman Empire, the ancient world operated under a very different moral framework. Infanticide was common. The sick and elderly were often abandoned. Gladiatorial combat was entertainment. Slavery was unquestioned. The strong dominated the weak, and this was consid...

The Book of Mormon: Ancient Record or Modern Fraud? The Evidence Speaks

There's a story that began in upstate New York in 1830, when a young man named Joseph Smith published a book he claimed was translated from ancient golden plates. The world mocked him. Critics dismissed it as frontier fiction. Yet today, over 17 million people testify that this book, the Book of Mormon, has brought them closer to Jesus Christ. This isn't a small claim. It's not a footnote in religious history. It's a living testimony that continues to transform lives, strengthen families, and build communities of faith across every continent. And the question it poses is both simple and profound: could this book really be what it claims to be? A Book Centered on Christ Open the Book of Mormon to any page and you'll find Jesus Christ. His name appears over 3,900 times in its pages, an average of once every 1.7 verses. From the first book to the last, from the prophecies of ancient prophets to the account of his personal ministry in the Americas, this is a book about ...

Why God Must Be Real

Stand outside on a clear night and look up at the stars. Thousands of points of light scattered across the darkness, each one a sun burning billions of miles away. Behind them, invisible to your eyes, stretch two trillion galaxies, each containing hundreds of billions of stars. You are standing on one of those planets, a collection of atoms that somehow became conscious, looking up and asking the oldest question humanity has ever asked: Is there a God? Your heart already knows the answer. You've felt it in moments of wonder, in the birth of a child, in the mathematical elegance of a snowflake, in the guilt that whispers when you've done wrong, in the love that makes sacrifice feel like privilege. But your mind wants reasons. You want to know if belief makes sense, if faith has a foundation. It does. And the evidence is written across everything that exists. Beginnings Need a Beginner Think about everything you've ever seen or touched. Every tree, every river, every mountain...