Choose your question below. Under each one is a short answer you can read here; for the full biblical answer, click "Read more".
- Is the Lord Jesus Christ God or a created being?
The Lord Jesus Christ is God manifest in the flesh — not a creature, not the first of creation. He is the Creator, not the created; the eternal, not the begun; worthy of worship because He truly is God. Thomas called Him "My Lord and my God" (John 20:28), and the Lord did not correct him but received the worship. John declares: "and the Word was God" (John 1:1). The oneness of God is not denied by confessing Christ's deity, but by claiming the Creator became a creature. He is the one God who appeared in the flesh to redeem you.
Read more → - Is the New World Translation accurate?
The "New World Translation" is not a faithful, neutral translation, but one altered at its decisive points to agree with the organization's prior teaching, especially in denying Christ's deity. The proof needs no special knowledge of languages: compare John 1:1 across five translations over the centuries, and they all read "the Word was God," while the organization's version alone stands apart with "a god." When one translation breaks from the consensus of all the rest, always in the direction of a single doctrine, it is far likelier that it was reshaped than that everyone else erred.
Read more → - Do only 144,000 go to heaven?
There are not two classes of believers in the Bible, one small and heavenly and another large and earthly. All believers share one hope and one heavenly calling, and all are called to be with Christ where He is. The "hundred and forty-four thousand" in Revelation 7 is expressly described as "of all the tribes of the children of Israel" — not an elite class of the saved. The apostle Paul said to every believer: "having a desire to depart, and to be with Christ" (Philippians 1:23). Heaven is the hope of all who believe, not of a chosen few.
Read more → - Does the soul die with the body?
Death is not the cessation of consciousness. The body sleeps in the grave, but the soul remains alive and aware, and the believer at death is at once present with the Lord. The Lord Jesus Christ said to the repentant thief: "To day shalt thou be with me in paradise" (Luke 23:43) — today, not after extinction and a distant resurrection. And the apostle Paul knew that to be "absent from the body" is to be "present with the Lord" (2 Corinthians 5:8). The future resurrection concerns the body, not the soul, which is never snuffed out.
Read more → - Does hell exist?
Everlasting punishment is a plain reality the Lord Jesus Christ Himself taught, not a pagan invention. The wicked are not blotted out, but punished with a conscious, ongoing punishment — by the very same word that describes the eternal life of the righteous. Note that the Lord used one word for both: "these shall go away into everlasting punishment: but the righteous into life eternal" (Matthew 25:46) — so if the life of the righteous is truly everlasting, so is the punishment of the wicked. God's love is real, and so is His justice; that is why He gave His Son to rescue you from this fate.
Read more → - Is salvation conditional on loyalty to the organization?
Salvation is in the Person of the Lord Jesus Christ, not in belonging to an organization or obeying a human body. The believer is united to Christ directly, sealed by the Holy Spirit, held in a hand from which no power can pluck him: "neither shall any man pluck them out of my hand" (John 10:28). There is no ark of safety called an organization, no single human channel through which your relationship with God must pass. The fear of questioning or leaving is not from God; for the truth does not fear examination: "searching the scriptures daily" (Acts 17:11).
Read more → - What does the Bible say about blood transfusions?
The Bible's commandments about blood forbid eating it as food, out of reverence for the life that is in it — they do not forbid transfusing it medically to save a life. The matter concerns eating, not a medical rule binding you to let the sick die. The whole heart of the law is the preserving of life, and the Lord Jesus Christ taught that a person is "better" than the letter of a command when it conflicts with mercy (Matthew 12:12), and that God will "have mercy, and not sacrifice" (Matthew 12:7). You are not made to choose between obeying God and saving your son; saving the life is what God desires.
Read more → - Did the Lord Jesus Christ die on a cross or a stake?
This matter is far smaller than the questions of the deity of Christ and of salvation — no one is saved by knowing the shape of the wood, nor lost by being ignorant of it, so it should not eclipse the greatness of Him who hung upon it. And yet the text of the Bible itself fits a two-beamed cross: Thomas spoke of "the print of the nails" in His hands, in the plural (John 20:25), and a title was set up "over his head," not over His hands (Matthew 27:37). What matters is not the shape of the wood but who died on it and why: He died for your sins and rose again.
Read more → - Is the Holy Ghost a force or a person?
The Holy Ghost is a true divine Person, not an impersonal power like electricity. He speaks, teaches, and guides; He has a mind and a will; He can be lied to and grieved — and these are acts that belong only to a person. When Ananias lied, Peter said he had lied "to the Holy Ghost" and then "unto God" (Acts 5:3-4) — so lying to Him is lying to God, because He is God. A force cannot be grieved or lied to; only a person can be grieved. The Holy Ghost is not a tool God uses, but God Himself dwelling in you.
Read more → - Is salvation by faith alone or by faith and works?
Salvation is by grace alone through faith alone, a gift received and not a wage earned by preaching, obeying the organization, or struggling to endure. Good works are the fruit and evidence of salvation, not its price nor its cause. You will never be at rest while you think your salvation hangs on your own unending faithfulness; but Scripture declares: "For by grace are ye saved through faith... not of works" (Ephesians 2:8-9). You receive salvation in full by faith first, and then works follow as proof of a living faith — not as the price of an acceptance not yet complete.
Read more → - Does the Bible forbid medical blood transfusions?
[teaser coming soon]
Read more → - Is celebrating the birth of Christ forbidden?
[teaser coming soon]
Read more → - Is the Trinity a human invention or a biblical truth?
[teaser coming soon]
Read more → - Did Christ rise spiritually or bodily?
[teaser coming soon]
Read more → - Is the New World Translation faithful to the original text?
[teaser coming soon]
Read more →
An Invitation to Receive Divine Salvation — Accept The Lord Jesus Christ as Your Personal Saviour
Dear reader — if these words have touched your heart and you have recognised that you are a sinner in need of a Saviour, know that God is calling you to Himself in this very moment. You do not need a priest, or a human mediator, or a holy place, or rituals or works. The Lord Jesus Christ paid the full price on the cross, and the promise of God is certain and clear:
What saves you is not the words of this prayer — but the faith in your heart that the Lord Jesus Christ died for you and rose from the dead. But if you want to express your faith in sincere words, read this prayer with a humble heart as though you are speaking to the living God:
The Prayer of Salvation
"O Great, Holy, and Loving True God,
I come to You now with complete humility, confessing that I am a sinner. I have broken Your commandments many times in my thoughts, in my words, and in my deeds. I know that my sin deserves eternal death and eternal separation from You. I have no good work I can offer that is able to redeem my soul, and no righteousness of my own to cover my nakedness before Your holiness.
But I believe with all my heart in the testimony of Your Word that Your only Son, the Lord Jesus Christ, died on the cross for my sins — bearing in my place the punishment I deserved. I believe that He was buried, and that He rose from the dead on the third day, alive and victorious over death and the grave, and that He is alive now unto the ages of ages.
In this blessed moment, I receive the Lord Jesus Christ as my personal Saviour. I trust in Him alone — not in my works, not in my religion, not in rituals or any person or angel or saint. On the Lord Jesus Christ alone, and on His precious blood shed on the cross, I build the hope of my eternal salvation.
I thank You, my Father, that You have now received me in the Lord Jesus Christ, and have forgiven all my sins, and have given me eternal life as a free gift by Your grace. I thank You that You have sent Your Holy Ghost to dwell in my heart, bearing witness to me that I have become Your child. Give me grace to know You more day by day, and to live the rest of my life for Your glory alone.
I pray all this in the name of my Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ, by the power of the Holy Ghost. Amen."
After You Have Prayed — What Now?
If you prayed this prayer from a truly believing heart, the greatest miracle in all your history has happened in this moment: you have passed from death to life, from darkness to light, from the kingdom of sin into the kingdom of the beloved Son of God. You have become a child of the living God, and God's own promise guarantees this to you in His trustworthy Word:
Notice the power of this promise: "gave he power" — a settled right, guaranteed, not a wish or a possibility. And notice "them that believe on his name" — not "those who performed great deeds," not "those who completed rituals," but simply "them that believe." You are now one of them — with absolute certainty.
Here are five simple steps to establish you in your new life with the Lord Jesus Christ:
First — Read the King James Bible every day. Begin with the Gospel of John, then continue through the rest of the New Testament, then the Psalms and Proverbs. God speaks to you through His Word as a father speaks with his son. Do not read quickly — read with meditation and prayer. "The holy scriptures, which are able to make thee wise unto salvation" (2 Timothy 3:15).
Second — Pray every day. Speak to God as a loving Father — not with memorised words, but with words from your heart. Share with Him your joys and sorrows and questions and fears. Prayer is the breathing of the Christian life. "Pray without ceasing" (1 Thessalonians 5:17).
Third — Join a Bible-believing church. Do not walk this road alone. Faith grows in the fellowship of believers, where the Word is preached faithfully and baptism and the Lord's Supper are practised according to the King James Bible. "Not forsaking the assembling of ourselves together" (Hebrews 10:25).
Fourth — Be baptised according to the King James Bible. Baptism is not a condition for salvation, but it is the first step of obedience after faith. It is a public declaration that you died with the Lord Jesus Christ and were buried with Him and rose with Him to a new life. "He that believeth and is baptized shall be saved" (Mark 16:16) — faith first, then baptism as its natural fruit.
Fifth — Witness to others about the Lord Jesus Christ. What you have experienced of salvation and love cannot remain hidden. Begin with your family and friends. Tell them simply and honestly how the Lord Jesus Christ changed your life. "That which we have seen and heard declare we unto you" (1 John 1:3).
And finally, remember always that your salvation is not built on your feelings or on any work you perform — but on the unchanging promise of God:
"These things have I written unto you that believe on the name of the Son of God; that ye may know that ye have eternal life."
— 1 John 5:13
Notice: "that ye may know" — not "that ye may hope," not "that ye may wish," not "that ye may wait in anxious fear." But that ye may know with complete, unshakeable certainty that you have eternal life. This is the difference between all the world's religions and the Gospel of the Lord Jesus Christ: religions say "work and perhaps you will be saved" — and the Word of God alone says: "believe and know that you are saved."
✉ Share Your Testimony of Salvation
"Likewise, I say unto you, there is joy in the presence of the angels of God over one sinner that repenteth." — Luke 15:10