Zuko

Zuko walks carefully through the full gospel of Jesus Christ using Say–Obey–Share (SOS). This article centres salvation on grace through faith (Romans and Ephesians), explains repentance, baptism, and the Holy Spirit in their biblical order, and prepares readers for later discussions on baptism and tongues without pressure or formulas.
Zuko gently introduces the United Pentecostal Church International (UPCI), placing it on the Sect/Cult Danger Scale and encouraging readers to slow down, open Scripture, and test teachings carefully. This orientation article does not attack people, but helps seekers understand where UPCI fits within Christianity and why key doctrines about God and salvation matter.
Christians who love the Bible sometimes disagree about baptism: should it be given only to those who personally repent and believe (believer’s baptism), or can it also be given to the children of believing parents (infant baptism)? This Scripture-first guide lays out the strongest arguments both sides use, lists every clear baptism event recorded in the New Testament, and highlights what is explicit versus what is inferred. It also includes a focused section on the New Covenant and practical SOS self-discovery prompts to help you reach a conscience-level conclusion before God.
This self-discovery Bible study invites readers to explore what Scripture says about Satan using the SOS method: What does the text say? What should I obey? Who can I share this with? Through narrative passages, Jesus’ encounters, and apostolic teaching, the article helps readers examine whether the Bible presents Satan as a personal adversary or merely a symbol of human temptation—allowing Scripture to speak for itself without extra-biblical assumptions.
This self-discovery Bible study invites seekers to explore what Scripture says about the Holy Spirit using the SOS method: What does the text say? What should I obey? Who can I share this with? Through guided questions and Bible passages, readers are encouraged to examine whether the Holy Spirit acts personally—teaching, speaking, guiding, being grieved, and working alongside the Father and Jesus—allowing Scripture to speak for itself without creeds or assumptions.
This self-discovery Bible study invites seekers to explore what Scripture says about Jesus using the SOS method: What does the text say? What should I obey? Who can I share this with? Through guided questions and Old and New Testament passages, readers are encouraged to examine Jesus’ identity, His role in creation, the meaning of the cross, salvation through His name, and His final reign and judgment—allowing the Bible to speak for itself.
Christadelphians are a Bible focused Christian movement that seeks to model faith and practice after the early church. They emphasise careful Scripture reading, adult baptism by immersion, and weekly remembrance of Jesus’ death. However, Christadelphian teaching departs from historic Christianity on several core issues, including the nature of Jesus Christ, the Holy Spirit, and the meaning of salvation. This article offers a calm, Bible based explanation of who Christadelphians are, what they believe, where their teachings diverge from the gospel, and how Christians can engage thoughtfully and graciously using Self Discovery Bible Study (SOS) principles.
Can Eastern spirituality and Christianity be blended, or do they offer fundamentally different hopes? This article brings the comparison to a clear decision point, contrasting escape from the self with redemption of the self. It explains why enlightenment and resurrection point in opposite directions, and gently invites readers to consider whether peace is found in disappearance or in restored relationship through Jesus.
What happens at the end of life? This article compares Eastern views of enlightenment and release found in Hinduism and Buddhism with the biblical hope of resurrection. By examining how each worldview understands death, identity, justice, and love, it explores whether the final hope is extinction, dissolution, or restored life.
Many spiritual traditions promise freedom by letting go of the self. But does true hope come from escape — or from redemption? This article compares Eastern ideas of liberation found in Hinduism and Buddhism with the biblical vision of restored identity. By placing these two hopes side by side, it explores how each worldview understands suffering, love, justice, and what it means to be truly free.