Zuko Explains

This article explores how Sikhism understands moral failure through ego (haumai), karma, and spiritual discipline. It explains the Sikh path of transformation through devotion and service, then carefully compares this with the Bible’s diagnosis of sin, guilt, bondage, and the need for a new heart.
Sikhism teaches belief in one formless God, often called Waheguru, known through remembrance, obedience, and communal devotion rather than personal revelation. This article explores Sikh prayer, daily practices, honour–shame culture, and how Sikh devotion compares carefully with the Bible’s understanding of God’s name, character, and holiness.
This article introduces who the Sikhs are, exploring their origins in Punjab, the role of the Sikh Gurus, and the formation of a strong community identity. It explains how history, culture, and shared discipline shape Sikh faith and daily life, while gently setting the stage for thoughtful comparison with the Bible.
This launch page introduces Sikhism through the Zuko Explains series, offering a clear, respectful overview of Sikh beliefs, history, community life, and spiritual practices. It guides readers through key topics such as the Sikh Gurus, belief in one God, devotion, honour and service, while carefully preparing for thoughtful comparison with the Bible.
“Praying in the Spirit” is a biblical phrase often misunderstood or narrowly defined. This article examines every major New Testament reference to Spirit-led prayer, allowing Scripture to define its meaning. Rather than emotional experience or ritual, praying in the Spirit is shown to be prayer empowered, directed, and aligned with God’s will — sometimes involving tongues, always involving submission, truth, and love.
This SOS Bible study explores speaking in tongues as presented in Scripture, asking whether tongues are a language, a sign, or a requirement. By examining Acts, Corinthians, and the teaching of Jesus and Paul, this article gently tests the claim that tongues are necessary evidence of salvation or a second baptism of the Holy Spirit. Readers are invited to Say, Obey, and Share what the Bible actually teaches—without pressure, formulas, or fear.
Some churches teach that baptism must be performed exclusively “in Jesus’ name” for salvation. This article carefully examines every major baptism passage in Scripture, including Acts and Matthew 28, allowing the Bible to define what baptism means, what it symbolizes, and how it fits within salvation by grace through faith.
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.