Jesus Christ

Zuko’s Seeker’s Questions on Sikhism offers a gentle, thoughtful entry point for curious readers exploring Sikh beliefs and Christianity side by side. Using reflection questions and Bible references, this section invites seekers to consider who God is, who Jesus claimed to be, the nature of sin and forgiveness, and why the cross matters — without pressure or debate.
Zuko’s Apologist’s Quick Guide to Sikhism provides clear, respectful, Scripture-led responses to common Sikh beliefs. This section equips Christians to engage thoughtfully on topics such as the nature of God, Jesus’ identity, salvation, good works, and truth, while highlighting key differences between Sikh teaching and the Bible. Designed for quick reference, gentle clarity, and confident conversations.
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.
This article gently brings the Buddhist journey to its natural crossroads. After exploring suffering, impermanence, reincarnation, and enlightenment, it asks a deeper question: what if hope is not escape, but rescue? It contrasts the Buddhist vision of release — the candle going out — with the Christian promise of eternal life: a restored world, meaningful identity, and a personal God who comes to dwell with us. Rather than arguing, the article invites reflection on love, forgiveness, and whether a final answer to suffering must come from outside ourselves. It closes by opening the door to the good news of Jesus — not as religion, but as an invitation to life, repentance, forgiveness, and a restored relationship with the Creator.
When we look honestly at suffering and evil, two very different responses emerge from major worldviews. Buddhism recognises suffering as universal and teaches a path of inner peace through detachment and letting go, aiming to reduce suffering by loosening attachment. But many forms of pain — injustice, abuse, death — cry out not just for inner peace but for justice, healing, and resolution. Christianity agrees that suffering is real, but it goes further: the world does not only need escape — it needs rescue. In the person of Jesus Christ, God enters suffering, bears its weight, confronts evil, and offers not just comfort but redemption. At the cross, evil is taken seriously and love endures suffering on behalf of others. The resurrection then declares that suffering and death do not have the final word, promising renewal for individuals and for all creation. Rather than detaching from the world, Christianity points to a God who heals, restores, and rescues through His redemptive plan in Christ.