14/05/2026
FINAL PART — Faith, Questions, Truth & Why I Still Believe
This is my final response for now, to our dear brother Mama Liberia
After all the discussions, arguments, emotions, theology, history, scholarship, criticism, and unanswered questions, let me now speak personally, honestly, and clearly.
I believe in God.
Not because I am forced to.
Not because I am blind.
Not because I am afraid to think.
And not because I ignore history, science, or difficult questions.
I believe because after studying, questioning, observing life, examining history, human nature, morality, prophecy, consciousness, and existence itself, I still find myself pointing back to one conclusion:
there is a God greater than human understanding.
Now let me balance this carefully.
Yes, there are false prophets.
Yes, religion has been abused.
Yes, some pastors manipulate people.
Yes, churches have made mistakes throughout history.
Yes, there are difficult questions in the Bible.
Yes, there are things theology cannot fully explain scientifically.
But none of those things automatically disprove God.
Human corruption does not erase divine truth.
A fake doctor does not invalidate medicine.
A corrupt judge does not invalidate justice.
And a false prophet does not invalidate God.
That is why even after all the debates, I still stand with faith.
And let me say something many people may not understand immediately:
Even if at the end of my life I discover that Christianity was false, I still would not regret living by many of the principles taught in the Bible:
love, discipline, forgiveness, humility, self-control, compassion, wisdom, honor, patience, peace, and moral responsibility.
Those principles alone have helped millions of people live meaningful and conscious lives.
But personally, I do not believe Christianity is false.
In fact, one of the greatest reasons I still believe is because of the Bible itself.
Think about it carefully.
The Bible was written over a period of more than 1,500 years by dozens of different writers:
from different generations, different regions, different political periods, different languages, different cultures, and different backgrounds. Some were kings. Some were shepherds. Some were fishermen. Some were prophets. Some were scholars. Some were prisoners. Yet somehow, across centuries, the central message remains remarkably connected: humanity, sin, morality, redemption,
judgment, hope, faith, and God’s relationship with mankind.
That level of continuity is one of the most extraordinary realities in literary and religious history.
And here is my challenge:
If there exists another book in human history written across so many centuries, by so many unrelated writers, from different civilizations and languages, maintaining such theological continuity, prophetic structure, historical influence, and global survival, then present it.
If I truly find something greater, deeper, more consistent, and more transformative than what I have encountered in Scripture, then I will honestly reconsider my faith.
Because true faith should never fear investigation.
Now let me say something that may offend both extremists and skeptics: God does not owe humanity complete explanation for everything. There are mysteries none of us fully understand:
life, consciousness, time, death, existence, eternity, creation, spirit,
and the origin of reality itself. Some people online speak as if human intelligence has already solved the universe. It has not.
Whether defending religion or attacking it, all of us are still limited human beings trying to understand an infinite reality with finite minds. And perhaps that is where humility becomes important.
The person questioning religion has unanswered questions.
The pastor defending religion also has unanswered questions.
The atheist has unanswered questions. The scientist has unanswered questions. The theologian has unanswered questions.
No one here fully understands existence.
There are secrets in this universe hidden beyond human intelligence, and none of us posting online — whether supporting or opposing religion — possesses complete intellectual capacity to unravel every mystery of God, creation, and eternity. That is simply reality.
Now let me speak directly about Christ.
Our God is alive. According to Christian belief, Jesus Christ died and resurrected after three days. That is the foundation of Christian faith: the resurrection. Many religious founders died and remained in graves remembered by history. But Christianity stands or falls on one claim: that Christ conquered death. And for billions of believers across generations, that resurrection remains the greatest symbol of hope humanity has ever known. That is why Christians do not merely celebrate the death of Christ. They celebrate the resurrection.
Now, do I understand every mystery in the Bible? No.
Can I answer every scientific or theological question perfectly? No.
Do some questions remain difficult? Yes.
But uncertainty is not the same as falsehood.
Even science continues discovering things it once denied. Human knowledge evolves constantly. So I choose humility over arrogance.
Faith over hopelessness. Wisdom over blind emotion. And conscious living over reckless existence. I believe heaven and hell are real. But even if someone argues otherwise, I would still rather live my life consciously: loving people, seeking truth, helping others, walking with purpose, guarding my soul, and preparing for eternity rather than living carelessly without moral direction.
Because one day all of us — believers, skeptics, pastors, critics, rich, poor, famous, unknown — will eventually face the reality of death.
And beyond arguments, debates, podcasts, Facebook posts, theology, and internet opinions, every human being will someday confront eternity personally.
At that point, intelligence alone will not save us. Pride will not save us. Arguments will not save us. Only truth will matter. So question wisely. Study deeply. Think critically. Reject manipulation. Reject blind loyalty. But also remain humble enough to admit that human knowledge has limits. And in the middle of all the confusion, noise, religion, hypocrisy, arguments, and history, I still choose God.