One of the most googled questions is: "Is there a God?" or "Does God exist?" That question drives the purpose of this app. Through a logic-based approach, this site will help guide you in exploring your own answers through reflection and reasoning. Familiar ideas may appear in new ways.
The main page presents a decision tree. Clicking an icon opens thoughtful text about each choice, exploring both sides of the question. Your path and choices will be displayed as you progress so you can see how your answers shape your journey.
The first three questions draw inspiration from William Lane Craig's On Guard: Defending Your Faith with Reason and Precision. The core questions of purpose, meaning, and value are foundational—answering them is essential to everything that follows. If those are answered negatively, much else becomes irrelevant. But if answered positively, they lead to a deeper relationship with God, not just rules and religion.
Each screen represents a set of options. Read each option before selecting your choice from the dropdown menu. Click Continue to move to the next set of questions.
Default popup text
I am not here to preach at you. I am here to lay something out. Not a checklist. Not a formula. But a glimpse into the heartbeat of the Gospel—through four powerful, soul-cutting truths. These are not just religious ideas. They are the architecture of grace. The scaffolding of reality itself. Ignore them, and the house falls. Lean into them, and you find something better than answers—you find life.
Let us start here: “In the beginning…” Ever stopped to ask why God even bothered? Why create at all? Why birth galaxies, planets, atoms, people—knowing full well we’d rebel? Did someone force His hand? Was He lonely, pacing heaven with nothing to do? No. God lacked nothing. He was not bored or needy. He was already love in its purest form—Father, Son, and Spirit. Complete. Whole. Satisfied. And yet—He created. He carved mountains out of mantle and marrow. He painted light into darkness. He formed creatures, trees, and time itself… not because He had to, but because He wanted to. That is grace exemplified. Pure and unsought. Genesis 1:1 is not just a sentence—it is a signal flare. Before you ever breathed, before you failed, before sin wrecked Eden—He gave. We live on a planet tilted just right, orbiting at just the right speed, in just the right zone, with air we can breathe, water we can drink, and sunsets that stir something in us we can’t explain. That is not random. That is cosmic generosity. You do not earn your heartbeat.
Let us blow up the second truth—because it wrecks religion. Most gods in history stay far above the fray. Zeus threw lightning. Odin sat on a throne. Hindu deities incarnate only in illusions. Even modern spirituality tends to picture the divine as some vague force—powerful, distant, aloof. But the Gospel makes a wild claim. God stepped down. Not metaphorically. Not through a prophet. Not through visions. He put on skin. He entered the womb of a teenage girl in a backwater town under Roman oppression. He grew inside her. Was born among animals. His first sounds were not commands—but infant cries. His first throne? A feeding trough. We hear about people who have had near death experiences talk about how they never wanted to come back to this life. We’ve heard the stories — people who’ve had near-death experiences often say they didn’t want to come back. Heaven was too good. Too full of peace. But Jesus did the opposite. He chose to leave heaven. Not for a visit. Not to demand obedience. But to enter this broken, god-forsaken world and die — willingly — as a sacrifice for every single one of us. That’s not just love. That’s a God worthy of all our praise and adoration. To draw from lyrics from Downhere's How Many King's that inspires awe and reference:
Would a king give up their kingdom for you or me? Who leaves behind glory to walk among us? Would you trade greatness to stand with the least of us? Who risks openning their hearts to a broken world? Who would offer their One and only child to set us free? Only One did that for you and me!You do not negotiate for lungs that keep inflating. You exist because grace spoke the first word.
Now lean in. This is the one that offends our instincts. In Jeremiah 31:31-34, God says something radical: He will make a new covenant, one written on the hearts of men where He will remember their sins no more. Not just forgive. Forget. That shatters us because we do not forget. We replay our shame on a loop. We measure people by their worst day. We cling to bitterness like armor. But God says, When I forgive you, it’s done. That is not soft. It is seismic. I remember a manager asking me, If someone like Hitler repented at the last second… would God actually forgive him? Everything in me wanted to say no. I get the outrage. It feels wrong. Offensive, even. But that is the scandal of grace. It does not mean sin has no weight. It means Jesus bore every ounce of it. If forgiveness had a limit, none of us would be safe. Because where do you draw the line? One affair too many? One abortion too far? One addiction relapse too late? If God can forgive a terrorist like Paul, a traitor like Peter, a violent man like Moses… then yes, He can forgive anyone who turns to Him. That’s not cheap grace. It is costly grace—purchased with blood. The only thing standing between you and a wiped-clean soul… is pride.
Let’s not sugarcoat it. The world is a mess. And not just in the abstract—politics, crime, war. I’m talking about your living room. Your mind. Your mornings. Your scrolling. Your silence. We are at war. Ephesians calls Satan the god of this world—not because he is sovereign, but because he is crafty, persistent, and deadly. He does not show up with horns. He shows up as convenience, resentment, and passive apathy. He thrives in the background. The voice that says, Why even try? or You will always be broken. You think it is just a coincidence that when you try to pray, your mind floods with everything you forgot to do? You think it is nothing that just when a friendship is healing, someone brings up that thing again? You think it is a chance that the moment you take a step toward God, the floor falls out from under you? Let me tell you a story. I was finishing a doctorate in Old Testament. Prepping for ministry. Teaching. Studying ancient Hebrew. I had a map, a mission. Then one fall—from a ladder—paralyzed me. Forty years old. Done. Wheelchair. My life was permanently altered. That was not the script, not in the five or twenty-year plan. It felt like sabotage. But now? I see it more clearly. I still do not see the whole picture and that is where faith comes into the picture. God did not abandon my story. He was rewriting it. He did not give me immunity from pain. He gave me something better: purpose through it. The Gospel does not promise ease. It promises presence. Jesus bled, and Paul asked for the thorn in his flesh to be removed multiple times. You might have to as well at some point. But He bled first. And His blood means this: Your suffering is not the end. It is the battlefield where victory is forged.
Let us be real for a moment—some ideas sound deep until you really sit with them.
Stuff like:
• Nothing matters anyway.
• We are all just atoms.
• Make your own truth.
• Do what feels right.
• Karma will sort it out.
But look closer. Those are not answers. They are escape routes. No rules, no consequences, no grace—just vibes and chaos. You are not free in that world. You are just drifting.
Now think about this: why do people still search for meaning? Why do we ache for purpose? Because deep down, we know there is something more. Something real. Something true.
The first lie ever told in history was in a garden. A serpent said, You will be like God. Translation? You get to be in charge. You decide right and wrong. No one tells you otherwise.
But that freedom broke everything.
There is another way. It starts with these words: In the beginning... God’s grace. Not chance. Not algorithms. Grace. You are not here because the universe rolled the dice. You are here because God wanted you here.
And someday, when this life ends, your soul will say one of two things:
• OM,G. A gasp of shock and terror.
• O,MG. A cry of joy and reunion.
Same letters. One comma. Eternity split in half.
You have made choices that brought you to this moment. Your next choice could define your future forever.
If you choose the path to heaven GREAT! There is also the other side of the coin, total seperation from God. Some call that hell, a place opposite of relationships and connection.
Let us not sugarcoat this.
If you believe life is just a random accident—
That we are evolved machines wired by biology and chance—
That meaning is made up, morality is fluid, and death is the end—
Then what you are left with is a world without grounding. No truth. No ultimate justice. No grace.
It is not just bleak. It is unstable.
Ideas like reincarnation, moral relativism, scientism, or hyper-individualism all promise structure. But none of them deliver hope. Not lasting hope. Not the kind that holds up under pain, loss, or death.
And yet… most people live like meaning does exist. Like purpose matters. Why? Where does that longing come from?
The first recorded deception was subtle: You will be like God. Meaning you get to define truth. You get to decide right and wrong. It is seductive. But it is the start of unraveling.
There is an alternative. A deeper foundation. It begins with: In the beginning… God offered grace. Not obligation. Not necessity. Grace. A Creator who chose to make a home for us here. Life, as a gift.
And when this life ends, we’ll all face the same moment of truth—one that echoes in three letters:
• OM,G—a cry of dread and realization.
• O,MG—a shout of joy and worship.
Same words. Just a comma. Infinite difference.
Your life matters. Your response to that truth matters even more.
If you choose the path to heaven, GREAT! There is also the other side of the coin, total seperation from God. Some call that hell, it's place opposite of relationships and connection.
Once you have downloaded your selections with the explanations, please review them. You may want to repeat the process. It's up to you. Whatever, you do, please don't just dismiss this, your life may depend upon it.
Maybe something stirred while you worked through these questions. A flicker. A tug in your chest. A quiet ache that whispered, “There has to be more than this.”
That’s not your imagination. It’s not wishful thinking. It’s the beginning of something real.
There is a life—deeper, harder, more beautiful—where your name carries weight, where your story matters, and where you are loved beyond what you can comprehend. Not because you earned it. But because you were made for it.—no one is beyond God’s reach!
This life won’t promise comfort. It won’t hand you ease. But it will offer meaning. It will offer grace. It will walk with you through storms and not abandon you in the dark.
God—the one who carved the stars, who sees your worst moments and stays anyway—wants you. He gave everything, even His own Son, to bring you back. Not to chain you with religion, but to free you with relationship.
You don’t need a script. You don’t need to get it perfect. Just start with honesty. Say something like:
“Heavenly Father, I know I’ve fallen short. I’ve tried things my way, and I’m tired. But You loved me first. You sent Your Son to take my place and offer me life. I want that life. Please forgive me, save me, and walk with me from here on—especially when things get hard. I’m Yours. Amen.”
If you prayed something like that—whether through tears or trembling or with quiet certainty—reach out. Let someone know. You’re not meant to walk this alone.
Find a church. Not a perfect one—there are none. Just a community of broken people learning how to be whole.
Any finally... welcome home!
Purpose
Jeremiah 29:11 “For I know the plans I have for you,” declares the Lord, “plans to prosper you and not to harm you, plans to give you a hope and a future.”
Ephesians 2:10 For we are God’s handiwork, created in Christ Jesus to do good works, which God prepared in advance for us to do.
Identity
Genesis 1:27 God created mankind in his own image, in the image of God he created them; male and female he created them.
1 Peter 2:9 But you are a chosen people, a royal priesthood, a holy nation, God’s special possession…
Sin & Brokeness
Romans 3:23 For all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God.
Isaiah 59:2 But your iniquities have separated you from your God…
Grace & Forgiveness
Ephesians 2:8-9 For it is by grace you have been saved, through faith—and this is not from yourselves, it is the gift of God…
1 John 1:9 If we confess our sins, he is faithful and just and will forgive us our sins and purify us from all unrighteousness.
Truth
John 14:6 Jesus answered, “I am the way and the truth and the life. No one comes to the Father except through me.”
Psalm 119:160 All your words are true; all your righteous laws are eternal.
Hope
Romans 15:13 May the God of hope fill you with all joy and peace as you trust in him…
Lamentations 3:21-23 Yet this I call to mind and therefore I have hope: Because of the Lord’s great love we are not consumed…
Lordship of Christ
Philippians 2:10-11 …at the name of Jesus every knee should bow… and every tongue acknowledge that Jesus Christ is Lord…
Colossians 1:16-17 All things have been created through him and for him. He is before all things, and in him all things hold together.
Eternity
John 5:24 Whoever hears my word and believes him who sent me has eternal life…
Revelation 21:4 ‘He will wipe every tear from their eyes. There will be no more death’ or mourning or crying or pain…
Hell
Matthew 13:41–42 The Son of Man will send out his angels... They will throw them into the blazing furnace, where there will be weeping and gnashing of teeth.
Matthew 10:28 “Do not be afraid of those who kill the body but cannot kill the soul. Rather, be afraid of the One who can destroy both soul and body in hell.”
Luke 16:23–24 (Parable of the Rich Man and Lazarus) “In Hades, where he was in torment, he looked up... ‘I am in agony in this fire.’”