Infrequently Asked Questions

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A blog for the quiet questions that still deserve a voice.

Some questions are common. Others—perhaps the most meaningful—go unasked. This evolving blog is dedicated to those inquiries that live between the lines of ordinary conversation. Here, personal reflections, spiritual insights, and thoughtful perspectives explore life, faith, history, and the subtle art of being human. The aim isn’t certainty. It’s dialogue, depth, and a quiet invitation to think again.

opened book on brown wooden table

What is your view of Christianity today?

Christianity has endured for over two millennia, spreading across nations and cultures. Despite the missteps and contradictions in its human expression, its endurance hints at something eternal. Built on water, bread, and wine—symbols both elemental and universal—it offers a profound simplicity. And yet, in today’s American landscape, that simplicity often feels lost in a fog of politics, tribalism, and division. Has the gospel been buried beneath culture wars? Can it return to its original posture—one of love, humility, and reconciliation?

woman praying

Why do so many Christian denominations exist, and what does that say about faith?

The fragmentation of Christianity has a long lineage—from the early councils to the Reformation to the countless modern denominations. The accessibility of scripture, once a gift, became a battlefield for doctrinal correctness. Love, the core message of the gospel, began to take a backseat to being “right.” Each new group formed with the belief that it had reclaimed the truth. But what if unity was never about agreement, but about grace? What does this continual splintering reveal about the way we engage with mystery?

woman in church

Should Christianity be a political force?

The entanglement of church and state is nothing new—and always dangerous. In the Gospels, Jesus steered clear of political ambition. His kingdom, He said, was “not of this world.” Still, in America, religion often finds itself campaigning, legislating, and dividing. Is it possible to live a faith that doesn’t seek dominance? One that influences not by force, but by example? Perhaps true power lies not in authority, but in compassion that asks nothing in return.

Explore rarely asked but deeply meaningful questions about faith, connection, and personal reflection. Return whenever you’re ready.

Group reading books and discussing with coffee.

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