I have spent most of my life asking questions about Christianity to all types of people.
I have asked religious leaders, religious followers, atheists, educators, authors and nonbelievers.
If you're Christian who wants to learn more about Christianity, now is the right time to start asking questions.
You should be asking questions about Jesus, Moses, the Four Gospels, The Old and New Testament and God.
Was Jesus really God? Where did God come from? Did God have parents? Was the Bible actually written by God or man? Did Jesus start Christianity or did a large group of his followers start it? Each question that you ask will easily create one or two more questions and your list will seem like it never ends.
I don't have a physical list that's written down on a piece of paper, but the questions I have in my head seem to provoke a curiosity that most Christian educators can't seem to handle.
If you're going to ask your mother and father or a Christian leader a question like," Did Jesus really feed 5000 people with a couple of loaves of bread and some fish? And your answer is," Yes.
" You could have some problems.
This is when you need to up the start digging a little deeper and start asking better questions like.
" Did Jesus really feed 5000 people with a couple of loaves of bread and some fish, and if so can you actually provide me with any proof or evidence?" Now the answer could change from yes to maybe or even no.
If you're not asking questions, it's time to start.
Don't accept all of your answers as the truth either, just understand that these are opinions of the people that you are asking the questions to.
If you're truly seeking the truth, you're going to need to start studying other religions, contradictions in the Bible, early Christian history, Roman history and the origins of the Bible.
Whatever you do, make sure that you don't receive all of your answers from your religious leaders or you might not ever find the entire truth about Christianity.
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