Faith, Icons, and the Shape of Belief
Faith seeks form. The difference between a random object and a sacred icon is not beauty, but belonging. A pencil could remind you of creation, but a Christian icon carries the breath of centuries—a shared doorway where countless souls have met the divine.
Faith, Thinking Patterns, and the Weight of the Soul: On Changing Religions and Renewing Belief
When someone considers changing religions, they are not simply altering their worship rituals—they are engaging in a profound reorientation of meaning. Religion provides a cognitive framework that influences how we process both triumph and tragedy. To shift that framework is to move the very foundation of thought.
The Place Where Faith Belongs
Faith is not a leap into the dark; it is a step toward the light that has always been there, waiting to be noticed. Every human being, at some point, seeks something beyond themselves—something that gives shape to the questions of why we exist and what holds it all together.
Faith and the Human Search for Direction
Humans are meaning-hungry creatures. We do not live by bread alone — we live by stories, symbols, and the conviction that our lives matter. When faith weakens, so too does our sense of direction.
What Is Christianity?
The Founder: Jesus of Nazareth
Christianity traces its beginnings to Jesus of Nazareth, a historical figure whose existence is confirmed by sources outside the Bible.