What Do You Do When the Bible Raises More Questions Than Answers?
Christian Resource
The Way Through
A New Believer's Guide to Trusting Jesus When Life Gets Complicated
Have you ever opened your Bible with excitement, only to walk away more confused than comforted? You're not alone. Many new believers encounter passages that raise more questions than answers, and without the right tools, those questions can quietly erode your faith. The Way Through is an honest, practical guide for anyone who has ever wondered if their doubts disqualify them from a real relationship with God.
This book does not avoid the hard parts of Scripture. It walks straight into them. From Old Testament violence and unanswered prayer to the tension between a loving God and human suffering, The Way Through addresses the passages that cause real believers to stumble. These are not hypothetical questions — they are the ones that keep people up at night and quietly push them away from the faith they genuinely want.
What makes this book different is that it does not offer polished, oversimplified answers. Most Christian books either avoid difficult passages altogether or respond with theological language that leaves everyday readers more confused than before. The Way Through meets you where you are, with honesty and compassion, and gives you a practical framework you can apply every time you encounter a passage that troubles you.
By the time you finish, you will know how to approach confusing Scripture with confidence, how to hold your questions without losing your faith, and how to keep trusting Jesus even when the Bible raises more questions than answers. Start with a free chapter today, or sign up for the newsletter to receive ongoing encouragement for your faith journey.

Excerpt From Introduction
I was alone in that trailer, crying and wondering if my failures had destroyed our family. Here I was, a new Christian, supposedly under God's protection, and our life was falling apart.
Then I encountered Noah's flood, and everything I thought I knew about God's character crumbled. I had to read it again. This wasn't the gentle Jesus I'd been hearing about at church. The flood account wasn't the cute animal story from my childhood — it was divine wrath against sin so pervasive that only eight people on the entire planet were worth saving.
I closed the Bible and walked outside onto our tiny front porch. Was I a bad Christian for being disturbed by this? If you've ever opened your Bible with genuine excitement only to encounter passages that made you pause, question, or even feel disturbed — you're not alone.


