Reasoning Faith

Reasoning Faith

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Jude 1:3: "Beloved, although I was very eager to write to you about our common salvation, I found it necessary to write appealing to you to contend for the faith that was once for all delivered to the saints."

Getting Started

Before building your site, better take a look at this section.

Theme Installation

Extract the zipped package downloaded from ThemeForest to your desktop, in the extracted package you will find the gullu.zip file which is the WordPress theme.

You can install the theme in two ways:

FTP: Extract gullu.zip file and upload the extracted folder to /wp-content/themes/ folder on your server.

WordPress: Navigate to Appearance -> Add New Themes -> Upload page. Select gullu.zip file. Press the Install Now button to upload and install the theme.

After uploading the theme, you have to activate it. Navigate to Appearance -> Themes page to activate the theme.

Demo Import

If you want your site to look like exactly the ‘Gullu’ demos then you have to import the demo content successfully.

We integrated the One Click Demo installation feature to ‘Gullu’ WordPress theme. You can import all demo content just by a click only.

OneClick Demo Installation Process

  • Install the theme and activate it. Then install all the required plugins. Make sure all the required plugins are activated.
  • After activating all the required plugins navigate to Appearance > ‘One Click Demo Import’ menu from the WordPress dashboard.

Note: If the option data do not import then you have to import it manually. Navigate to ‘Theme Settings > Backup’. Then copy-paste the backup string here and click on the Import a Backup button. You will find the backup string in the options.txt file.

The recommended method to import the demo content.

If you failed to import the demo content by one click then you have to follow the below steps to import the demo content manually.  You will get all demo content data with the theme package. You will find the demos in ‘gullu>inc/demo{disired-demo-number} this path.

  • Navigate to Tools > Import then install the WordPress plugin and click on the ‘Run Importer’. Upload here the ‘theme_content.xml’ file.
  • Install the Widget Importer & Exporter plugin to import the demo widgets. Then navigate to Tools > Widget Importer & Exporter and upload here the ‘widget_data.wie’ file.
  • Now you have to import the Dental Options as like the demo. Navigate to ‘Theme Settings > Backup’. Then copy-paste the backup string here and click on the Import a Backup button. You will find the backup string in the options.txt file.

How to update premium plugins?

We have integrated some premium plugins with the theme and bundled those plugins with the theme. You don’t have to input your Themeforest product ID to unlock any theme features. We are not providing the third party plugin’s license along with the theme.

We are providing the plugins file only and we are continuously updating the bundled plugins with the theme updates. You can install/get those plugins on Appearance > Instal Plugins. Or you can get the plugin files in the rogan/inc/tgm/plugins folder.

Required Plugins

After installing the theme you most have to install the ‘Gullu Core’, ‘Visual composer’ and ‘Codestar Framework’ plugins to import the demo content as well and work the theme correctly.

You will find all required and recommended plugins at Appearance > Install Plugins.

Control blank space between rows

You can control the space between rows from the visual composer’s shortcode section settings.
Select the shortcode section from the Visual composer page edit screen (backend or frontend editor) that you want to control. Check the Styling tab from the visual composer’s element settings. Take a look at the below screenshot of it-
 
 
Note:  Input the padding (spaces around the section) as clockwise (Top Right Bottom Left)

Biblical Foundations (Faith & Doctrine)

Purpose: To establish the unshakable authority of Scripture and the core doctrines of the Christian faith.
Focus: What we believe and why—from Scripture’s reliability to the nature of God, salvation, and moral truth.
Subcategories:

  • Authority of Scripture
  • Attributes of God & the Trinity
  • The Person and Work of Christ
  • Salvation & Grace
  • The Holy Spirit & the Church
  • Covenants, Prophecy, and Eschatology
  • Pentecostal Theology (Spirit-empowered worldview)

Apologetics

Defend your faith with reason and Scripture. Explore evidence for God’s existence, the reliability of the Bible, the resurrection of Jesus, and responses to modern objections. This is your hub for apologetics articles, doctrinal truths, and cultural engagement.

Do All Religions Lead to God?

A Biblical Response to Religious Pluralism

“And the Lord’s servant must not be quarrelsome but kind to everyone, able to teach, patiently enduring evil, correcting his opponents with gentleness.”
2 Timothy 2:24–25 (ESV)

Published by Reasoning Faith | For believers seeking truth in an age of spiritual confusion.

Introduction: The Allure of Inclusive Spirituality

In today’s multicultural world, one idea has gained near-universal acceptance: “All religions are different paths up the same mountain—they all lead to God.” This view—known as religious pluralism—is often praised as tolerant, humble, and peaceful. It promises unity without dogma and spirituality without exclusivity.

But is it true?

More importantly: Is it biblical?

While the desire for peace among faiths is commendable, Scripture presents a radically different claim: that salvation comes through one person, by one name, through one act of atonement. Jesus did not say, “I am one of many ways.” He declared, “I am the way, and the truth, and the life. No one comes to the Father except through me” (John 14:6).

This Bible study examines the claim of religious pluralism in light of Scripture, history, and logic. We will:

  • Clarify what pluralism teaches,
  • Show how it contradicts core Christian doctrine,
  • Offer a reasoned, gentle defense of Christ’s exclusivity,
  • And provide key passages for reflection and discussion.

Our aim is not to insult other faiths, but—as Paul did in Athens—to reason with truth and grace, pointing all people to the only Savior who conquered sin and death.

1. The Claim: “All Religions Are Equally Valid Paths to God”

What Pluralism Teaches

Religious pluralism asserts that:

  • All major world religions (Christianity, Islam, Hinduism, Buddhism, etc.) are valid responses to the divine.
  • No single religion holds exclusive truth.
  • Salvation or enlightenment is possible through multiple, even contradictory, belief systems.

This view is popular in academia, media, and interfaith dialogues. It is often framed as the only “enlightened” position in a diverse world.

Why It Appeals

  • It avoids conflict.
  • It feels humble (“Who am I to say my way is right?”).
  • It honors cultural diversity.

But appeal is not truth. And when examined closely, pluralism collapses under its own contradictions.

2. The Biblical Witness: Christ Alone Is the Way

Jesus’ Own Words

Jesus made the most exclusive claim in religious history:

“I am the way, and the truth, and the life. No one comes to the Father except through me.”
John 14:6 (ESV)

He did not say, “I am a way.” He said, “the way.” This is not arrogance—it is identity. If Jesus is who He claimed to be (the incarnate Son of God), then His words must be taken seriously.

The Apostolic Testimony

The early Church echoed this exclusivity:

  • “Salvation is found in no one else, for there is no other name under heaven given to mankind by which we must be saved.” (Acts 4:12)
  • “There is one God and one mediator between God and mankind, the man Christ Jesus.” (1 Timothy 2:5)

This was not cultural bias—it was theological conviction rooted in the resurrection. The apostles staked their lives on the truth that Christ’s death and resurrection were unique, sufficient, and necessary.

The Logic of Atonement

Christianity is not merely a moral system—it is a rescue mission. Sin separates us from a holy God (Isaiah 59:2). Justice demands payment. In Christ, God Himself provided the sacrifice (Romans 3:25–26).

Other religions offer paths of self-effort: karma, law-keeping, meditation, or ritual. Christianity alone offers grace through substitution: “God made him who had no sin to be sin for us, so that in him we might become the righteousness of God.” (2 Corinthians 5:21)

You cannot blend these. Either we save ourselves—or Christ saves us. The two cannot coexist.

3. The Contradictions of Pluralism

Logical Incoherence

Pluralism claims all religions are true—but their core teachings contradict each other:

  • Christianity: God is triune; Jesus is divine; salvation by grace.
  • Islam: God is strictly one; Jesus is a prophet; salvation by works.
  • Hinduism: Millions of gods; reincarnation; no final atonement.
  • Buddhism: No personal God; salvation through enlightenment.

They cannot all be right. If Jesus is God incarnate, then Islam and Buddhism are false on this point. If there is no personal God (as in Theravāda Buddhism), then Christianity and Islam are false.

Pluralism tries to resolve this by saying, “All religions are just human attempts to describe the same ultimate reality.” But that redefines every religion—turning them into something their adherents would reject.

As philosopher Ravi Zacharias observed:

“When you say all religions are the same, you don’t honor them—you insult them. You tell a Muslim his belief in one God is just a symbol. You tell a Christian the resurrection didn’t really happen. You reduce truth to metaphor.”

The Arrogance of Relativism

Ironically, pluralism is itself an exclusive claim:

“My view—that no religion has the truth—is the only correct view.”

This is not humility. It is intellectual imperialism disguised as tolerance.

4. A Gentle, Truthful Response

We Affirm Common Ground—But Not Common Salvation

Christians can—and should—respect people of other faiths. We affirm:

  • The dignity of every person (Genesis 1:27),
  • The value of moral living,
  • The sincerity of many seekers.

But respecting a person does not require affirming their beliefs as true. Love speaks truth—even when it is hard.

The Scandal of Particularity

Yes, it is scandalous that God would act in one time, through one man, in one place. But that is the heart of the gospel: “When the set time had fully come, God sent his Son…” (Galatians 4:4).

The cross is narrow—but it is open to all: Jew and Gentile, rich and poor, male and female, from every tribe and tongue (Revelation 5:9). The door is exclusive—but the invitation is universal.

Our Call: Reason with Gentleness

We do not win souls by argument—but we remove obstacles to faith through clear, loving reasoning. As Peter wrote:

“Always be prepared to give an answer to everyone who asks you to give the reason for the hope that you have. But do this with gentleness and respect.”
1 Peter 3:15 (NIV)

This is the heart of Reasoning Faith: not quarreling, but kindly teaching; not condemning, but patiently correcting.

Key Scriptures for Study and Reflection

  • John 14:1–6 – Jesus declares Himself the only way to the Father.
  • Acts 4:10–12 – “Salvation is found in no one else.”
  • 1 Timothy 2:3–6 – One God, one mediator, one ransom for all.
  • Romans 3:21–26 – Righteousness through faith in Christ alone.
  • Galatians 1:6–9 – Warning against a different gospel.
  • 1 Peter 3:15–16 – Defend your hope with gentleness.
  • Revelation 5:9 – People from every nation worship the Lamb.

The Narrow Road That Leads to Life

“Enter through the narrow gate. For wide is the gate and broad is the road that leads to destruction, and many enter through it. But small is the gate and narrow the road that leads to life, and only a few find it.”
Matthew 7:13–14 (NIV)

The exclusivity of Christ is not a barrier—it is a bridge. In a world of endless paths that lead to dead ends, Jesus offers one way that leads to eternal life.

We do not proclaim this to exclude, but to invite. Not to condemn, but to save.

May we, like Paul in Athens, reason with truth and grace—pointing all people to the unknown God who has now made Himself known in Christ (Acts 17:23–31).

“Your word is a lamp to my feet and a light to my path.”
Psalm 119:105 (ESV)

Published by Reasoning Faith
For small group study, personal reflection, or church discussion.

Cite this article: Reasoning Faith, “Bible Study: Do All Religions Lead to God? A Biblical Response to Religious Pluralism,” Reasoning Faith, accessed [Insert Date], https://reasoning.faith .

Ten Democratic Policy Positions

Apologetics

🕊️ Ten Democratic Policy Positions—and the Biblical Case Against Their Moral Reinterpretation

1. 🩺 Abortion

Democratic View: Legal abortion is a fundamental right of bodily autonomy.
Common Biblical Appeal: Compassion for women in crisis; Jesus’ mercy toward sinners.

Quotable Rebuttal:
“If the unborn are not human, then abortion requires no justification. But if they are human—then no justification is sufficient.”

Apologetic Defense:
The moral status of the unborn is not a matter of religious opinion but biological fact: from conception, a unique human organism exists with its own DNA. Scripture consistently treats the unborn as persons (Psalm 139:13–16; Jeremiah 1:5; Luke 1:41–44). To claim compassion while permitting the intentional destruction of innocent human life is a category error: true compassion seeks to protect both mother and child. The early Church universally condemned abortion (Didache 2:2), recognizing it as a violation of the Sixth Commandment. A society that sacrifices the weakest for the convenience of the strong has abandoned justice for utilitarianism.


2. 🌈 LGBTQ+ Rights

Democratic View: Full affirmation of LGBTQ+ identity and relationships is a matter of equality and love.
Common Biblical Appeal: “Love your neighbor” (Mark 12:31); Jesus’ outreach to outcasts.

Quotable Rebuttal:
“Love does not mean affirming every desire as good—but walking with others toward the truth that sets them free.”

Apologetic Defense:
Jesus loved sinners—but never left them in their sin (John 8:11). Scripture defines marriage as the covenantal union of one man and one woman (Genesis 2:24; Matthew 19:4–6), and consistently identifies homosexual acts as contrary to God’s design (Leviticus 18:22; Romans 1:26–27; 1 Corinthians 6:9–10). This is not bigotry but anthropology: human sexuality reflects the image of a triune God whose love is both sacrificial and ordered. To redefine marriage is not to expand love but to obscure the gospel mystery it was meant to display (Ephesians 5:32). True inclusion invites all to repentance and grace—not to the normalization of rebellion.


3. 🌍 Environmental Protection

Democratic View: Aggressive climate action is a moral imperative.
Common Biblical Appeal: Stewardship of creation (Genesis 2:15).

Quotable Rebuttal:
“Creation care is a biblical duty—but not when it elevates the planet above the people made in God’s image.”

Apologetic Defense:
Christians affirm environmental stewardship as part of our creation mandate. However, some climate policies prioritize ecological balance over human flourishing—restricting energy access for the poor or opposing life-saving technologies. Scripture places humanity above creation as its vice-regent (Psalm 8:5–8), not as its equal. Stewardship must be wise, not idolatrous. We care for the earth not because it is sacred in itself, but because it belongs to the Lord—and because it sustains His image-bearers.


4. 🏥 Universal Healthcare

Democratic View: Healthcare is a human right that government must guarantee.
Common Biblical Appeal: Jesus healed the sick; care for the ill is a mark of discipleship (Matthew 25:36).

Quotable Rebuttal:
“Compassion is commanded—but coercion is not the Christian method of mercy.”

Apologetic Defense:
The Church has always cared for the sick—through hospitals, clinics, and almsgiving—often before governments acted. But Scripture never assigns this duty to the state. Instead, it calls believers to sacrificial generosity (Galatians 6:10; 1 John 3:17). While just societies should ensure access to care, biblical ethics emphasize voluntary charity over state compulsion. Moreover, policies that fund abortion or gender-transition procedures under the banner of “healthcare” violate the sanctity of life and God’s created order—making uncritical support morally untenable.


5. 🛂 Immigration & Refugee Policy

Democratic View: Open borders and expansive asylum reflect biblical hospitality.
Common Biblical Appeal: “Love the foreigner” (Leviticus 19:34); “I was a stranger…” (Matthew 25:35).

Quotable Rebuttal:
“Loving the stranger does not negate a nation’s right—and duty—to govern its borders justly.”

Apologetic Defense:
Scripture commands kindness to immigrants, but also affirms the legitimacy of nations and lawful governance (Acts 17:26; Romans 13:1–4). The Old Testament included immigration laws (Deuteronomy 23:7–8) and distinctions between sojourners and citizens. Compassion must be paired with order: unchecked migration can overwhelm communities, fuel exploitation, and undermine the very stability needed to care for newcomers. True biblical hospitality occurs within the framework of justice, security, and national responsibility.


6. ✊ Racial Justice

Democratic View: Systemic racism requires structural remedies, including reparations and equity policies.
Common Biblical Appeal: “All are one in Christ” (Galatians 3:28); God shows no partiality (Acts 10:34).

Quotable Rebuttal:
“The gospel abolishes racial hierarchy—but not by dividing people into new categories of guilt and victimhood.”

Apologetic Defense:
Christianity was the first movement to declare the full dignity of every ethnicity. But biblical justice is individual and repentance-based—not collective or ancestral. Scripture condemns partiality (James 2:1–9) but never assigns guilt based on skin color or heritage. The solution to racial sin is not systemic retribution, but transformed hearts through the cross (Ephesians 2:14–16). Policies that punish the innocent for the sins of the past—or that essentialize identity by race—contradict the unifying power of the gospel.


7. 🔫 Gun Control

Democratic View: Strict firearm regulations reduce violence and save lives.
Common Biblical Appeal: “Blessed are the peacemakers” (Matthew 5:9); “Live at peace with everyone” (Romans 12:18).

Quotable Rebuttal:
“Disarming the innocent does not create peace—it invites tyranny and empowers the wicked.”

Apologetic Defense:
While Scripture extols peace, it also acknowledges the reality of evil and the need for just defense (Luke 22:36; Romans 13:4). The state bears the sword to punish wrongdoers—but so too may individuals protect the vulnerable (Exodus 22:2). Disarming law-abiding citizens disproportionately harms the poor and marginalized, who cannot afford private security. True peacemaking addresses the heart of violence—sin—not merely its tools. And history shows that gun confiscation often precedes oppression, not safety.


8. ⚖️ Economic Equality

Democratic View: Wealth redistribution is necessary to achieve fairness.
Common Biblical Appeal: “Sell your possessions and give to the poor” (Luke 12:33); care for the needy (Proverbs 31:8–9).

Quotable Rebuttal:
“The Bible commands generosity—not government-mandated envy disguised as justice.”

Apologetic Defense:
Scripture praises voluntary generosity (2 Corinthians 9:7) but never endorses state-enforced wealth transfer. The early church shared goods freely (Acts 4:32–35), not under compulsion. Moreover, the Bible affirms private property (Exodus 20:15; Acts 5:4) and rewards diligence (Proverbs 14:23). While Christians must care for the poor, “equality” in Scripture means equal dignity—not equal outcomes. Forced redistribution often entrenches poverty by disincentivizing work and innovation—undermining the very prosperity that funds charity.


9. 🏛️ Separation of Church and State

Democratic View: Religion should not influence public policy.
Common Biblical Appeal: “Render to Caesar…” (Matthew 22:21).

Quotable Rebuttal:
“Jesus distinguished spheres of authority—but never said believers must check their conscience at the voting booth.”

Apologetic Defense:
“Separation of church and state” was never meant to silence religious citizens—but to prevent state control of the church. Christians are called to be “salt and light” in every sphere (Matthew 5:13–16), including politics. Every law reflects someone’s morality; the question is whose. To exclude biblical ethics from public discourse is not neutrality—it is secular hegemony. A just society protects religious freedom, not by banishing faith from the public square, but by ensuring all voices—including Christian ones—can contribute to the common good.


10. ❤️ Criminal Justice Reform

Democratic View: Emphasize rehabilitation over punishment, especially for nonviolent crimes.
Common Biblical Appeal: “Love mercy” (Micah 6:8); “Blessed are the merciful” (Matthew 5:7).

Quotable Rebuttal:
“Mercy without justice is sentimentality; justice without mercy is cruelty. God demands both.”

Apologetic Defense:
Scripture balances justice and mercy (Psalm 85:10). While restoration is ideal, the state is ordained by God to “bear the sword” and punish evil (Romans 13:4). To minimize consequences for crime—especially violent or predatory acts—endangers the innocent and dishonors victims. True reform upholds accountability while offering pathways to repentance. But when “compassion” ignores truth or public safety, it ceases to be Christian—and becomes mere moral therapeutic deism.


🔍 Conclusion: Truth in Love, Not Compromise in Silence

Many well-meaning Christians believe that adapting biblical ethics to progressive politics makes the faith more palatable. But as C.S. Lewis warned, “A man can’t always be defending the truth; he must also live by it.”

The Church’s mission is not to mirror the spirit of the age—but to confront it with the unchanging Word of God (Romans 12:2). This does not mean rejecting compassion, justice, or care for creation. It means grounding those goods in their true source: the character of a holy, just, and merciful God.

A forthcoming analysis will examine how Republican-aligned Christians interpret these same issues—and whether their approach fares better before the bar of Scripture.

But one thing is certain: Faithfulness is not measured by political alignment, but by allegiance to Christ—and to every word that proceeds from the mouth of God (Matthew 4:4).

— Reporting with integrity, defending with reason, anchored in truth.

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✝️ Politics and the Fear of God

A Biblical Apologetics Defense

Introduction

“The Holy Spirit is the ultimate Teacher and Guide.” (John 14:26; John 16:13)

Christians today face difficult political choices, but God’s Word gives us clear moral standards. Our political alignment must never be shaped by emotion, culture, or popularity—but by the unchanging truth of Scripture.
In every generation, God calls His people to stand for righteousness even when it is unpopular.

Scripture Foundation

Proverbs 14:34 (AMP)“Righteousness exalts a nation, but sin is a disgrace to any people.”
Acts 5:29 (AMP)“We must obey God rather than men.”

Apologetics Point

A Christian’s highest loyalty is to God’s truth.
Political decisions, including how we vote, must reflect biblical righteousness—not compromise with sin.

God and Imperfect Leaders

Throughout history, God used flawed people to accomplish divine purposes:

  • Samson (Judges 13–16): morally weak, yet God used him to deliver Israel.
  • Cyrus (Isaiah 45:1): a pagan king, yet called God’s “anointed” because he restored Israel.

In the same way, despite Donald Trump’s personal flaws, many of his policies reflect biblical principles: defending the unborn, protecting Israel, and promoting religious liberty.

Key Principle

God values obedience to His purposes above personal perfection.
Christians must judge by fruit, not by flaws.

Why Christians Cannot Support Anti-Biblical Policies

❌ Democratic Party Platforms in Conflict with Scripture

  1. Abortion“You knit me together in my mother’s womb” (Psalm 139:13–16).
    Taking innocent life is murder (Exodus 20:13).
  2. Transgender Ideology“Male and female He created them” (Genesis 1:27; Matthew 19:4–6).
    Gender is God’s design, not man’s invention.
  3. Lawlessness and Open Borders“Let everyone be subject to the governing authorities” (Romans 13:1–4).
    God calls for order and justice, not anarchy.
  4. Opposition to Israel“I will bless those who bless you” (Genesis 12:3).
    To curse Israel is to rebel against God’s covenant.

Conclusion:
To endorse policies that kill babies, confuse children, and curse Israel is to stand against God Himself. These are not political preferences—they are moral absolutes.

Trump’s Policy Achievements and Christian Values

  • Appointed Three Supreme Court Justices → helped overturn Roe v. Wade (Proverbs 24:11–12).
  • Moved U.S. Embassy to Jerusalem → fulfilling biblical alignment with Israel (Psalm 122:6).
  • Brokered Middle East Peace Accords → blessing those who bless Israel (Genesis 12:3).
  • Defended Religious Liberty → standing on Acts 5:29.

Apologetics Defense:
These policies reflect righteousness and biblical fruit, even if the man behind them is imperfect. God’s sovereignty often works through imperfect instruments.

Rebuttals to Common Objections

Objection 1: “Trump is immoral; Christians cannot support him.”

Response: God used Samson and Cyrus—both imperfect men—to accomplish His plans. Policy fruit matters more than personal flaws.

Objection 2: “Democrats care for the poor and immigrants—this is Christian compassion.”

Response: True compassion never justifies killing the unborn or confusing children about gender. “Learn to do good; seek justice, correct oppression.” (Isaiah 1:17)

Objection 3: “Christians should stay out of politics.”

Response: Jesus called believers to be salt and light (Matthew 5:13–16).
Silence in the face of evil is complicity.

Apologetic Logic and Defense

Objective Truth
Life begins at conception (Psalm 139:13). This is not opinion—it’s both biblical and biological fact.

Law of Non-Contradiction
You cannot claim to follow Christ (who defends life) while supporting a party that celebrates death through abortion.

Fruit Test (Matthew 7:16)
Good trees bear good fruit. Democratic platforms promote destruction; Trump-era policies defended life, freedom, and faith.

Life Application

  • Pray for Wisdom: “If any of you lacks wisdom, let him ask of God.” (James 1:5)
  • Teach Biblical Values: Train your children to discern right from wrong according to Scripture.
  • Refuse Compromise: Stand boldly for truth, even when it’s unpopular.
  • Vote Biblically: Align your conscience with God’s Word, not with political trends.

Pentecostal Empowerment

The Holy Spirit empowers believers to stand strong in dark times.

  • “You will receive power when the Holy Spirit comes on you.” (Acts 1:8)
  • Daniel stood firm against ungodly decrees (Daniel 6).

Like Daniel, the Spirit-filled believer must stand firm when culture bows to idols. Revival requires both prayer and action—truth must be proclaimed in love and boldness.

Conclusion

Christians cannot support platforms that glorify abortion, gender rebellion, or hostility toward Israel.
God can use flawed leaders for His purposes.
Policy fruit must outweigh personality flaws.

“As for me and my house, we will serve the Lord.” — Joshua 24:15

Apologetics Summary

Truth: Life is sacred, gender is God’s design, and Israel is blessed.
Logic: You cannot support abortion and claim to uphold biblical values.
Defense: God uses flawed leaders, but He never blesses sinful policies.
Application: Pray, vote, and live in obedience to God’s Word.

Call to Action

  1. Pray for national revival and biblical leadership.
  2. Educate others in your church and community about biblical values.
  3. Speak truth with love—don’t fear cultural backlash.
  4. Let your vote and your voice glorify Christ.

“Righteousness exalts a nation.”
Let believers rise, speak truth, and stand firm under the power of the Holy Spirit.

Bible Study

Go deeper into God’s Word. Survey the Old and New Testaments, study the covenants of the Bible, learn how to study Scripture effectively, and explore keyword studies to strengthen your foundation.

Biblical Ethics and Public Policy

A Faithful Response to Contemporary Political Alignments

“And the Lord’s servant must not be quarrelsome but kind to everyone, able to teach, patiently enduring evil, correcting his opponents with gentleness.”
2 Timothy 2:24–25 (ESV)

Published by Reasoning Faith | For believers committed to truth, grace, and thoughtful discipleship in a confused age.

Introduction: The Crisis of Christian Conscience in a Polarized World

We live in a moment when political loyalty often eclipses theological conviction. Many churches—especially in affluent, urban settings—have subtly reshaped biblical ethics to align with progressive policy platforms, framing this alignment as “prophetic” or “compassionate.” While the desire to care for the poor, welcome the stranger, and protect the vulnerable is undeniably Christian, not every policy that claims moral virtue is morally coherent with Scripture.

The danger is not in caring about justice—but in redefining justice apart from God’s revelation. When Scripture is selectively quoted to affirm cultural trends while ignoring its broader moral framework, we risk what the prophet Jeremiah warned: “My people have committed two sins: They have forsaken me, the spring of living water, and have dug their own cisterns, broken cisterns that cannot hold water” (Jeremiah 2:13).

This Bible study is not a partisan tract. It does not endorse any political party. Instead, it asks a more fundamental question: Does this policy align with the whole counsel of God’s Word?

Using the lens of historic Christian orthodoxy—affirmed across Catholic, Orthodox, and Protestant traditions for 2,000 years—we examine ten major policy positions often associated with the modern Democratic platform. For each, we will:

  • Clarify the policy claim,
  • Acknowledge how Scripture is often invoked in its favor,
  • Present the consistent witness of biblical ethics,
  • Offer a reasoned apologetic defense, and
  • Provide key passages for personal meditation and group discussion.

Our goal is not to win arguments, but—as Paul instructs Timothy—to “correct opponents with gentleness,” trusting that God may grant them repentance leading to a knowledge of the truth (2 Timothy 2:25).

1. Abortion and the Sanctity of Human Life

The Policy Claim

Legal abortion is a fundamental right of bodily autonomy, essential to women’s equality and healthcare.

How Scripture Is Cited

Advocates emphasize Jesus’ compassion for marginalized women (e.g., the woman caught in adultery in John 8) and the call to “love mercy” (Micah 6:8).

Biblical and Historical Witness

From its inception, the Church has regarded abortion as the unjust taking of innocent human life. The Didache (c. AD 70–120), one of the earliest Christian documents outside the New Testament, states plainly: “You shall not murder a child by abortion” (Didache 2:2). This was not a cultural preference but a theological conviction rooted in the doctrine of the imago Dei—that every human being, from conception, bears God’s image (Genesis 1:26–27).

Scripture consistently treats the unborn as persons:

  • “You knit me together in my mother’s womb” (Psalm 139:13)
  • “Before I formed you in the womb I knew you” (Jeremiah 1:5)
  • John the Baptist “leaped in his mother’s womb” upon hearing Mary’s voice (Luke 1:41, 44)

Apologetic Defense

Science confirms that at fertilization, a unique human organism with its own DNA begins to exist. If the unborn are human—and they are—then abortion is the intentional killing of an innocent person. Compassion for women in crisis is vital, but true compassion offers life-affirming alternatives: adoption, counseling, material support, and community care. To solve suffering by eliminating the sufferer is not justice—it is utilitarianism dressed in the language of rights.

The Sixth Commandment—“You shall not murder” (Exodus 20:13)—protects the most vulnerable among us. A society that sacrifices the weak for the convenience of the strong has abandoned the moral foundation that makes justice possible.

Key Scriptures: Genesis 1:26–28; Psalm 139:13–16; Jeremiah 1:4–5; Luke 1:39–45; Exodus 20:13; Proverbs 6:16–17

2. LGBTQ+ Identity and Sexual Ethics

The Policy Claim

Full legal and social affirmation of LGBTQ+ identities and relationships is a matter of dignity, equality, and love.

How Scripture Is Cited

Proponents highlight Jesus’ command to “love your neighbor as yourself” (Mark 12:31) and His fellowship with tax collectors and sinners (Luke 15:1–2).

Biblical and Historical Witness

The Bible presents human sexuality as a sacred reflection of God’s covenantal love. From creation, marriage is defined as the lifelong, exclusive union of one man and one woman (Genesis 2:24), a pattern reaffirmed by Jesus (Matthew 19:4–6) and the apostles (Ephesians 5:31–32). Homosexual acts are consistently identified as contrary to God’s design (Leviticus 18:22; Romans 1:26–27; 1 Corinthians 6:9–10).

Crucially, the Church has never taught that same-sex attraction itself is unforgivable—but it has always held that sexual intimacy belongs only within heterosexual marriage. This is not bigotry; it is anthropology. To redefine marriage is to obscure the gospel mystery it was meant to display: Christ’s covenant love for His Church.

Apologetic Defense

Jesus loved sinners—but never left them in their sin. To the woman caught in adultery, He said, “Go and sin no more” (John 8:11). True love speaks truth, even when it is costly. Affirming someone’s self-identity in rebellion against God’s created order is not kindness—it is spiritual negligence.

Moreover, the call to sexual purity applies to all: the unmarried, the divorced, and those with same-sex attraction. The gospel offers not merely acceptance, but transformation: “And such were some of you. But you were washed, you were sanctified, you were justified…” (1 Corinthians 6:11).

Key Scriptures: Genesis 1:27–28; 2:18–25; Leviticus 18:22; Romans 1:24–27; 1 Corinthians 6:9–11; Ephesians 5:22–33

3. Environmental Stewardship

The Policy Claim

Climate change is a moral emergency requiring sweeping government intervention.

How Scripture Is Cited

“The Lord God took the man and put him in the Garden of Eden to work it and take care of it” (Genesis 2:15); “The earth is the Lord’s” (Psalm 24:1).

Biblical and Historical Witness

Christians are called to be wise stewards of creation. But Scripture places humanity—not the planet—at the center of God’s redemptive concern. Humans are crowned “with glory and honor” and given dominion over creation (Psalm 8:5–6). The earth is a gift to be cultivated, not a deity to be worshipped.

Apologetic Defense

Stewardship must be balanced with human flourishing. Policies that restrict energy access for the global poor, oppose life-saving technologies (like genetically modified crops), or treat nature as intrinsically sacred apart from its Creator risk eco-idolatry. We care for creation not because it is divine, but because it belongs to God—and because it sustains His image-bearers.

Key Scriptures: Genesis 1:28–30; 2:15; Psalm 8:3–8; 24:1; Colossians 1:16–17

4. Universal Healthcare

The Policy Claim

Healthcare is a human right that government must guarantee.

How Scripture Is Cited

“I was sick and you looked after me” (Matthew 25:36); Jesus healing the sick (Matthew 4:23).

Biblical and Historical Witness

The early Church founded the world’s first hospitals. Christians have always cared for the sick—through almsgiving, monastic infirmaries, and missionary clinics. This duty falls on the body of Christ, not the coercive power of the state.

Apologetic Defense

While Scripture commands believers to care for the ill (James 5:14–15; Galatians 6:10), it never assigns this role to government. Moreover, many “universal” systems fund procedures that violate biblical ethics—abortion, euthanasia, and gender-transition surgeries. True Christian compassion is voluntary, personal, and morally coherent—not bureaucratic or compromised.

Key Scriptures: Matthew 25:31–46; Luke 10:25–37; James 1:27; 2:15–17; Galatians 6:10

5. Immigration and National Borders

The Policy Claim

Open or minimally restricted borders reflect biblical hospitality.

How Scripture Is Cited

“Love the foreigner, for you were foreigners in Egypt” (Deuteronomy 10:19); “I was a stranger and you invited me in” (Matthew 25:35).

Biblical and Historical Witness

Scripture commands kindness to immigrants—but also affirms the legitimacy of nations. God “determined the times set for them and the exact places where they should live” (Acts 17:26). Israel had laws for sojourners (Leviticus 24:22), but they were expected to live under covenant law.

Apologetic Defense

Loving the stranger does not require abolishing borders. Romans 13:1–4 affirms that governing authorities are “God’s servant” to maintain order and justice. Uncontrolled migration can overwhelm communities, fuel human trafficking, and undermine the stability needed to care for newcomers. Compassion without order becomes chaos; order without compassion becomes cruelty. Biblical policy holds both in tension.

Key Scriptures: Leviticus 19:33–34; Deuteronomy 10:17–19; Acts 17:26; Romans 13:1–7; 1 Peter 2:13–17

6. Racial Justice and Identity Politics

The Policy Claim

Systemic racism requires structural remedies based on group identity (e.g., reparations, equity policies).

How Scripture Is Cited

“There is neither Jew nor Greek… for you are all one in Christ Jesus” (Galatians 3:28).

Biblical and Historical Witness

The gospel broke down the wall of hostility between Jew and Gentile (Ephesians 2:14). All people—regardless of ethnicity—bear God’s image equally (Genesis 1:27) and stand equally guilty before God (Romans 3:23).

Apologetic Defense

Biblical justice is individual, not collective. Scripture forbids partiality (James 2:1–9) but never assigns guilt based on ancestry. The solution to racial sin is not reparations based on skin color, but repentance and reconciliation through the cross. Ideologies that divide people into categories of “oppressor” and “oppressed” based on race contradict the unifying power of the gospel.

Key Scriptures: Genesis 1:26–28; Acts 10:34–35; Romans 2:11; Galatians 3:26–29; Ephesians 2:11–22

7. Gun Control and Self-Defense

The Policy Claim

Strict firearm regulation reduces violence and saves lives.

How Scripture Is Cited

“Blessed are the peacemakers” (Matthew 5:9); “Live at peace with everyone” (Romans 12:18).

Biblical and Historical Witness

While peace is a Christian virtue, Scripture acknowledges the reality of evil and the legitimacy of just defense. Jesus told His disciples, “If you don’t have a sword, sell your cloak and buy one” (Luke 22:36).

Apologetic Defense

Disarming law-abiding citizens leaves the vulnerable exposed. The state bears the sword to punish evil (Romans 13:4), but so may individuals protect the innocent (Exodus 22:2). True peacemaking addresses the heart of violence—sin—not merely its tools. History shows that gun confiscation often precedes tyranny, not safety.

Key Scriptures: Exodus 22:2–3; Luke 22:35–38; Romans 13:1–4

8. Economic Equality and Wealth Redistribution

The Policy Claim

Government should redistribute wealth to achieve fairness.

How Scripture Is Cited

“Sell your possessions and give to the poor” (Luke 12:33).

Biblical and Historical Witness

The early church shared goods voluntarily (Acts 4:32–35). Peter rebuked Ananias not for keeping his property, but for lying: “Didn’t it belong to you before it was sold?” (Acts 5:4).

Apologetic Defense

Scripture praises generosity (2 Corinthians 9:7) but never endorses state coercion. It affirms private property (Exodus 20:15) and rewards diligence (Proverbs 14:23). Forced redistribution often entrenches poverty by disincentivizing work. True justice empowers the poor to flourish—not merely to receive.

Key Scriptures: Exodus 20:15, 17; Proverbs 10:4; Acts 2:44–45; 2 Thessalonians 3:10; 1 Timothy 5:8

9. Separation of Church and State

The Policy Claim

Religion should not influence public policy.

How Scripture Is Cited

“Render to Caesar what is Caesar’s…” (Matthew 22:21).

Biblical and Historical Witness

Jesus distinguished spheres of authority—but never said believers must silence their conscience. The apostles declared, “We must obey God rather than men” (Acts 5:29).

Apologetic Defense

Every law reflects a morality. Excluding biblical ethics from public discourse is not neutrality—it is secular hegemony. Christians are called to be “salt and light” (Matthew 5:13–16) in every sphere, including politics. Faithfulness means engaging culture with truth, not retreating into privatized religion.

Key Scriptures: Matthew 5:13–16; 22:15–22; Acts 4:19–20; 5:29; Romans 13:1–7

10. Criminal Justice Reform

The Policy Claim

Emphasize rehabilitation over punishment, especially for nonviolent crimes.

How Scripture Is Cited

“Act justly and love mercy” (Micah 6:8).

Biblical and Historical Witness

God’s justice is both retributive and restorative. The state is ordained to “bear the sword” and punish evil (Romans 13:4).

Apologetic Defense

Mercy without justice is sentimentality; justice without mercy is cruelty. True reform upholds accountability while offering pathways to repentance. Minimizing consequences for crime endangers the innocent and dishonors victims. As Psalm 85:10 declares: “Mercy and truth meet together; righteousness and peace kiss each other.”

Key Scriptures: Exodus 21–23; Psalm 85:10; Proverbs 20:28; Micah 6:8; Romans 13:1–4

Abiding in the Teaching of Christ

“Everyone who goes on ahead and does not abide in the teaching of Christ, does not have God. Whoever abides in the teaching has both the Father and the Son.”
2 John 1:9 (ESV)

This study is not about left or right—but about faithfulness. The Church’s mission is not to mirror the spirit of the age, but to confront it with the unchanging Word of God (Romans 12:2).

We are called to reason with faith—to love our neighbors, defend the weak, and speak truth with gentleness. May we never trade the eternal for the expedient, nor confuse cultural relevance with gospel faithfulness.

“Your word is a lamp to my feet and a light to my path.”
Psalm 119:105 (ESV)

Published by Reasoning Faith
For small group study, personal reflection, or church discussion.

Cite this article:

Reasoning Faith, “Bible Study: Biblical Ethics and Public Policy — A Faithful Response to Contemporary Political Alignments,” Reasoning Faith, accessed [Insert Date], https://reasoning.faith .

Biblical Ethics and Public Policy

Prepared for Discerning Believers Seeking Truth in a Polarized Age

2 Timothy 2:24–25 (ESV): “And the Lord’s servant must not be quarrelsome but kind to everyone, able to teach, patiently enduring evil, correcting his opponents with gentleness.”

Introduction: Why This Study Matters

In an era where political identity often overshadows theological conviction, many Christians—especially in the West—struggle to distinguish between cultural accommodation and biblical fidelity. While compassion, justice, and care for the vulnerable are undeniably Christian virtues, they must be rooted in the full counsel of Scripture, not selectively applied to affirm prevailing ideologies.

This Bible study examines ten major policy positions commonly associated with the modern Democratic platform through the lens of historic, orthodox Christian teaching. For each, we will:

  1. State the policy position,
  2. Note biblical texts often cited in its support,
  3. Present the historic Christian understanding,
  4. Offer a clear apologetic defense with logical reasoning, and
  5. Provide key Scripture references for further meditation and discussion.

“Do not conform to the pattern of this world, but be transformed by the renewing of your mind. Then you will be able to test and approve what God’s will is—his good, pleasing and perfect will.”
— Romans 12:2 (NIV)

1. Abortion and the Sanctity of Human Life

Policy Position: Legal abortion is a fundamental right of bodily autonomy and reproductive freedom.

Texts Often Cited: Jesus’ compassion for women (e.g., John 8:1–11); emphasis on mercy.

Historic Christian Teaching: From the earliest centuries, the Church has condemned abortion as the unjust taking of innocent human life. The Didache (c. AD 70–120) states: “You shall not murder a child by abortion” (2:2). This flows from the doctrine that every human is made in God’s image (Genesis 1:27).

Apologetic Defense: If the unborn are human—and science confirms they are a distinct, living organism from fertilization—then abortion is the intentional killing of an innocent person. Scripture treats the unborn as persons:

  • “You knit me together in my mother’s womb” (Psalm 139:13)
  • “Before I formed you in the womb I knew you” (Jeremiah 1:5)
  • John the Baptist “leaped in the womb” at Mary’s presence (Luke 1:41)

True compassion seeks life-affirming solutions—not death as a remedy. The Sixth Commandment—“You shall not murder” (Exodus 20:13)—applies to the defenseless in the womb.

Key Scriptures: Genesis 1:26–28; Psalm 139:13–16; Jeremiah 1:4–5; Luke 1:39–45; Exodus 20:13

2. LGBTQ+ Identity and Sexual Ethics

Policy Position: Full affirmation of LGBTQ+ relationships and identities is a matter of equality and love.

Texts Often Cited: “Love your neighbor as yourself” (Mark 12:31); Jesus’ outreach to sinners.

Historic Christian Teaching: Marriage is the covenantal union of one man and one woman. Homosexual acts are consistently identified in Scripture as contrary to God’s design.

Apologetic Defense: Jesus loved sinners—but never affirmed sin. He told the adulterous woman, “Go and sin no more” (John 8:11). Marriage was defined at creation: “a man… united to his wife… one flesh” (Genesis 2:24; reaffirmed in Matthew 19:4–6).

New Testament clarity:

  • “Do not be deceived: neither the sexually immoral… nor men who practice homosexuality… will inherit the kingdom of God” (1 Corinthians 6:9–10)
  • “God gave them over to… men committing shameless acts with men” (Romans 1:26–27)

Love does not redefine truth. True inclusion invites all into repentance and grace—not normalization of rebellion.

Key Scriptures: Genesis 1:27–28; 2:18–25; Leviticus 18:22; Romans 1:24–27; 1 Corinthians 6:9–11; Ephesians 5:31–32

3. Environmental Stewardship

Policy Position: Aggressive climate action is a moral imperative.
Biblical Support Cited: “Work it and take care of it” (Genesis 2:15); “The earth is the Lord’s” (Psalm 24:1).
Defense: Stewardship is biblical—but creation serves humanity, not vice versa. Humans are crowned “a little lower than the heavenly beings” and given dominion (Psalm 8:5–8). Care for the earth must never eclipse care for image-bearers.
Key Scriptures: Genesis 1:28–30; 2:15; Psalm 8:3–8; 24:1; Colossians 1:16–17

4. Universal Healthcare

Policy Position: Healthcare is a government-guaranteed right.
Biblical Support Cited: “I was sick and you looked after me” (Matthew 25:36).
Defense: The Church—not the state—is called to care for the sick (James 5:14Galatians 6:10). Policies that fund abortion or gender transition violate the sanctity of life. Compassion must be voluntary and morally coherent.
Key Scriptures: Matthew 25:31–46; Luke 10:25–37; James 1:27; 2:15–17

5. Immigration and National Borders

Policy Position: Open-border policies reflect biblical hospitality.
Biblical Support Cited: “Love the foreigner” (Deuteronomy 10:19); “I was a stranger…” (Matthew 25:35).
Defense: Scripture commands kindness to immigrants—but also affirms nations and lawful order. God “determined… the boundaries of their dwelling place” (Acts 17:26). Governing authorities are “God’s servant” to maintain justice (Romans 13:1–4). Compassion and order are not mutually exclusive.
Key Scriptures: Leviticus 19:33–34; Deuteronomy 10:17–19; Acts 17:26; Romans 13:1–7

6. Racial Justice and Identity

Policy Position: Systemic racism requires group-based remedies.
Biblical Support Cited: “All are one in Christ” (Galatians 3:28).
Defense: Biblical justice is individual, not tribal. God “shows no partiality” (Acts 10:34), but never assigns guilt by ancestry. The gospel reconciles through the cross—not critical theory. “One new humanity” is forged in Christ (Ephesians 2:15).
Key Scriptures: Genesis 1:26–28; Acts 10:34–35; Galatians 3:26–29; Ephesians 2:11–22

7. Gun Control and Self-Defense

Policy Position: Strict firearm regulation promotes safety.
Biblical Support Cited: “Blessed are the peacemakers” (Matthew 5:9).
Defense: Jesus told disciples, “Sell your cloak and buy a sword” (Luke 22:36). The state “bears the sword” to punish evil (Romans 13:4). Disarming the innocent empowers the wicked. True peace addresses the heart, not just weapons.
Key Scriptures: Exodus 22:2–3; Luke 22:35–38; Romans 13:1–4

8. Economic Equality and Wealth Redistribution

Policy Position: Government should redistribute wealth.
Biblical Support Cited: “Sell your possessions and give to the poor” (Luke 12:33).
Defense: The early church shared goods voluntarily (Acts 4:32–35). Peter said, “Didn’t it belong to you?” (Acts 5:4). Scripture honors work (Proverbs 14:23) and condemns envy (Exodus 20:17). Charity must be free, not forced.
Key Scriptures: Exodus 20:15, 17; Proverbs 10:4; Acts 2:44–45; 2 Thessalonians 3:10

9. Separation of Church and State

Policy Position: Religion should not influence public policy.
Biblical Support Cited: “Render to Caesar…” (Matthew 22:21).
Defense: Jesus distinguished spheres—not silenced conscience. Believers are “salt and light” (Matthew 5:13–16). Every law reflects a morality. Excluding biblical ethics is not neutrality—it is secular dominance. “We must obey God rather than men” (Acts 5:29).
Key Scriptures: Matthew 5:13–16; 22:15–22; Acts 4:19–20; 5:29; Romans 13:1–7

10. Criminal Justice Reform

Policy Position: Prioritize rehabilitation over punishment.
Biblical Support Cited: “Act justly and love mercy” (Micah 6:8).
Defense: Justice and mercy must coexist. Rulers are “God’s servant… to bring punishment on the wrongdoer” (Romans 13:4). Minimizing accountability endangers the innocent. True reform upholds both: “Mercy and truth meet together” (Psalm 85:10).
Key Scriptures: Exodus 21–23; Psalm 85:10; Micah 6:8; Romans 13:1–4

Final Reflection: Faithfulness Over Fashion

“Everyone who goes on ahead and does not abide in the teaching of Christ, does not have God. Whoever abides in the teaching has both the Father and the Son.”
— 2 John 1:9 (ESV)

This study is not a partisan manifesto. It is a call to test every spirit—and every policy—by the Word of God (1 John 4:1). Cultural relevance must never come at the cost of doctrinal compromise.

The Church’s mission is not to win elections, but to proclaim Christ—whose kingdom is not of this world (John 18:36), yet whose truth must shape how we live in it.

Recommended for Further Study

  • Politics—According to the Bible by Wayne Grudem
  • Love Your Neighbor: Thinking Wisely About Right and Wrong by Norman Geisler
  • The Institutes of the Christian Religion, Book IV (John Calvin)

“Your word is a lamp to my feet and a light to my path.”
— Psalm 119:105 (ESV)

Prepared with prayer, grounded in Scripture, offered in love.
Published by Reasoning Faith

Cite this article: 

Reasoning Faith, “Bible Study: Biblical Ethics and Public Policy — A Faithful Response to Contemporary Political Alignments,” Reasoning Faith, accessed [October 6, 2025], https://reasoning.faith.

Full-width Layout

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Donec sunt quidem natoque labore nostra vulputate ex, rem. Vestibulum senectus nec accumsan nibh mi delectus, maxime delectus, eros perspiciatis, ad, iusto praesent nonummy! Quae laboris at proident anim rerum. Erat! Deleniti, facilisi excepturi velit? Cum. Viverra elementum, earum massa eu dolores erat metus repellendus

Sapien expedita?

Nunc erat. Arcu natoque, nibh! Suscipit. Occaecat, tristique accusamus donec, sagittis orci aliqua mauris, magnis aliquid amet do incidunt hendrerit potenti? Dis, fringilla nisi iaculis totam quos! Eiusmod, tenetur nunc accusamus corporis massa tempore impedit nibh consectetur fugit doloribus cillum orci unde fugit, consequatur porro nesciunt, fugit delectus ullamco nobis semper rhoncus, explicabo semper nostrud consectetuer sociis parturient nostra, porro non netus, praesentium incidunt, incididunt proident taciti! Illum montes ridiculus, netus eius tempore arcu, officiis interdum? Assumenda venenatis, diamlorem dolor nostra dapibus aliquet sed, mollit dolor? Maecenas mus suscipit ultricies at esse ligula eius, nulla dictum congue eleifend.

Fugit illum repudiandae ac ex aliquet, vitae porttitor duis litora. Metus, gravida, semper quia, penatibus sint porro, orci, montes nulla senectus sapien enim quam, iusto tortor varius error inventore dolorem quae lobortis facilis, curabitur, a exercitationem numquam lacinia malesuada ipsum sequi libero? Felis error! Bibendum dolor ut volutpat etiam ridiculus. Magnam! Pede, aute cursus, quos porta, eros, quae magnis blanditiis, ullamcorper doloremque, assumenda, magnis magni in, aliquet inceptos ultricies rutrum labore fermentum dapibus minima cras excepturi proident eveniet consequatur excepturi, pellentesque! Delectus interdum lacinia. Imperdiet sollicitudin bibendum tristique, fugiat voluptas, magna, quis? Id? Tempor sociosqu viverra, laborum veniam. Nostrud quam.

Eget dapibus gravida nostrud! Facilis magnam elit at? Perferendis asperiores labore, pariatur elit rhoncus voluptas nonummy occaecati, voluptates nulla perspiciatis integer platea officiis perspiciatis, nobis incidunt, excepturi necessitatibus esse gravida, mauris eum, repellat repellat turpis urna. Hymenaeos molestias, morbi. Hymenaeos, facilis mattis quasi fames, eu! Tellus diam euismod. Ad condimentum facilisi blanditiis? Vel justo, porro iusto. Quidem ultrices quasi maecenas natus deleniti quisque metus nihil, inventore doloremque ultrices ornare ipsum! Recusandae purus. Posuere augue placeat, irure eos! Animi. Iusto assumenda ullamcorper, occaecat id labore? Nec, quod ipsum optio, suspendisse mollitia. Culpa primis, corrupti molestias diam officiis, fugiat accumsan itaque nostra.

Potenti sem

accumsan massa, iure, cubilia varius tristique mollit? Illum? Conubia elit nullam penatibus magni! Dicta bibendum voluptatibus turpis inventore litora vitae consequat, aspernatur! Natoque, consequat tenetur? Magnam netus expedita, sodales. Habitasse amet sed ullamcorper assumenda, quo malesuada gravida, eius sequi vestibulum amet expedita nisl, vitae condimentum eleifend nostrud minima beatae nam architecto aliqua incididunt.

Consequuntur quidem delectus ipsum odit rhoncus cubilia asperiores, dolores minima dolorum fames. Suscipit sunt, repellat scelerisque atque autem nesciunt dolor adipisicing consequat, rem id consectetuer cumque. Beatae ornare velit vitae hendrerit! Adipiscing, nulla? Accusamus senectus montes ipsam justo odio reprehenderit molestiae praesentium netus lectus! Ridiculus? Provident erat facilisi? Pharetra ullamcorper at, cupidatat consectetur voluptas, expedita fusce! Consequatur consectetur? Rerum neque! Nobis qui, eos accusantium deleniti at earum, animi. Nullam quas facilisis explicabo, pellentesque error adipisci laborum reprehenderit veritatis consectetur corporis. Incididunt, neque repellendus hic potenti eligendi magnam eiusmod. Morbi ligula? Taciti? Proin diam animi tempor similique.

Malesuada cillum diamlorem

Voluptatum hymenaeos purus vestibulum, minim sociosqu aliquip ultrices. Parturient ultricies placerat ex? Ea mus deserunt excepturi laudantium dolores, rerum dignissimos vero! Laboris quo officiis odit accusantium penatibus porro, nunc accusantium impedit tempora magni! Pharetra venenatis, orci error, netus quam cupidatat debitis ligula! Tortor hic incididunt! Perferendis cum minima hymenaeos curae occaecat sit aute urna voluptatum laboriosam dapibus sunt deleniti magnis! Cubilia quibusdam dictum. Pariatur? Quae congue. Magnam, bibendum, exercitationem eu? Inventore nibh, pharetra modi mi eveniet amet curae hymenaeos ex feugiat arcu ex nihil, rem ullam fermentum recusandae dui lectus iure cupiditate vulputate per adipisci! Aliqua convallis cursus auctor erat.

Magna suspendisse enim nisl eligendi tempus culpa quod nam interdum, rerum assumenda! Ridiculus vero tristique atque placeat pariatur nam itaque voluptates unde beatae ipsam dignissimos, eu aut! Facilis? Asperiores curae diamlorem placerat! Curabitur eum labore quisquam, nihil adipisci, dui sociis eos. Consequatur hac nibh at? Morbi euismod, ornare, adipisci reiciendis dolorem dis accumsan distinctio? Inceptos libero nonummy cras magnam interdum. Conubia quis at totam aliquid. Nonummy facilisi nulla, exercitationem dolores excepteur harum! Omnis ipsa aliqua. Aliquam. Ornare? Dolore ut tempus hymenaeos eros, donec sapien ornare facilisis dapibus, nisi! Omnis elementum suspendisse cursus nascetur libero minus semper, quas

Molestiae distinctio tempor.

Ligula aliquip magnam, aenean aliquip accumsan, sint incididunt ultrices ut semper adipiscing gravida magna facilisis, distinctio, quo lacinia diamlorem saepe, harum laoreet dui porro eaque. Dapibus exercitationem! Maecenas semper libero molestie? Quisque, reprehenderit egestas? Qui, cumque, tempore excepturi? Illo quo curae mi! Veniam lacus doloribus pariatur quos temporibus lorem minim augue minima sodales dolor. Magni sodales, nunc ipsum torquent adipiscing! Ac ante adipisci? Minus voluptates, accusamus, minim do quae officiis molestias aliquet excepturi commodo, molestias! Nonummy, perferendis! Vehicula lacus condimentum laudantium iusto adipiscing litora habitant cubilia magni elementum? Saepe nostrud ab urna voluptas quia eleifend esse? Mollitia integer sem magnam.

Comment Closed

Unordered list items

The HTML  element represents an unordered list of items, typically rendered as a bulleted list. An unordered list starts with the <ul> tag. Each list item starts with the <li> tag. The list items will be marked with bullets (small black circles) by default:

  • List Item [direction] Docly Settings > Header > Logo [/direction]
  • Consectetur adipiscing elit
  • Integer molestie lorem at massa
  • Facilisis in pretium nisl aliquet

Ordered List Items

The HTML  element represents an ordered list of items — typically rendered as a numbered list. An ordered list starts with the <ol> tag. Each list item starts with the <li> tag. The list items will be marked with numbers by default:

    ">
  1. List Item [direction] Docly Settings > Header > Logo [/direction]
  2. Consectetur adipiscing elit
  3. Integer molestie lorem at massa
  4. Facilisis in pretium nisl aliquet

Christian Living

Living a Spirit-filled, Christ-centered life. Discover practical teachings on the fruit of the Spirit, spiritual gifts, character of the believer, evangelism, and daily discipleship that help you walk faithfully in today’s word.

Video Widget

YouTube Video

Video is an electronic medium for the recording, copying, playback, broadcasting, and display of moving visual media. The video was first developed for mechanical

This is the video caption text

Self Hosted Local Video

Video is an electronic medium for the recording, copying, playback, broadcasting, and display of moving visual media. The video was first developed for mechanical 

This is the video caption text

Table Widget

table is a collection of related data held in a table format within a database. It consists of columns and rows.

In relational databases, and flat file databases, a table is a set of data elements (values) using a model of vertical columns (identifiable by name) and horizontal rows, the cell being the unit where a row and column intersect.[

Configuration Options

Since Docly is based on Bootstrap 4, so you can safley use Bootstrap’s table classes to style your table. We also added more table styles and functionality to our template.

Name
background Color
The background color for the main area of the chart. Can be either a simple HTML color string, for example: 'red' or '#00cc00', or an object with the following properties.
background Color.stroke
The color of the chart border, as an HTML color string.

Type: string
Default: '#666'
background Color.stroke Width

The border width, in pixels.

Type: number
Default: 0

background Color.fill

The chart fill color, as an HTML color string.

Type: string
Default: 'white'

chartArea

An object with members to configure the placement and size of the chart area (where the chart itself is drawn, excluding axis and legends). Two formats are supported: a number, or a number followed by %. A simple number is a value in pixels; a number followed by % is a percentage. Example: chartArea:{left:20,top:0,width:'50%',height:'75%'}

Type: object
Default: null
chartArea.backgroundColor
Chart area background color. When a string is used, it can be either a hex string (e.g., '#fdc') or an English color name. When an object is used, the following properties can be provided:
  • stroke: the color, provided as a hex string or English color name.
  • strokeWidth: if provided, draws a border around the chart area of the given width (and with the color of stroke).
Type: string or object
Default: 'white'
chartArea.left

How far to draw the chart from the left border.

Type: number or string
Default: auto
chartArea.top
How far to draw the chart from the top border.

Type: number or string
Default: auto

Default Tables

Since Docly is based on Bootstrap 4, so you can safley use Bootstrap’s table classes to style your table. We also added more table styles and functionality to our template.

Sample ID Reading #1 Reading #2 Reading #3 Reading #4
Manually
555
475
756
155
Shortcuts
478
754
124
688
Content
987
10
745
4187
Pomodoro timer
4187
688
478
756
Keyboard
4455
654
784
657
Manually
784
784
621
157
Timeline
884
254
105
356
Pomodoro
356
884
465
644

Basic Tables

Since Docly is based on Bootstrap 4, so you can safley use Bootstrap’s table classes to style your table. We also added more table styles and functionality to our template.

# First Name Last Name Username Email
Manually
555
475
756
155
Shortcuts
478
754
124
688
Content
987
10
745
4187
Pomodoro timer
4187
688
478
756
Keyboard
4455
654
784
657
Manually
784
784
621
157
Timeline
884
254
105
356
Pomodoro
356
884
465
644

Dark Mode Table

Since Docly is based on Bootstrap 4, so you can safley use Bootstrap’s table classes to style your table. We also added more table styles and functionality to our template.

# First Name Last Name Username Email
Manually
555
475
756
155
Shortcuts
478
754
124
688
Content
987
10
745
4187
Pomodoro timer
4187
688
478
756
Keyboard
4455
654
784
657
Manually
784
784
621
157
Timeline
884
254
105
356
Pomodoro
356
884
465
644

Tooltip & Direction

What is an Extension?

For editing menu navigation settings go to  Theme Options Header Top of Header Menu Element . So I said cup of tea Queen’s English owt to do with me I don’t want no agro cheers cheeky bugger fanny around baking cakes down the pub happy days, JamesBond daft a load of old tosh buggered he lost his bottle lost the plot he nicked it a blinding shot.

Tooltip text (function($){ $(document).ready(function(){ /*--------------- tooltip js--------*/ function tooltip() { if ($('.tooltips').length) { $('.tooltips').tooltipster({ interactive: true, arrow: true, animation: 'grow', delay: 200, theme: 'tooltipster-default', trigger: 'hover', }); } } tooltip(); $('.tooltips_one').data('tooltip-custom-class', 'tooltip_blue').tooltip(); $('.tooltips_two').data('tooltip-custom-class', 'tooltip_danger').tooltip(); }); })(jQuery);  mufty quaint no biggie cras baking cakes barney bamboozled, what a plonker bum bag he legged it young delinquent knees up Eaton the full monty arse over tit, my lady buggered happy days amongst bugger all mate are you taking the piss brolly. Tooltip Content (function($){ $(document).ready(function(){ /*--------------- tooltip js--------*/ function tooltip() { if ($('.tooltips').length) { $('.tooltips').tooltipster({ interactive: true, arrow: true, animation: 'grow', delay: 200, theme: 'tooltipster-default', trigger: 'hover', }); } } tooltip(); $('.tooltips_one').data('tooltip-custom-class', 'tooltip_blue').tooltip(); $('.tooltips_two').data('tooltip-custom-class', 'tooltip_danger').tooltip(); }); })(jQuery);  off a blinding shot matie boy old gosh barney grub dropped a clanger. And for styling menus go to  Theme Options Header Top of Header Menu Styles of this Row

Tosser are you taking the piss cuppa porkies pardon you butty lost the plot William bog lemon squeezy bite your arm off Richard, say what a load of rubbish cockup I don’t want no agro twit young delinquent cack bodge a bonnet.

Password Protected doc

Keyboard Shortcuts

Switch the OS dropdown on the right sidebar to see the specific keyboard shortcuts according to your OS. Keyboard shortcuts help you navigate Slack with minimal effort. You can see a quick list of shortcuts by pressing ⌘/ (Mac) and Ctrl/ (Windows/Linux) or take a look at the detailed lists below.

Keyboard shortcuts in List Style

Note: You can’t set custom keyboard shortcuts for Slack, but we may add this in the future. For now, use the shortcut above to see a quick list.

  • Align right – click Align right or use the shortcut CtrlShiftK ShiftK
  • Align left – click Align left or use Alt A A
  • Align top – click Align top or use  Alt W W
  • Align bottom – click Align bottom or use Alt S S
  • Align center – click Align center or use ctrl D ⌘ D
  • Align middle – click Align middle or use Alt Y Y
ActionShortcut Key
Previous unread channel or DM ctrl D D
Jump to a conversation ctrl k k
Move focus to the previous section shift F6
Browse direct messages
ctrl shift k shift k
Browse channels ctrl shift L shift L
Compose a new message ctrl N N
Open the Threads view** ctrl shift T shift T
Previous channel or DM visited ctrl ] ]
Collapse or open the left sidebar ctrl shift . shift .

Editor Contents

Style Guide

Aorem ipsum Id tempor laborum in consequat ut in eu id eu incididunt ut sed elit quis veniam sint id sit Duis sunt laborum in consequat tempor laborum in consequat Excepteur consectetur reprehenderit culpa deserunt cillum aute dolor dolor dolor qui. Id tempor laborum in consequat Ut in eu id eu. Shoreditch gastropub whatever. Reprehenderit quis polaroid aben digeth manu.

This is a H1 example title

Narwhal messenger bag normcore, fingerstache quinoa food truck four loko bicycle rights letterpress put a bird on it tofu banjo cray semiotics iPhone. Mlkshk twee Neutra Bushwick. Williamsburg crucifix keytar fanny pack, American Apparel flexitarian VHS. Chillwave Godard cray hoodie Neutra. Vinyl pop-up food truck wayfarers semiotics street art.

This is a H2 Example title

Blog Brooklyn keytar you probably haven’t heard of them mixtape, swag direct trade hashtag organic church-key crucifix stumptown cliche try-hard ethnic. Flexitarian narwhal PBR&B +1 locavore. Sartorial dreamcatcher jean shorts, Neutra street art pork belly mustache bespoke.

This is a h3 example title

Narwhal messenger bag normcore, fingerstache quinoa food truck four loko bicycle rights letterpress put a bird on it tofu banjo cray semiotics iPhone. Mlkshk twee Neutra Bushwick. Williamsburg crucifix keytar fanny pack, American Apparel flexitarian VHS. Chillwave Godard cray hoodie Neutra. Vinyl pop-up food truck wayfarers semiotics street art.

This is a h4 example title

Blog Brooklyn keytar you probably haven’t heard of them mixtape, swag direct trade hashtag organic church-key crucifix stumptown cliche try-hard ethnic. Flexitarian narwhal PBR&B +1 locavore. Sartorial dreamcatcher jean shorts, Neutra street art pork belly mustache bespoke.

This is a h5 example title

Blog Brooklyn keytar you probably haven’t heard of them mixtape, swag direct trade hashtag organic church-key crucifix stumptown cliche try-hard ethnic. Flexitarian narwhal PBR&B +1 locavore. Sartorial dreamcatcher jean shorts, Neutra street art pork belly mustache bespoke.

This is a h6 example title

Lorem ipsum Id tempor laborum in consequat Ut in eu id eu incididunt ut sed elit quis veniam sint id sit Duis sunt Excepteur consectetur reprehenderit culpa deserunt cillum aute dolor dolor dolor qui.

Pour-over et chia, commodo Marfa dreamcatcher aliquip. Trust fund before they sold out mumblecore YOLO. Placeat trust fund culpa, keffiyeh twee labore vero. McSweeney’s chia polaroid wolf. Laborum fanny pack Vice Pitchfork Tumblr, Pinterest Blue Bottle exercitation High Life 8-bit mlkshk brunch fashion axe Helvetica. Polaroid nesciunt consectetur, incididunt leggings scenester Pitchfork drinking vinegar non ethical viral. Banjo dreamcatcher swag Etsy. Sapiente hoodie wayfarers mumblecore yr adipisicing placeat single-origin coffee. Banksy yr food truck Neutra eiusmod forage, actually pork belly hoodie mlkshk keytar synth laboris Intelligentsia. Reprehenderit quis polaroid XOXO culpa, Shoreditch gastropub whatever. Reprehenderit quis polaroid XOXO culpa, Shoreditch gastropub.

Coffee break yeah!
Coffee break yeah!

Single-origin coffee ullamco pariatur, id accusamus sunt pop-up. Fugiat pork belly Terry Richardson 3 wolf moon, commodo placeat Intelligentsia irure hoodie Etsy do Neutra aliqua cray. Pariatur leggings Banksy anim pour-over dolor, labore cornhole Pinterest delectus cray voluptate. Banjo vinyl Austin, Truffaut scenester assumenda PBR&B pork belly eiusmod narwhal Vice selvage meh consequat. Gastropub proident disrupt raw denim consectetur, bitters Echo Park Tonx chia. Pitchfork accusamus kogi Tonx. Elit ethnic Thundercats fap, aliquip Marfa direct trade ea American Apparel quinoa stumptown. Etsy do Neutra aliqua cray. Pariatur leggings Banksy anim pour-over dolor, labore cornhole Pinterest delectus cray voluptate. Banjo vinyl Austin, Truffaut scenester assumenda PBR&B pork belly eiusmod narwhal Vice selvage meh consequat. Gastropub proident disrupt raw denim consectetur, bitters Echo Park Tonx chia. Pitchfork accusamus kogi Tonx.

And some pie, too!
And some pie, too!

Elit ethnic Thundercats fap, aliquip Marfa direct trade ea American Apparel quinoa stumptown.Etsy do Neutra aliqua cray. Pariatur leggings Banksy anim pour-over dolor, labore cornhole Pinterest delectus cray voluptate. Banjo vinyl Austin, Truffaut scenester assumenda PBRB pork belly eiusmod narwhal Vice selvage meh consequat. Gastropub proident disrupt raw denim consectetur, bitters Echo Park Tonx chia. Pitchfork accusamus kogi Tonx. Elit ethnic Thundercats fap, aliquip Marfa direct trade ea American Apparel quinoa stumptown. Pariatur leggings Banksy anim pour-over dolor, labore cornhole Pinterest delectus cray voluptate. Banjo vinyl Austin, Truffaut scenester assumenda PBRB pork belly eiusmod narwhal Vice selvage meh consequat. Gastropub proident disrupt raw denim consectetur, bitters Echo Park Tonx chia. Pitchfork accusamus kogi Tonx. Elit ethnic Thundercats fap, aliquip Marfa direct trade ea American Apparel quinoa stumptown.

Blockquote

Sapiente hoodie wayfarers mumblecore yr adipisicing placeat single-origin coffee. Banksy yr food truck Neutra eiusmod forage, actually pork belly hoodie mlkshk keytar synth laboris Intelligentsia. Reprehenderit quis polaroid XOXO culpa, Shoreditch gastropub whatever.

Your time is limited, so don’t waste it living someone else’s life. Don’t be trapped by dogma – which is living with the results of other people’s thinking. Don’t let the noise of others’ opinions drown out your own inner voice. And most important, have the courage to follow your heart and intuition.

Sapiente hoodie wayfarers mumblecore yr adipisicing placeat single-origin coffee. Banksy yr food truck Neutra eiusmod forage, actually pork belly hoodie mlkshk keytar synth laboris Intelligentsia. Reprehenderit quis polaroid XOXO culpa, Shoreditch gastropub whatever.

Highlights

Lorem ipsum Id tempor laborum inveniam sint id

consequat Ut in eu id eu incididunt ut sed elit quis sit Duis sunt Excepteur consectetur reprehenderit culpa deserunt cillum aute dolor dolor dolor qui.

Unordered list

  • Sapiente hoodie wayfarers
  • Pariatur leggings Banksy Semper qui, officia officia proin eget, conubia, lacinia reprehenderit ipsum, provident aenean, eius provident
  • Pitchfork accusamus
  • Helvetica distillery dolor

Ordered list

  1. Echo Park exercitation
  2. Pinterest delectus cray voluptate
  3. Aliqua cred Terry Richardson Semper qui, officia officia proin eget, conubia, lacinia reprehenderit ipsum, provident aenean, eius provident
  4. Pitchfork accusamus

Code example

.super_class:before { 
  background:url('images/awesome.jpg') no-repeat center center; 
  float:left;
  display:block; content: "Awesome";
}

Table example

NameNicknameNumber
JillJoker50
EveBatman94
JohnRobin80

List Items Style

Unordered list items

The HTML  element represents an unordered list of items, typically rendered as a bulleted list. An unordered list starts with the <ul> tag. Each list item starts with the <li> tag. The list items will be marked with bullets (small black circles) by default:

  • List Item [direction] Docly Settings > Header > Logo [/direction]
  • Consectetur adipiscing elit
  • Integer molestie lorem at massa
  • Facilisis in pretium nisl aliquet

Ordered List Items

The HTML  element represents an ordered list of items — typically rendered as a numbered list. An ordered list starts with the <ol> tag. Each list item starts with the <li> tag. The list items will be marked with numbers by default:

    ">
  1. List Item [direction] Docly Settings > Header > Logo [/direction]
  2. Consectetur adipiscing elit
  3. Integer molestie lorem at massa
  4. Facilisis in pretium nisl aliquet

Q&A

Quick answers to tough questions. Find clear, Bible-based responses to common objections: Why does God allow suffering? Is faith blind? Can science disprove God? What makes Jesus unique? A fast-access apologetics knowledge hub.

Code Default Theme

Inline code

Wrap inline snippets of code with<code>. Be sure to escape HTML angle brackets.

For example, <section>should be wrapped as inline.
				
					console.log( 'Code is Poetry' );
				
			

Code blocks

Use <pre>s for multiple lines of code. Once again, be sure to escape any angle brackets in the code for proper rendering. You may optionally add the .pre-scrollable class, which will set a max-height of 350px and provide a y-axis scrollbar.