A free, scholarly resource to equip Christian believers — of every denomination — with evidence-based answers for honest dialogue with their Muslim neighbors, family, and friends.
Every year, millions of Christians find themselves in conversations they did not expect — a Muslim colleague at work, a family member exploring conversion, a neighbor who challenges you on what they believe about the Bible. Most of you want to respond with truth, but don't even know where to begin. You talked about Jesus and got nowhere.
This site was built for those critical moments where facts matter. Not to just to win arguments but to give critical discussion a foundation of actual evidence — historical, textual, and archaeological — so they can respond with both clarity and kindness.
This resource site was created for truth-seekers to quietly study before a conversation gets difficult.
"The Lord's servant must not be quarrelsome but must be kind to everyone, able to teach, not resentful. Opponents must be gently instructed, in the hope that God will grant them repentance leading them to a knowledge of the truth."
2 Timothy 2:24–25
Jeremiah 31:33–34 contains one of the most remarkable promises in all of Scripture: a coming covenant where God's law would no longer be an external code to be enforced, but something written directly on human hearts. "No longer will they teach their neighbor, or say to one another, 'Know the LORD,' because they will all know me, from the least of them to the greatest." The knowledge of God would become personal, internal, and freely embraced.
That promise is the seed of something civilization has been growing from ever since — the idea that conscience cannot be coerced, that truth persuades rather than compels, that bearing with one another across difference is not weakness but the mark of a transformed heart. Romans 14 describes what this looks like in practice: holding strong conviction without requiring the crushing of everyone who differs.
This resource is built in that tradition. It does not threaten. It does not legislate. It presents evidence, follows the paper trail, and trusts that truth has its own weight. The instruction in 2 Timothy 2:24–25 is the operating principle: gently instruct opponents, in the hope that God grants them repentance. The outcome is His. The faithfulness in presenting truth is ours.
Every claim on this site traces back to a verifiable source — the Torah, the Dead Sea Scrolls, Bereishit Rabbah, Sahih al-Bukhari, the Codex Sinaiticus. Nothing is asserted without a paper trail. Muslim scholars themselves are cited wherever they acknowledge the same evidence.
The goal is not to humiliate. The goal is to present truth clearly and let the evidence speak. Muslims are people made in the image of God, and they deserve honest engagement — not caricature. Hard conversations with them can be held with gentleness and truth.
This is not a debate club or a platform for outrage. This is a toolkit. It is built for anyone who wants to be ready when the conversation comes — not to crush, but to illuminate. There is a difference between defending your faith and attacking someone else's character.
This resource is non-sectarian. The evidence of Torah integrity and isra'iliyyat borrowing is relevant to anyone who holds the authority of Scripture.
This site does not hide its purpose. But if you are a Muslim who genuinely wants to examine the historical record and compare it against Islamic claims, you are welcome here. The sources cited are ones Muslim scholars themselves recognize.
Christians in marriages or close family relationships with Muslims face a particular kind of pressure — the pressure to be silent about what they believe. This resource exists to help those people hold their faith with confidence and clarity, even in difficult relational dynamics.
If you came here to fact-check, you are in the right place. Every claim links to a primary source. Every comparison cites chapter and verse. The evidence is meant to be verified, not just believed.
The Church was not called to disappear quietly from the public square. It was called to be a city on a hill, a light that cannot be hidden. That calling does not change when the question is difficult, when the conversation is uncomfortable, or when the cultural pressure is to say nothing at all.
This site is a small act of obedience to that calling. It is free because truth should not be behind a paywall. It is in plain language because scholarship is not a credential — it is a responsibility. And it is built with care because the people asking these questions deserve more than slogans.
"You are the light of the world. A city set on a hill cannot be hidden."
Matthew 5:14May this resource help you stand steady, speak clearly, and remain a light — wherever you are placed.