
A Self-Paced Bible Study For Everybody.
Whether you're skeptical, curious, brand new to Christianity, a long-time believer, or somewhere in between, Walk In Faith helps you understand what you're reading and how it applies to everyday life.
- No church background required.
- No theology degree required.
- Just Scripture, honest questions, and one chapter at a time.
Type what's on your mind. Get a verse that meets you there.
Not a substitute for Scripture or community — a starting point. The Bible Chat pulls a relevant verse, explains what it actually means, and connects it back to what you're carrying.
Start your journey
If you're curious about Christianity, skeptical of faith, new to the Bible, or simply trying to understand what Christians believe, start here.
Jesus Was A Real Person
Before discussing faith, miracles, prayer, or Christianity, start with a simpler question: did Jesus of Nazareth actually exist?
Why Jesus?
If Jesus was a real person, why do billions of people still follow Him today? Learn who Jesus was, what made Him different, and why His life continues to influence the world.
Ask Questions
Explore common questions about Christianity, faith, suffering, prayer, doubt, and the Bible.
Prayer Journal
Track your questions, prayers, reflections, gratitude, and answered prayers as you move through your journey.
I never planned on building a Christian website.
Less than a year ago, I wasn't seriously studying the Bible either.
As I started reading Scripture for myself, I realized many of my assumptions about Christianity came from things I had heard rather than things I had actually explored.
Walk In Faith started as a way to organize what I was learning and the questions I was asking.
I'm not a pastor or a theologian. I'm someone trying to figure this out in real time, just like the next person.
If you're exploring Christianity for yourself, I hope it helps.
Let's get something out of the way right now. Jesus was a real person who walked the earth in human form.
This isn't a faith claim. It's a historical one. Nearly every serious historian, religious or not, agrees that Jesus of Nazareth was a real person who lived in first-century Judea. Roman and Jewish sources from outside the Bible reference Him directly. Whether or not you believe what He taught is a separate question. That He existed isn't really up for debate.
The Old Testament, in 2 minutes.
You're about to read the New Testament — the story of Jesus. But the New Testament constantly references people, places, and promises from the Old Testament (everything that happened before Jesus). Here's the cheat sheet so none of it feels confusing.
God creates the world. People walk away from Him. God picks one family — Abraham's — to start putting it back together. That family becomes the nation of Israel, God's chosen people. Israel is supposed to show the world what God is like, but they keep failing. Through it all, God keeps promising a Messiah — a rescuer who will fix what's broken. The Old Testament ends still waiting. The New Testament opens with Jesus arriving.
God promises an old, childless man that his descendants will become a great nation and bless the whole world. Abraham believes God and leaves everything. That promise is the seed of Israel — and eventually, Jesus.
The miracle child born to Abraham and Sarah in their old age. He's the proof God keeps His word. The promise passes through him to the next generation.
A flawed schemer who wrestles with God and gets a new name: Israel. His twelve sons become the twelve tribes of Israel. The nation literally takes his name.
When the New Testament says Abraham, Isaac, or Israel "failed," it's not an insult — it's the whole point. Even God's chosen people couldn't live up to God's standard on their own. That's why Jesus shows up. He succeeds where everyone else fell short.
The New Testament, one book at a time
The Gospels
Paul's Letters
General Letters
Prophecy
Built to make the Bible easier to understand.
- No pressure.
- No schedules.
- No commitment.
- Move at your own pace.
- 01Read
Start with a chapter of Scripture.
- 02Understand
Get a plain-English breakdown: what happened, why it matters, the historical context, and what it teaches about God and people.
- 03Reflect
Answer practical questions designed to help you apply the lesson to your own life.
- 04Document Your Journey
Record your notes, prayers, questions, lessons, and personal reflections.
- 05Take The Next Step
Move to the next chapter whenever you're ready.
One chapter. One lesson. One step at a time.
Not ready for chapter one? Start here.
Timeless wisdom from Scripture on marriage, parenting, anxiety, leadership, forgiveness, and purpose. Christian or not, this is practical life advice that has shaped people for thousands of years.
You don't need to have all the answers today.
You don't need to know where the road leads. You just need to take the next step.
- Read the chapter.
- Think about the lesson.
- Answer the questions.
- See where the journey takes you.
