Some people believe truth is objective and can be discovered.
Others believe truth is relative, constructed by cultures, or ultimately unknowable.
Before examining questions about God, morality, or salvation, a more basic question must be asked:
Can anything actually be true?
If truth exists, then beliefs can be examined and tested.
If truth does not exist, then no belief—including the claim that truth does not exist—can ultimately be trusted.
In everyday life, people rely on truth constantly:
when evaluating evidence,
when expecting honesty,
when seeking justice,
and when deciding what to believe.
So the question is not simply whether truth exists, but whether it can be examined.