The Truth Audit
A logic-based investigation into truth, deception, and salvation
A logic-based investigation into truth, deception, and salvation
What if the most important questions in life deserve more than quick answers?
People disagree about God, truth, and salvation—not because they don’t care, but because they start from different assumptions and trust different authorities.
The Truth Audit exists to help people slow down and ask better questions.
Not emotional questions.
Not cultural questions.
Truth questions.
This guided tool uses logic, Scripture, and God’s own tests for truth to examine what we believe—and why. It doesn’t attack people or traditions.
It evaluates claims.
Wherever you’re starting from—religious, skeptical, or unsure—you’re invited to walk through a clear, step-by-step investigation that leads to the heart of the biblical gospel.
—Or, if you're ready to skip to the punchline—
What this is:
A guided investigation, not a debate
A logic-based walkthrough, not a sermon
A tool for testing truth claims using Scripture
What this is not:
An attack on people or churches
A pressure tactic
A replacement for conversation
This tool works best when questions are allowed to do their work.
You can stop at any point.
You can explore other paths later.
Truth does not fear examination.
This investigation exists because Christians believe truth is meant to be shared, not imposed.
Jesus instructed His followers to make His message known openly, not through coercion, pressure, or force, but through teaching, witness, and clarity.
“Go therefore and make disciples of all the nations…teaching them to observe all things that I have commanded you.”
— Matthew 28:19–20
Scripture also calls Christians to be prepared to explain what they believe and why they believe it:
“Always be ready to give a defense to everyone who asks you a reason for the hope that is in you, with meekness and fear.”
— 1 Peter 3:15
The Truth Audit was developed to assist with that responsibility, not to replace it.
It is not a substitute for personal conviction, conversation, or conscience before God.
It does not assume agreement.
It does not demand a response.
It invites examination.
People are free to stop at any point.
Truth does not require compulsion.
This investigation examines ideas, not people. Participation is always voluntary.
Prefer something distraction-free?
The Truth Audit is also available as a pocket-sized, offline field tool—an evangelistic Swiss Army knife designed for real conversations in the real world.
How to Use This Tool
This investigation is designed to be explored slowly and honestly.
It works best when questions are allowed to do their work.
If you’re walking through this with someone else:
Let them read.
Let them choose paths.
Don’t rush to conclusions.
Don’t argue points before they’re ready.
Truth does not require pressure.
It requires clarity.
The goal is not to win an argument, but to remove obstacles that prevent trust in Christ.