You Are Welcome to Believe — But You Are Not Free to Rewrite Scripture
“You Are Welcome to Believe — But You Are Not Free to Rewrite Scripture”
In every generation, people bring their own backgrounds, philosophies, and worldviews into their encounter with Christianity. That’s normal. That’s human. And that’s part of the journey of faith.
But there is a line that no one — no movement, no ideology, no culture — has the authority to cross:
You may interpret Scripture.
You may wrestle with Scripture.
You may question Scripture.
But you may not rewrite Scripture.
The Bible is not a personal diary.
It is not a political manifesto.
It is not a cultural mirror.
It is not a canvas for self‑expression.
It is revelation — something given, not invented.
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1. Interpretation is human. Alteration is rebellion.
Every believer must interpret Scripture.
That’s part of discipleship.
But altering Scripture is something entirely different.
It is the attempt to:
• remove what is uncomfortable
• add what is convenient
• reshape God’s words to fit human desires
• turn revelation into self‑justification
Interpretation asks, “What does God mean?”
Alteration says, “I will decide what God should have said.”
One is humble.
The other is pride in its purest form.
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2. Scripture does not belong to us — we belong to it.
People today speak as if the Bible were a flexible document, open to revision whenever society shifts. But Scripture is not a cultural product. It is not owned by any group, movement, or ideology.
You can approach it.
You can study it.
You can disagree with it.
You can struggle with it.
But you cannot change it.
Because it is not yours.
It is not mine.
It is not ours.
It is God’s.
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3. Christianity welcomes everyone — but it does not rewrite itself for anyone.
This is the balance the Church has always held:
• Everyone is invited to Christ.
• No one is invited to edit Christ.
The Gospel is not clay to be molded.
It is a cornerstone to be built upon.
When people reshape Scripture to match their worldview, they are not practicing Christianity.
They are practicing self‑worship with biblical vocabulary.
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4. The moment Scripture becomes negotiable, it becomes meaningless.
If the text can be changed:
• to fit modern trends
• to justify personal behavior
• to align with political agendas
• to avoid discomfort
• to affirm whatever someone wants affirmed
then Scripture stops being Scripture.
It becomes a mirror reflecting our desires instead of a window revealing God’s truth.
And a faith built on a mirror collapses the moment the viewer changes.
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5. Respect your beliefs — but respect the Bible too.
You can come from any background.
You can hold any ideology.
You can wrestle with any question.
You can bring your whole life to the foot of the cross.
But you cannot bring a pen to rewrite the words.
Christianity has room for every seeker.
But it does not bend its foundation to match the seeker’s preferences.
The Bible is not a document we edit.
It is a truth we encounter.
And encountering truth means letting it shape us —
not reshaping it to suit us.

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