How To Use This Site
The Truth Project is a resource library for exploring Jesus, Scripture, and early Christian thought. It gathers quotes, notes, videos, reflections, and source material around some of the big questions of faith.
Start With The Home Page
Begin with Rob Packer's introduction video. Rob explains the heart behind the project through the idea of "filters" - the assumptions and traditions that can shape the way we see truth.
The home page also gives you several simple ways to begin exploring:
- A Good Place To Start: a curated pathway for new visitors.
- Search: look for entries by keyword, title, author, or topic.
- Popular Topics: see the most visited areas of the library.
- Popular Entries: jump into individual entries others are reading.
- Recent Entries: see what has been added most recently.
Use Start Here
The Start Here section is the easiest way into the site. It groups selected entries into helpful pathways, so you can explore one question at a time without needing to browse the whole library straight away.
These pathways include common questions about God, judgment, hell, restoration, and salvation; early church voices and what they believed; and translation questions around words such as "eternal," "punishment," "perish," and "hell."
Browse Topics
The Topics page contains the full Truth Project collection. Topics include areas such as the character of God, biblical exegesis, hell, fire of God, restoration of all things, mercy, love of God, and many more.
You can browse all topics, search by keyword, or filter the entries by topic and author. Once you open a topic, you will see entry cards connected to that topic. Click any card to view the full entry.
Explore Authors
The Authors page lists the writers, teachers, theologians, early church voices, and other sources represented in the collection. Each author page includes background information and links to entries connected with that author.
Follow The Cross-References
Entries are linked across the site. One entry may appear under several topics, and each topic tag can take you into related material. Author names also link to author pages, helping you follow a thread from one entry into a wider body of thought.
When you are viewing an entry from a topic, navigation links at the bottom of the entry page let you move to the previous or next entry in that topic. This makes it easy to work through a topic in order.
Register For Personal Tools
You can register and log in to make the site more useful for your own study.
Once logged in, you can bookmark entries you want to return to, add private notes to entries, and view your bookmarks and notes from your dashboard.
This is helpful if you are reading slowly, preparing a study, or collecting thoughts as you explore.