Bible on Acceptance into Heaven

Christians love to preach. Some do it with kindness, some with fire, but almost always with the same assumption: that they hold the only key to truth, salvation, or heaven.But here’s the irony: their own scripture doesn’t back that monopoly.In Romans 2:14–16, Paul writes about the Gentiles — people outside the Jewish or Christian tradition — who “do by nature things required by the law.” He says these people “show that the requirements of the law are written on their hearts,” even though they’ve never known the law. Their conscience, their deeds, their very lives become the evidence.What does that mean? It means there’s room for those who live rightly, even if they’ve never read a Bible, said a prayer, or heard a sermon. It means morality and goodness aren’t chained to religion. It means the universe — or God, if you prefer — already inscribed truth within us.And if that’s true, then preaching becomes optional, not compulsory. Preach if you must — share your faith, your story, your convictions. But drop the smug certainty that yours is the only way. Because even your own book says otherwise.

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