BSN: Bible Studying, Not Reconstructing is a direct confrontation with the growing impulse to reshape historic Christian belief under the banner of reconstruction, deconstruction, and theological revision. Rooted in 2 Timothy 4:2, this work calls believers back to disciplined, text-driven study rather than inherited tradition, emotional reaction, or philosophical layering.
From Abraham's break with idols to Christ's declaration, "I am the way," Scripture consistently narrows devotion, clarifies authority, and consolidates access to God. This book examines whether later religious developments align with that biblical trajectory or subtly expand beyond it.
With sustained engagement of Jesus' own words, apostolic teaching, and the structure of New Testament prayer, BSN challenges readers to ask a decisive question: Where does Scripture command what later tradition assumes?
This is not a rejection of history, reverence, or holiness. It is a demand for clarity. If Christ is the one mediator, if prayer is directed to the Father through the Son, and if the apostles regulated worship through revealed instruction, then any expansion of devotional structure must stand under biblical scrutiny.
BSN is a call to study Scripture as given, not reconstruct it according to inherited systems. It invites readers to examine authority, mediation, and worship direction with honesty and courage—returning always to the text.