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If Jesus is only a moral teacher or a religious symbol, then His words can be admired and set aside. But the Bible—and history—won’t let us do that. Jesus claimed to forgive sins, spoke as the final authority on truth, and accepted worship. These aren’t the claims of a mere prophet or philosopher; they are the claims of someone who believed Himself to be God stepping into human history. And yet Jesus is profoundly personal. He didn’t come simply to win arguments; He came to heal broken people, restore relationships, and call us into the life we were designed for. When He speaks of loving God and loving neighbour, He’s not offering rules but revealing what a flourishing human life looks like. When He dies on the cross, He isn’t acting out a tragedy—He’s paying the cost of our failures, so we don’t have to. And when He rises from the dead, He leaves a real, historical footprint that demands a response: either He is who He said He is, or the world’s most influential movement was built on a fiction. The invitation of Jesus is both rational and relational: examine the evidence, consider His claims, but also dare to approach Him—for the deepest proof of who He is is found in the transformed lives of those who meet Him.