You may have found this site while searching for answers, clarity, or meaning.
Before you read further, it’s important to understand what this site is and what it is not.
LastDaysLiving is written for Christians.
It speaks to people who already trust Jesus Christ and are learning how to live faithfully under His reign.
If you are not a Christian, this page exists for you.
Not to pressure you.
Not to debate you.
But to speak honestly about what Christians believe, what following Jesus truly means, and what is being offered.
The Christian Story Begins With Fellowship
Christianity begins with God, not with us.
The Bible teaches that humanity was created for fellowship with God. We were made to know Him, walk with Him, trust Him, and live under His good and loving authority.
Life was meant to be lived with God, not merely for Him.
But humanity chose independence instead of trust.
The Bible calls this sin. Sin is more than doing wrong things. It is a rupture in relationship. A turning away from God as King and a refusal to live in dependence on Him.
That turning fractured fellowship with God and brought separation, suffering, and death into the world.
This broken fellowship is why the world feels disordered.
It is why shame, fear, striving, and loss are universal.
And it is why no amount of effort or morality can restore what was lost.
God’s Purpose Has Always Been Restoration
God did not abandon humanity to separation.
From the beginning, His purpose has been restoration, not rejection.
Throughout Scripture, God pursues people, calls them back, and promises renewal. That story reaches its fulfillment in Jesus Christ.
Jesus did not come merely to improve behavior or offer religious instruction.
He came to restore fellowship between God and humanity.
Jesus Christ and Restored Fellowship
Jesus Christ entered the world as God in human flesh.
He lived the faithful life humanity failed to live. He trusted the Father fully. He obeyed without fracture. He lived in unbroken fellowship with God.
Jesus was crucified, not as a tragic accident, but as part of God’s redemptive purpose.
“But God shows His love for us in that while we were still sinners, Christ died for us.”
(Romans 5:8)
Through the cross, Jesus dealt with sin and its consequences. Through His resurrection, He defeated death and opened the way back to God.
To understand why Jesus’ death was necessary and what it accomplished, this page explains the meaning of the cross clearly: Why Jesus Had to Die.
The resurrection is God’s declaration that restoration is real.
Jesus now reigns as King. His authority is present, not postponed. And under His reign, fellowship with God is no longer barred.
Repentance, Faith, and Coming Home
Becoming a Christian is not about becoming religious or improving yourself.
It is about being restored to God.
This restoration begins with repentance and faith.
Repentance means turning.
It is a turning away from self-rule and independence.
It is an honest acknowledgment that life lived apart from God cannot heal itself.
Faith means trust.
It is placing your confidence in Jesus Christ.
Trusting Him as Savior who restores you.
Trusting Him as King to whom you now belong.
“If you confess with your mouth that Jesus is Lord and believe in your heart that God raised Him from the dead, you will be saved.”
(Romans 10:9)
This turning is not merely moral.
It is relational.
Through repentance and faith, fellowship with God is restored.
Kingdom Citizenship and New Life
Christians believe that salvation does more than forgive sin.
It restores relationship.
Those who trust in Jesus are welcomed back into fellowship with God and transferred into God’s Kingdom. This is what it means to become a Christian.
You are no longer separated.
You are no longer striving to earn God’s attention.
You belong.
This restored identity comes before obedience.
Following Jesus involves learning to live faithfully, but obedience flows from belonging, not fear. Christian life is a lived response to restored fellowship, empowered by God’s Spirit.
This site exists to help Christians live that restored life faithfully, patiently, and with hope.
If you’re a Christian and want clarity on how trust in Jesus is lived day by day, not just believed once, you may find this helpful:
What It Means to Trust Jesus
Your Next Step Matters
If you are considering these things seriously, do not walk this path alone.
Christian faith is not meant to be figured out in isolation or lived only online. Restoration draws people back into relationship, not into solitude.
Your next step should be relational and embodied.
We encourage you to:
- Speak with a trusted Christian you know personally
- Reach out to a local church and ask to talk with a pastor
- Attend a church where Scripture is taught and Jesus Christ is honored as Lord
A real conversation with real people matters more than reading another article.
If you do not know any Christians personally, seek a Bible-teaching church in your area and ask honest questions. A healthy church will welcome sincere inquiry without pressure or manipulation.
A Final Word
If you continue reading this site, understand that it speaks from within Christian faith. It assumes restored fellowship with God through Christ and allegiance to Him as King.
If you pause here instead, that is wise too.
Christianity does not rush decisions.
It calls for honesty, repentance, trust, and a return to relationship.
Wherever you are, we are glad you came.
And we pray that you come to know the grace, truth, and restoring love of God in Jesus Christ.
Continue Here
What We Believe
Why We Speak of the Last Days
Faithful Living overview