I often find myself reflecting on a simple but profound question:
What if the same God who created the universe also wove His truth into our biology—and our relationships?
It’s a question that bridges the gap between science and faith, between what we observe in the natural world and what we believe about human nature. For much of my life, I stood on one side of that divide. As a former atheist, I was shaped by logic and biology—but also by deep questions about meaning, identity, and redemption.
Today, as a Christian theologian, I believe those questions were pointing me somewhere all along.
And here’s what I’ve come to see clearly: evolutionary science doesn’t contradict the biblical Fall—it actually provides compelling evidence for it. Our biology bears the imprint of a fallen world. Selfishness, competition, and pain are not just spiritual realities, but evolutionary traits that speak directly to our need for redemption.
That journey led me to write two books: Homo Lapsus and Jesus and Women. Together, they represent my attempt to integrate science, theology, and the real-life social issues we face—especially around gender.
A Bigger Story
At first glance, faith and science, men and women, sin and grace might seem like opposing forces. But I believe they actually tell one unified story—a story of a God who redeems every part of our human experience.
Whether you’re a believer wrestling with scientific questions…
A thinker seeking to reconcile faith with reason…
Or someone longing for a vision of Christianity that restores rather than divides… These books are for you.
As I studied evolutionary biology through a theological lens, something surprising emerged: I began to see the Fall not just as a symbolic story, but as a reflection of biological reality. Human selfishness, violence, and brokenness aren’t just spiritual concepts—they’re deeply embedded in our evolutionary history. But here’s the good news: so are love, sacrifice, and the capacity for redemption. God’s redemptive design isn’t in conflict with science. It’s written into it.

My second book, Jesus and Women, was born from a deep desire to explore how Jesus treated women—not from tradition, but from Scripture. In a culture that silenced them, Jesus gave them voice. In a society that diminished them, He restored their dignity and purpose. This isn’t just a “women’s issue.” It’s a gospel issue. Jesus didn’t just preach truth—He lived it, in every encounter with women across the Gospels.
