Description:
One lie changed everything.
It didn't begin in culture. It didn't begin with you. It began with a question that challenged truth itself-and its effects are still shaping lives today.
What if the greatest dangers in life are not the lies we hear...
but the lies we believe?
From the very beginning of human history, deception has shaped the course of civilizations, relationships, and personal destinies. Lies rarely arrive announcing themselves as falsehoods. Instead, they appear quietly-disguised as half-truths, assumptions, rationalizations, or convenient narratives that feel easier to accept than reality.
In The Truth About a Lie, author and Christian leader James Langston explores the powerful influence deception holds over individuals and societies. Drawing from Scripture, history, psychology, and personal reflection, Langston exposes how lies begin, why they spread, and why the most dangerous deception often occurs within the human heart.
This completely rewritten Second Edition takes readers on a compelling journey through the nature of truth and dishonesty. Beginning with the first lie recorded in the Garden of Eden, the book examines how deception has continued to influence human behavior throughout history and into modern culture.
Inside these pages, readers will explore:
- The origin of deception and its lasting impact on humanity
- How small compromises can grow into patterns of dishonesty
- The psychological and emotional burden created by deception
- The hidden ways people deceive themselves
- The cultural forces that reward dishonesty and suppress truth
- The freedom that comes from choosing integrity and honesty
More than an examination of deception, this book is a call to rediscover the transformative power of truth.
According to Scripture, truth is not merely an idea or philosophical principle-it is embodied in the person of Jesus Christ, who declared:
"I am the way, the truth, and the life." (John 14:6)
Through thoughtful insight and biblical reflection, Langston invites readers to confront the subtle lies that influence everyday decisions and to embrace a life grounded in honesty, courage, and spiritual clarity.
Because in the end, the question is not whether truth exists.
The question is whether we are willing to live by it.