The Truth Is Not Complicated is not a book about villains, conspiracies, or hidden elites. It is a book about patterns. Across medicine, food, housing, religion, and other modern systems, the same quiet structure appears again and again: incentives replace conscience, harm becomes normalized, and outcomes matter less than intentions. No one plans this. No one intends it. And yet the damage persists. This book does not argue. It observes. Written in a calm, reflective voice, it explores how systems originally built to solve problems gradually become invested in managing them instead. Healing becomes disruptive. Prevention becomes impractical. Stability is protected even when it quietly costs human well-being. The book’s purpose is not to persuade you of a position, but to help you see clearly enough to ask better questions. It does not offer a new doctrine or a replacement for Scripture. Instead, it repeatedly points the reader back to the Bible itself, read slowly and honestly, as the only reliable escape from normalized harm and borrowed conviction. If you finish this book and find yourself opening Scripture more often, listening more carefully, and living more awake inside the world you already inhabit, it has done exactly what it was meant to do.