Welcome to Capman Reign LLC

Devon M Capman

Christian Radio Access

Welcome to the private Capman Reign Christian radio access page.

This area is intended for verified Christian radio programmers, worship broadcasters, reviewers, and ministry media professionals.

Streaming selections are provided for evaluation and broadcast consideration. Full-resolution broadcast files, lyrics, and promotional materials are available upon request.

Cover Me — Worship
Faith-centered worship song focused on surrender, dependence upon God, and spiritual protection through grace.

Bless Me Indeed
Inspirational contemporary Christian track centered on prayer, growth, purpose, and God’s guidance through life.

They Chose His Name — Bible Rock Vol. 1 Album
Scripture-inspired rock selection reflecting on identity, sacrifice, and the enduring message of faith.

I’m On The Team — Bible Rock Vol. 2
Energetic faith-driven anthem emphasizing unity, commitment, perseverance, and belonging within the Kingdom of God.

Bible Rock Albums for Download or purchase on link below.

http://Kunaki.com/MSales.asp?PublisherId=239345&PP=1

Our Faith and the Public

Here are ten major areas where many people often misunderstand, underestimate, or never fully engage the depth of the Bible’s claims. This is not saying that people are ignorant or dishonest—many are thoughtful people—but these are common gaps in understanding when evaluating Scriptures that are the core of the Christian Faith. This is our stand:

  1. The Bible is not one book

Many approach Scripture as if it were a single-author religious manual. In reality, the Bible is a library written across roughly 1,500 years by kings, shepherds, prophets, physicians, poets, historians, fishermen, and scholars—yet it maintains a remarkably unified storyline centered on humanity, sin, covenant, redemption, and God’s relationship with mankind.

  1. The Bible is deeply rooted in history

People sometimes assume biblical events exist only in mythological space. Yet Scripture constantly anchors itself to real rulers, nations, wars, genealogies, cities, trade routes, and political systems. Archaeology has repeatedly confirmed people, places, customs, and events once dismissed as fictional, even when not proving every theological claim.

  1. Hebrew thought is different from modern Western thought

Modern readers often expect scientific-style precision or philosophical abstraction. Ancient Hebrew writing communicates through imagery, layered meaning, parallelism, covenant structure, symbolism, and narrative patterns. Missing this causes people to misread poetry as science, metaphor as literalism, or theological structure as contradiction.

  1. The central theme is moral rebellion, not merely religion

The Bible’s core claim is not “join a religion.” It argues humanity is fundamentally separated from God morally and spiritually. Scripture portrays mankind as capable of brilliance and compassion while also deeply corrupted by selfishness, pride, violence, lust for power, and deception. Many agnostics critique organized religion while never fully confronting Scripture’s diagnosis of human nature—which history repeatedly validates.

  1. The New Testament writers claimed eyewitness grounding

The authors of the New Testament did not generally write as philosophers proposing abstract ideals. They claimed public events, witnesses, locations, and resurrection encounters. Whether one accepts those claims or not, the texts present themselves as historical testimony, not merely symbolic spirituality.

  1. Prophecy in Scripture is broader than fortune-telling

Many skeptics think biblical prophecy only means predicting future events. In Scripture, prophets primarily confronted nations about morality, corruption, idolatry, injustice, and covenant violation. Predictive elements exist, but prophecy was largely ethical confrontation and spiritual warning.

  1. The Bible presents a unified human condition

One reason Scripture has endured is that it describes recurring human behavior with unsettling accuracy:

  • greed destroys societies
  • power corrupts rulers
  • people rationalize evil
  • crowds are easily manipulated
  • pleasure alone does not satisfy
  • human beings crave meaning, forgiveness, love, and transcendence

Many people critique doctrine while overlooking how penetrating the Bible is psychologically and socially.

  1. Grace is more radical than many realize

A common misunderstanding is that Christianity teaches people “earn” salvation by morality. The New Testament actually teaches the opposite: mankind cannot achieve righteousness before God through moral performance alone. Grace, mercy, forgiveness, and redemption through Christ are central themes. This radically differs from many human systems built on merit, status, or self-perfection.

  1. The Bible contains uncomfortable material on purpose

Critics often point to violence, failure, hypocrisy, or disturbing narratives in Scripture. But the Bible unusually exposes its own heroes:

  • David commits adultery and murder
  • Moses disobeys God
  • Peter denies Christ
  • Israel repeatedly falls into corruption

Ancient propaganda normally glorified leaders. Scripture repeatedly exposes human failure instead of hiding it.

  1. The Bible’s claim is ultimately relational

Many people examine Scripture only intellectually. But the Bible’s central claim is relational and experiential: that God can actually be known, not merely analyzed. It presents prayer, repentance, worship, conscience, transformation, forgiveness, and spiritual rebirth as realities to experience—not only doctrines to debate.

The divide is often not merely evidence vs. non-evidence, but differing assumptions about:

  • whether God would reveal Himself
  • whether moral truth exists
  • whether consciousness and meaning point beyond materialism
  • whether human beings are purely biological or spiritually accountable

A thoughtful person can still raise serious objections to Christianity, biblical reliability, suffering, miracles, or religion itself. But many critiques come from engaging only fragments of Scripture rather than its full historical, literary, philosophical, and theological depth.