Nonfiction Christian Books
Neil Nolte is a self-taught theologian who believes the Bible was written for ordinary people. With years of personal study and a passion for using Scripture to interpret Scripture, he writes to help everyday Christians see that they can understand the Bible without a seminary degree. His work invites believers to think critically, seek humility, and come to a full understanding of God’s Word through the lens of Jesus Christ and His fulfillment of the Law and the prophets—with clarity, confidence, and joy.
Solving Scripture
In 2018, a study by Nature Human Behaviour found that cognitive dissonance leads only 10-15% of people to update their beliefs when presented with new evidence. This is due to entrenched biases which are often born from pride. For those among the 85%, reading books is for the sole purpose of supporting what they already believe.
Can anyone really know what's true?
In Solving Scripture, I link the rules of Sudoku to basic epistemology. You know your puzzle is wrong if you have two sevens in the same column. Likewise, if you have two beliefs that conflict each other, you know that at least one of those beliefs is wrong. And mistakes lead to more mistakes. If a belief leads to multiple anomalies, that’s a good indication that a mistake was made.
We cannot be consistently right until we’re willing to be wrong. Pride is one of the impediments that prevents us from knowing the truth. This book covers that topic and many more to help you discover the truth in God’s Word because believing a message from the world is of no value but believing a message from God will set you free.


The Window
The Bible’s story isn’t just about what’s coming—it’s about what already happened.
In The Window, I reveal how the old covenant ended, the new began, and how first-century events fulfilled what the prophets foretold. If you’ve ever been confused about prophecy or end times, this book offers clarity and confidence through a Christ-centered view of Scripture.
Was the New Testament written for the future—or about a moment that changed everything?
The New Testament wasn’t written in a vacuum. It emerged in a moment of history—between the resurrection of Christ and the destruction of the temple in AD 70.
This was The Window: a one-generation overlap between covenants, where the apostles carried the gospel forward while the old world crumbled behind them.
This book uncovers the story that frames the Gospel—a story of judgment, fulfillment, and kingdom. It’s the story Jesus foretold, the apostles endured, and the church was built upon.
If the old covenant truly ended, then something monumental began. And if we see it, everything in the New Testament comes into focus.