Justice, Truth, and Reform

40 Days is a faith-based justice reform mission focused on exposing systemic failures in the legal system and advancing reforms that better protect due process and equal protection under law.

This project was not created as a brand, a political vehicle, or a personal platform. It grew out of direct experience with how dangerous institutional failure can become when truth is distorted, accountability breaks down, and the systems meant to administer justice become unreliable for ordinary people. In those circumstances, silence stops being neutral. It becomes a form of complicity.

Scripture Why 40 Days speaks: the biblical duty to warn, testify, and not remain silent when truth and justice are at stake

40 Days is not grounded only in civic concern. It is also grounded in the conviction that Scripture places real moral weight on warning, truthful witness, and faithful speech when wrongdoing threatens others.

Ezekiel 3:18–21
Ezekiel teaches that when a warning is required, silence is not neutral. The passage emphasizes responsibility to warn the wicked, accountability for failing to do so, and the duty to speak so that others are not left unwarned.

In this context, the passage supports the principle that ignoring danger or withholding warning can itself become a moral failure.

Acts 4:19–20
Peter and John explain that there are times when obedience to God requires truthful witness even under pressure. Their answer is simple: they cannot remain silent about what they have seen and heard.

In this context, the passage supports the principle that truth sometimes must be spoken plainly, even when silence would be easier or safer.

Why this is included: 40 Days is a justice reform mission, but it is also a faith-based one. These passages help explain why the project treats silence, truthful witness, and warning as matters of conscience rather than branding or personal preference.
These passages are not included to overstate personal authority. They are included to explain the theological basis for why 40 Days treats warning, testimony, and reform as obligations of conscience.

40 Days exists to respond to that reality in a serious and constructive way. Its purpose is not simply to criticize what is broken, but to help repair it.

What 40 Days Does

40 Days serves both an educational and reform-oriented purpose.

It documents specific failure modes within the justice system, examines the civic and moral consequences of those failures, and presents legislative proposals aimed at strengthening accountability, improving due process, and restoring equal protection. The goal is practical reform grounded in truth.

This work is not driven by outrage for its own sake. It is driven by the conviction that a society cannot remain healthy when justice becomes inconsistent, inaccessible, or distorted by power.

Why This Matters

Justice is not a secondary concern in Scripture, and it is not a secondary concern in a functioning republic.

A legal system that fails to protect the truthful, restrain abuse, or apply the law fairly does damage far beyond individual cases. It weakens public trust, deepens instability, and encourages cynicism about lawful remedies. When people lose confidence that justice can be done through legitimate institutions, the entire social order becomes more fragile.

A more accurate, more accountable, and more credible justice system benefits everyone.

Bible First

40 Days is Bible first.

That means justice, truth, repentance, and unity must be judged by Scripture rather than by tribe, personality, expedience, or public pressure. It also means no political cause, public figure, or institution should be treated as beyond correction.

This project is grounded in the belief that moral disorder and institutional disorder are often connected. When power, reputation, wealth, or factional loyalty are treated as ultimate, truth is usually one of the first casualties. Justice reform, therefore, cannot be separated entirely from questions of moral clarity and repentance.

What 40 Days Is Not

40 Days is not a personality cult.
It is not a call to hatred.
It is not a defense of political violence.
It is not a partisan license to excuse corruption on one side while condemning it on the other.

The mission matters more than the messenger. Truth matters more than branding. Faithfulness matters more than influence.

What 40 Days Seeks to Build

40 Days seeks to:

  • expose systemic failures in the justice system
  • call the church to take corruption, truth, and due process seriously
  • advance legislative reforms that strengthen accountability and equal protection
  • provide tools and resources for constructive public engagement
  • encourage peaceful, lawful, and faithful action

The aim is to move people from vague concern to serious understanding, and from understanding to responsible action.

A Final Word

40 Days is built on the belief that justice still matters, truth still matters, and repentance is still possible.

A church should not be indifferent to corrupted justice. A nation should not assume it can neglect truth without consequence. But warning is not the same as despair. Reform is still possible. Accountability is still possible. A better path is still possible.

That is the purpose of 40 Days.

Get Involved

You can support the mission by:

  • reading and sharing the book
  • connecting us with churches or leaders
  • using our educational tools and resources
  • supporting reform outreach
  • helping call the church and the nation back to justice, truth, and repentance

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