In Deuteronomy 4:32–40 Moses convenes a “truth commission,” urging Israel (and us) to search all of history—from creation to the present—and ask two questions: Has any people ever heard the voice of God speaking from fire and lived? Has any god ever taken a nation for himself out of another nation by signs, wonders, and a mighty hand? The honest answer is a resounding no—only the Lord has done this at Sinai and in the Exodus. This same pattern continues in the resurrection of Jesus Christ, a public, multi-witness event that turned terrified disciples into fearless martyrs, transformed enemies into believers, and conquered the Roman Empire without sword or political power. History, therefore, drives us to the same confession Moses demanded: the Lord alone is God; there is no other. But we must not stop at intellectual assent; truth must be pressed home personally. Only when history produces heartfelt faith does it issue in the obedience and blessing God promises to us and to our children. Inquire of history, treasure the Lord as the only God, and obey—because he alone has spoken, acted, and saved like this.