What do we do with the strange parts of the Bible? Most believers know what to do with the familiar stories. We understand David and Goliath. We find comfort in Noah’s ark. We draw strength from Paul’s prison letters and hope from the miracles of Jesus. But what about the parts of Scripture that feel harder to explain? What about giants and the Nephilim, angels and demons, the occult, the Antichrist, the mark of the beast, the rapture, the tribulation, the unseen realm, dreams, visions, and the strange mysteries that make even seasoned Bible readers stop and ask, “What do I do with this?” In The Stranger Things: How The Bible Tells Me So , Jeff Davis takes readers on a bold, biblical journey into the mysterious side of Scripture. With a pastor’s heart and reverence for God’s Word, he explores some of the most fascinating, difficult, and often avoided subjects in the Bible, not to stir fear, sensationalism, or conspiracy, but to help readers understand what Scripture says and why it matters. This book was written for the curious believer, the serious student of Scripture, and the person who has always sensed that the Bible is far deeper, stranger, and more spiritually charged than many realize. It is also written for those who have felt intimidated by these topics or frustrated by how often they are handled with either shallow speculation or nervous silence. Inside these pages, you will explore questions such as: Who were the Nephilim, and why does Genesis 6 matter? What does the Bible really teach about angels, demons, and Satan? Why does God speak so strongly against the occult? What should Christians understand about the Antichrist, the false prophet, and the mark of the beast? How should we think about the rapture, tribulation, wrath, final judgment, and the return of Christ? What do the Bible’s strange stories reveal about the character of God, the reality of evil, and the hope of redemption? Rather than treating these topics like curiosities to gawk at, Jeff Davis places them inside the larger story of Scripture. Again and again, this book reminds us that the strange things in the Bible are not there to distract us, but to wake us up. They reveal that the world is not merely material, history is not random, evil is not imaginary, and God has not left His people defenseless in a dark and contested world. This book also helps readers understand an important truth: mystery in Scripture is not meant to produce panic. It is meant to produce reverence. The Bible’s hardest passages are not a threat to faith. They are often the very places where our faith is stretched, deepened, and anchored more firmly in the greatness of God. The Stranger Things: How The Bible Tells Me So is not a book about chasing the bizarre. It is not driven by hype, fear, or end-times sensationalism. It is a book about reading the whole Bible honestly, including the parts we tend to skip, flatten, or explain away. It is about recognizing spiritual counterfeits, standing firm in truth, and understanding that the unseen world is real, but that Jesus Christ is Lord over it all. The goal is not to become obsessed with darkness, prophecy charts, or hard-to-explain subjects. The goal is to become more discerning, more grounded in truth, more aware of spiritual realities, and more in awe of the God who has spoken. If you have ever wrestled with the Bible’s mysterious passages, wondered what to make of the supernatural, or wanted a guide that is both biblically serious and pastorally clear, this book is for you. The strange things in the Bible were never meant to push you away. They were meant to pull you deeper, deeper into truth, deeper into reverence, deeper into spiritual clarity, and deeper into Jesus. Because in the end, every strange road in Scripture leads to Him.