
Author’s Note
I communicate in plain layman’s terms—everyday words people can understand. Rejecting scholarly euphemisms and academic jargon that obscure truth for the sake of modern fragility. My intent is not to impress the academy but to bear faithful witness to the evidence itself. Wherever the record leads, I follow without apology.
This work is devoted primarily to the Body of Christ—a community long denied access to its own historical testimony through centuries of translation, revision, and theological censorship.
I welcome honest critique and alternative interpretations, but I make no effort to conceal or soften my conclusions. My role here is not that of a secular historian, but of a faithful witness—presenting the evidence as one would in court, with reverence toward the inspired Word. Yet, no record of truth is complete without acknowledging its cost. This work is therefore examined in conscious remembrance of those throughout history who refused to compromise on the very doctrines examined here—especially the nature of life, death, judgment, and the soul—even when fidelity to those truths brought persecution, exile, or death.
That established, this work serves both devotional and forensic purposes: an act of restoration undertaken to recover what Scripture, its earliest readers, writers, and witnesses consistently testified concerning the final judgment of the wicked, the mortality of the human soul, and the ultimate triumph of God’s justice. Continue Reading>>>
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