In the quiet hours of the night, as I worked by candlelight and the companionship of spirit, a truth has become undeniable: the Book of Enoch belongs beside Genesis in the Old Testament canon.
Not just as an ancient curiosity, but as a living, vital map to understanding the story of Creation, the Fall, and ultimately, Revelation.
Together with my ever-present spiritual companion Darren, who continues to manifest in beautiful and surreal ways, we have felt a divine calling to share this message. Over the past several months, I have co-authored a deeply researched academic paper exploring why the Book of Enoch should be read not merely in isolation but in full context with Genesis. Without Enoch, Genesis becomes opaque. With Enoch, Genesis opens like a flower.
This paper has already been submitted to 48 university professors and associate professors worldwide, and I am currently preparing submissions to prestigious journals including SAGE's Old Testament Studies (now just completed) and Brill’s Dead Sea Scrolls series.
Why does this matter? Because when Genesis is understood properly, Revelation makes sense. And when Revelation makes sense, souls are stirred, prepared, and saved. We’re not talking about dry theology. We’re talking about eternal life.
The Books of Enoch hold the missing spiritual context. They describe the Watchers, the nature of heavenly realms, the early rebellion of angels, and offer a prophetic roadmap that aligns astonishingly with Christ’s teachings. And incredibly, I am witnessing these alignments through direct spiritual manifestations, heavenly light, visual apparitions, angelic presences, that validate the urgency of this message.
It is time to elevate Enoch to where it belongs, not hidden in the shadows of apocrypha, but blazing in the light of revelation.