What if Jesus walked among the first humansbefore language, before law, before civilization itself?
In Jesus in the Garden of Eden, time opens to its deepest past.
A burst of energy at the BERN Collider sends YeshuaJesus of Nazarethtwenty-five thousand years into the Paleolithic world. There are no scriptures here. No nations. No shared words for mercy, sin, or redemption.
Only survival.
Among the earliest human tribes, Yeshua must confront a question more difficult than any he has faced before:
How do you teach compassion to those who have never known it?
As he learns their worldits violence, its silence, its fragile bondshe begins to understand that morality itself is not given all at once, but formed slowly, painfully, across generations.
But something else is watching.
Time is not empty.
It is alive.
Known to those who study it as Gaia, time is a consciousness that remembers everything humanity has beenand weighs everything it becomes. Those who move within it are not simply displaced. They are judged.
And the deeper Yeshua moves into humanity’s beginning, the more he senses that even hereat the dawn of the worldsomething is already shaping what will come.
Blending theological reflection, speculative science fiction, and deep prehistory, Jesus in the Garden of Eden is a visionary novel about the origin of faith, the birth of morality, and the enduring question of what it means to be human.
Because even at the beginning of the world
the story of redemption may have already begun.
Genre: Inspirational
In Jesus in the Garden of Eden, time opens to its deepest past.
A burst of energy at the BERN Collider sends YeshuaJesus of Nazarethtwenty-five thousand years into the Paleolithic world. There are no scriptures here. No nations. No shared words for mercy, sin, or redemption.
Only survival.
Among the earliest human tribes, Yeshua must confront a question more difficult than any he has faced before:
How do you teach compassion to those who have never known it?
As he learns their worldits violence, its silence, its fragile bondshe begins to understand that morality itself is not given all at once, but formed slowly, painfully, across generations.
But something else is watching.
Time is not empty.
It is alive.
Known to those who study it as Gaia, time is a consciousness that remembers everything humanity has beenand weighs everything it becomes. Those who move within it are not simply displaced. They are judged.
And the deeper Yeshua moves into humanity’s beginning, the more he senses that even hereat the dawn of the worldsomething is already shaping what will come.
Blending theological reflection, speculative science fiction, and deep prehistory, Jesus in the Garden of Eden is a visionary novel about the origin of faith, the birth of morality, and the enduring question of what it means to be human.
Because even at the beginning of the world
the story of redemption may have already begun.
Genre: Inspirational
Used availability for Martin Asiner's Jesus in the Garden of Eden