Authenic Discipleship in Christ through Reflective ChristianitySeries Books.

Christianity: Mysteries, Miracles & gods

We live in a world filled with mystery—yet many no longer look up.

From swirling galaxies to ancient scrolls hidden in caves, from the unpredictability of the weather to the sudden, life-altering miracles that defy scientific explanation, this book explores how God still whispers through both the natural and the supernatural. Christianity: Mysteries, Miracles & gods takes readers on a journey that spans from the ancient megaliths of unknown origin to the unseen spiritual realm alive around us even now.

Halfway through this book, it becomes clear: these aren’t just curiosities or coincidences. They’re markers. Hints. Warnings. Promises. The unpredictable patterns of nature point back to the Creator who once calmed a storm with a word. The tangled debates of quantum physics echo with order that scientists can’t fully explain but believers recognize as design. And the presence of miracles—both long past and in this very age—forces every reader to ask: what if the boundaries we see are not the real ones?

This book also dares to name the unseen. It traces the presence of false gods—those that were assigned to the nations at Babel but later rebelled and deceived mankind. It considers the growing influence of spiritual darkness, not just in temples and rituals, but through politics, media, and even division within the Church. But it does not stop there. We meet the One True God—still reaching into forbidden nations like Iran and China, still revealing Himself in dreams, visions, and the undeniable change in a human heart.

At this point in the journey, readers are no longer asked to believe blindly. They’re invited to see clearly. The mysteries point to meaning. The miracles point to a message. And the so-called “gods” crumble in the presence of the one true King.

This is not a book of fantasy, but of revelation. Not of fear, but of awe. If you’ve ever felt that there must be more happening behind the veil of ordinary life—there is. And God wants you to see it.