What would you ask Jesus if you had one hour alone with Him?
Not in a crowd.
Not in a sermon.
Just a quiet room where nothing has to be performed or defended.
The Dawn of Life imagines that moment.
Told through the voice of Oxley, an aging interviewer searching for more than rehearsed answers, this book captures a rare and intimate conversation with Jesus—one that reveals truth gently, honestly, and with surprising clarity. Oxley discovers quickly that Jesus isn’t interested in polished questions. He’s interested in the fears beneath them, the hopes buried under years of self-protection, and the longing every soul carries for something real.
Across their unfolding dialogue, Jesus speaks about the Kingdom, suffering, identity, mercy, and the quiet ways transformation begins long before we recognize it. He dismantles performance, confronts fear, and invites Oxley—and the reader—into a life marked not by certainty, but by trust.
If you’ve ever wrestled with doubt, longed for peace, or wondered why God feels close one moment and distant the next, this book offers a fresh, personal, and deeply moving perspective.
Not a sermon.
Not a debate.
A conversation.
The interview doesn’t change Him.
But it may change you.
In a time before time, when Heaven’s harmony was pure and unbroken, the Archangel Lucifer stood nearest to the Throne—brilliant, beloved, and adorned with light. But when the Creator’s plan introduced a new being called Man, jealousy stirred in Heaven’s perfect order. Lucifer, unwilling to bow before clay, sought his own kingdom—an act that shattered eternity.
Through a series of investigative dialogues, heavenly correspondent Malaki interviews the fallen one, tracing the origins of pride, the rebellion in Heaven, and the fracture of divine order. Each encounter exposes another layer of celestial history: Lucifer’s rise among the angelic choirs, his seduction of a third of Heaven’s hosts, his banishment, and his lingering obsession with humanity.
Lucifer’s Fall is not merely the chronicle of a rebellion—it is the anatomy of pride itself. Told in lyrical, introspective prose, it explores how beauty can become blindness and how even the brightest light can cast the longest shadow.
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