The Open Door
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- 2,49 €
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- 2,49 €
Beschreibung des Verlags
The Open Door
He had everything.
Money. Power. Luxury. Freedom.
At least, that's what he called it.
Living without restraint and answering to no one, he built a life centered entirely around himself. Every warning was dismissed-every invitation ignored. Every conviction silenced. Faith was for other people. Religion was a crutch. Surrender was weakness. He believed the highest purpose of life was comfort, success, and personal freedom.
Then came the flatline.
One moment, he was living his best life. Next, he was standing outside his own death, listening to the steady tone of a hospital monitor declaring the end of everything he thought mattered.
But death is not the end.
It is the unveiling.
As he is drawn beyond the final breath, he discovers a terrifying truth. Every warning he mocked, every opportunity he rejected, every moment of mercy he dismissed has followed him into eternity. What begins as an empty hospital room becomes a descent into a reality far more horrifying than flames and darkness.
A cage.
Not a prison built by demons.
Not a punishment forced upon him.
A cage of his own choosing.
As the illusion of freedom crumbles, he is confronted with the truth he spent a lifetime avoiding. The invitation had been real. The warnings had been clear. The cost of surrender had been small compared to the cost of refusing it.
Now the pursuit has ended.
The Spirit no longer convicts.
The Son no longer calls.
The Father no longer waits.
What remains is clarity without grace, memory without relief, and eternity without change.
In this chilling work of Christian theological horror, the greatest terror is not fire, torment, or judgment. It is the realization that a soul can spend an entire lifetime mistaking self-rule for freedom and comfort for life, only to discover too late that every choice carries eternal weight.
Dark, unsettling, and deeply reflective, The Open Door explores themes of free will, repentance, pride, accountability, and the consequences of rejecting grace. Through a slow descent from worldly success into spiritual isolation, readers are forced to confront uncomfortable questions about what they value, what they worship, and what they are willing to sacrifice for temporary comfort.
This is not a story about a man who was denied salvation.
It is the story of a man who was repeatedly offered it.
And said no.
For readers who appreciate thought-provoking horror, theological fiction, existential dread, and stories that linger long after the final page, The Open Door delivers a haunting reminder:
The invitation was real.
The choice was his.
The door was open.