The Exodus Protocol
When Liberation Became the Book of Moses
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- $9.99
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- $9.99
Publisher Description
Some miracles liberate. Others teach freedom how to survive.
Egypt has turned memory into empire.
The hidden interventions of the past have hardened into monuments, priesthood, and Pharaoh’s claim to divine order. What once protected humanity now helps justify slavery, power, and control. The Seraphim have watched long enough.
The system must be broken.
Moses is born into oppression, raised inside the house of Pharaoh, and divided between two worlds that both shape him and wound him. Hebrew by birth and Egyptian by education, he carries the burden of a people he barely knows and the violence of an empire he can no longer serve.
When exile drives him into the wilderness, Moses encounters a fire that does not consume, a voice hidden behind restraint, and a staff that is far more than wood. He is not chosen because he is ready. He is chosen because the work must begin.
But liberation is not spectacle.
The plagues are escalating warnings, each one shaped by consequence and restraint. The Red Sea is not an illusion, but a desperate corridor opened through forces humanity will remember as miracle. And Sinai is not merely a mountain. It is where freedom must become law, structure, covenant, and responsibility.
The Exodus Protocol reimagines Moses, Pharaoh, the plagues, the Red Sea, Sinai, and the Ark as a hidden Seraphim operation of rescue, judgment, discipline, and moral cost.
Because freeing a people is only the beginning.
Teaching them how to remain free is the harder miracle.