AI's Unfeeling Scientific Skills Across Multiple Scientific Domains Proving Far More than You May Expect.
Coming Soon to Direct Sales
Coming soon to Barnes and Noble
Coming Soon to Amazon
Uses artificial-intelligence tools and advanced statistical modeling to evaluate biblical claims.
Offers an impartial, evidence-driven approach—not assuming traditional timelines or doctrines.
Bridges faith and reason: faith isn’t abandoned, but fortified by data, history, and archaeology.
Engages skeptics, seekers, and believers: written to challenge, invite, and transform.
Explores prophecy-fulfillment, scientific fine-tuning, global myth parallels, and geological signatures.
Presents a courtroom-style framework of proof: “prosecution” (skeptical theory) vs. “defense” (biblical model) vs. verdict (coherence).
Invite to read with intent: not just to believe it, but to test it yourself, replicate the prompts, ask the hard questions.
Backed by a mission: to glorify God by showing the same truth that Scripture claims is written not only in pages—but in the world.
Includes practical tools/applications: reflection questions, FAITH-method summaries, next-step invitations.
Available in multiple formats (hardcover, kindle, audio) and through major retailers (Amazon, Barnes & Noble) as well as direct purchase.
The Story Everyone Thinks They Know
Everyone knows the story.
An old man builds a massive boat in the middle of dry land. Animals line up in perfect pairs. Rain
falls for forty days and forty nights. And somehow, the entire world is washed clean — every mountain covered, every
valley drowned — while one family drifts above the ruins of the old world,
waiting for a dove to return.
It’s a story we’ve told our children for centuries —
charming, moral, maybe even mythical. We hang it on nursery walls, we laugh at the thought of elephants climbing
ramps, and we smile because we think we know how stories like this work. They’re not meant to be taken literally.
They’re symbols. A parable about
judgment, mercy, and new beginnings.
Because how could it possibly be true?
How could a small group of people, led by one old man, build
something vast enough to carry the DNA of life through an ocean that swallowed
the world?
How could a flood cover mountains, erase civilizations, and leave only one
family behind to begin again?
It sounds impossible — not just improbable, but absurd
— especially in an age that prides itself on satellites, supercolliders, and
scientific certainty.
And yet… the story refuses to die.
It resurfaces in every corner of the planet: carved on
tablets in Mesopotamia, sung in tribal chants of the Pacific, retold by
Egyptians, Chinese, Greeks, and Native Americans — cultures that never met, yet
somehow remember the same flood.
How could that be?
If this were only a myth, why would the Earth itself seem to
echo it — with marine fossils on mountaintops, vast graveyards of tangled
bones, and layered sediments that look more like the aftermath of a single
violent catastrophe than the patient brushstrokes of time?
If what we call “legend” aligns with what we can measure,
then maybe the question isn’t “Could it be true?”
Maybe the question is “What if it always was?”
And if that’s the case—if something so extraordinary once
happened—then what else might not be as we expect?
What if the Bible’s most unbelievable stories were never
asking for blind faith, but offering forgotten fact?
What if ancient hands, guided by something greater, recorded
what modern science is only now rediscovering?
That’s where this journey begins. Not in defense of belief, but in pursuit of
truth — wherever it leads.
Because when you set aside what you’ve been told and let the
evidence speak for itself…
the impossible begins to sound surprisingly reasonable.
Preface
When the Evidence Speaks
What if the oldest story the world remembers turned out to
be true?
What if a flood described in Scripture, echoed in stone, and remembered in
every culture, was not just a myth—but history?
For centuries, the Bible has been treated as a book of
faith, not of fact—a poetic relic from an unscientific age. Yet, beneath our
feet lies a record that refuses silence: mountains folded like paper, seashells
perched atop peaks, fossil graveyards stretching for miles, and languages
scattered across continents that all recall the same deluge. The question is
not whether these things exist—the question is what story they are really
telling.
Can a book written thousands of years ago truly align with
the evidence the modern world is only now rediscovering?
Could ancient witnesses, guided by divine insight, have preserved a record of
events that geology, archaeology, and even artificial intelligence now confirm
in their own way?
The goal of this book is not to preach—but to explore. Not
to defend belief—but to test it by the same evidentiary standards we use in any
courtroom or laboratory. What happens when Scripture is examined not through
the lens of tradition or skepticism, but through data—through probabilities,
correlations, and physical facts that can be measured, modeled, and verified?
Across these chapters, we will let the world itself testify.
We will compare the rocks, the relics, and the records of humanity’s earliest
memory.
We will ask what happens when artificial intelligence—unbound by
worldview—analyzes that data as an impartial witness. Does it find faith
wanting, or does it find faith verified?
You may discover, as I did, that the answers are both
humbling and exhilarating.
That science and Scripture, when allowed to speak freely, do not contradict but
converge.
That the Flood may not be a moral parable, but a measurable event
that prophecy may not be coincidence, but coded accuracy
that faith, far from opposing reason, may actually complete it.
So come with an open mind and a questioning heart.
Ask boldly. Doubt honestly. Follow the evidence without fear of where it leads.
Because when truth is real—when it is woven into both revelation and reality—it
can withstand every test.
Perhaps, by the end of this journey, you will find what I
found:
that the oldest record on earth is not the rocks—but the Word that spoke them
into being.
Summary:
Can a book written millennia ago, by a myriad of ancient people, across time and assembled into a collection known as the Bible describe the very patterns the rocks still whisper today? Could Genesis—so often dismissed as myth—have recorded not imagination but observation? If Scripture and the sediment say the same thing, which one has been reading the other all along?
Modern science often begins with the premise that time explains everything. Eons stretch to fit every puzzle slow rivers carve continents evolution meanders toward meaning. Yet the earth’s own memory tells a different story—one of speed, upheaval, and synchronized change. From folded mountains and upright trees entombed in dozens of layers, to fossil graveyards where marine and land creatures lie side by side, the record behaves less like a diary of millions of years and more like a snapshot of catastrophe.
So the question becomes unavoidable: What does the actual evidence say about a global flood that claims to have wiped out the world and have a man and his family survive. Is there any potential for truth or even grains of truth that originated the story.
If the evidence itself speaks of sudden burial, rapid layering, global floodplains, and shared human memory of water and renewal—why does society still prefer the story of endless gradualism? Each chapter in this book re-examines a piece of that puzzle. The strata reveal movement and mixing beyond slow erosion. The fossils show a world caught mid-motion, sealed before decay could begin. The languages and myths of every culture repeat the same sequence—warning, deluge, refuge, renewal. Even genetics and engineering echo feasibility where skeptics expected fable.
Could it be that ancient writers recorded what they saw, not what they imagined? That Noah’s flood was not a regional fable but a world-redefining event whose scars remain in every canyon, every seabed, every civilization’s earliest stories?
The reader is invited to weigh the evidence as a juror would: not asking what we were taught to think, but what the data themselves insist upon. If multiple witnesses—geology, archaeology, linguistics, and AI analysis—testify independently and converge on the same account, then either coincidence has reached divine precision, or divine precision has been mistaken for coincidence.
Society’s dominant narrative claims progress: that human reason has outgrown the ancient text. But when the stones and strata echo that very text, perhaps it is not faith that must catch up to science—but science that must slow down enough to listen.
This investigation does not beg for belief it demands honesty. It asks whether time alone can carve coherence, whether random processes can produce worldwide symmetry, and whether the first book humanity preserved could possibly have remembered the truth long before laboratories rediscovered it.
Can a text so old still be right about a world so new? That is the question this book lays before every reader. And the deeper one follows the evidence—through rock, ruin, and reason—the more that question begins to answer itself.
Then the ultimate question, if this is true, what does that mean about God, the Bible and life? Is there more than what we have in this life?