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What if mythology isn't fiction - but humanity's oldest memory?
That is the question The Same Mountain refuses to leave unanswered.
The Book of Enoch - a text predating the New Testament, preserved among the Dead Sea Scrolls and in the canon of the Ethiopian Orthodox Church - describes two hundred beings called Watchers who descended upon Mount Hermon, crossed a forbidden boundary, fathered the giants known as the Nephilim, and transmitted to humanity knowledge it was not yet meant to have. The Bible confirms the event in Genesis 6. Psalm 82 describes its judgment. Jude and Peter reference it in the New Testament with a precision that is rarely explored.
Greek mythology tells the same story. With different names. In a different language. From a different mountain.
The Titans who ruled the earth in the primordial age. The demigods - Hercules, Achilles, Perseus - born of unions between the divine and the human. The Tartarus, the abyss where the Titans were imprisoned awaiting judgment. The same vocabulary Peter uses in 2 Peter 2:4 to describe the prison of the angels who sinned - the only time the Greek word tartaroo appears in the entire New Testament.
Two texts. Two peoples. The same structure, point for point.
The thesis of this book is bold: in a world still united - before Babel, before the dispersion - the event described by Enoch and the event preserved by Greek tradition may be the same occurrence, seen from different perspectives. What each culture called mythology may be the distorted, fragmented memory of a real era - the age when the divine and the human coexisted, crossed boundaries, and were separated by a judgment whose consequences the biblical text still describes as active.
The Same Mountain traces this argument chapter by chapter - from Genesis 6 to the empty altar in Athens, from the Nephilim to the inexplicable civilizations, from the Flood to the Tartarus - drawing on original texts, the Qumran manuscripts, and scholars such as Michael Heiser. It does not claim what cannot be proven. But it reveals the pattern - and leaves the reader free to conclude.
Includes the complete Book of Watchers (1 Enoch, chapters 1-36) as a appendix.
For Christians who want to understand what the Bible actually says about the supernatural world. For non-Christians who have always felt that ancient myths preserve something modernity discarded too quickly. For everyone who believes uncomfortable questions deserve to be asked.
There was a mountain. Perhaps two. Perhaps only one. That changes everything.
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