Description
WHAT IF JESUS WROTE YOU A LETTER?
Not a parable. Not a sermon. A letter – addressed to you, about the exact condition of your faith right now.
He already did.
Most Christians have no idea that Jesus personally wrote seven letters buried in the opening chapters of Revelation — letters that map the entire two-thousand-year arc of Church history and land with laser precision on the condition of the Church today. Inside those letters are two of the most explosive questions in all of Scripture:
Who is the “synagogue of Satan” — the group Jesus identifies twice as claiming to be Jews but lying — and who do they represent in the modern world? And was the rapture really invented by John Nelson Darby in the 1830s, or has the early Church taught it all along — and is it possible that pre-trib, mid-trib, and post-trib are all simultaneously correct?
Ed Mabrie doesn’t flinch from either question. In The Jesus Code, he examines all seven letters verse by verse, city by city, and era by era — using a four-lens framework that unlocks their historical, ecclesiastical, personal, and prophetic dimensions simultaneously. What emerges is a complete diagnosis of where the Church has been, where it is now, and what Jesus is saying to every believer in this final hour.
Along the way, Mabrie tackles the questions most Bible teachers avoid:
- Who is the “synagogue of Satan” — historically the Edomites, and prophetically… who exactly?
- Were the rapture’s roots in the early Church, or did Darby invent it whole cloth?
- Are pre-trib, mid-trib, and post-trib simultaneously correct — and why does the answer matter?
- What does Jesus actually think of the contemporary Western Church? And what does He think of yours?
- How does the Spirit of Jezebel operate in modern culture — and what does third-wave feminism have to do with ancient Babylon?
- What will the throne room of God look like when the Church arrives, and what does Revelation 4 tell us about the timing of the rapture?
The Jesus Code is not a gentle devotional. It is a rigorous, honest, and often uncomfortable examination of the Church’s condition — one that takes Scripture seriously enough to follow it wherever it leads, even when that means revising settled assumptions. Mabrie’s approach is direct, his wit dry, and his conclusions well-argued: make the Bible right, even if it means you’re wrong.
Whether you are a new believer or a lifelong student of Scripture, you will finish this book with a clearer picture of where the Church has been, where it is now, and what Jesus is saying to it — and to you — in this final hour.
He who has an ear, let him hear what the Spirit says to the churches.
That includes yours.
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