The Secret Dimensions of Scripture You Were Never Taught
Suppose your mind were a doorway rather than only a brain. Suppose your ideas were holy whispers from higher realms guiding your soul's path, not random sparks. The Die, Mentions of GOD, James Allen's most recent spiritual work, is an unfolding rather than a book.
Allen invites readers to investigate Biblical revelation,
physics, metaphysics, and spiritual science from Romans 8:14 to Revelation
21:1. One question most drives it: Are we living as divine energy stuck in a
third-dimensional illusion? The response is transforming rather than limited to
yes.
Allen makes interesting comparisons between spiritual revelation and the law of energy conservation seen through the prism of Scripture. He illustrates how actual and metaphorical divine light is, always guiding our road from within. Drawing on Proverbs 4:18, he underlines how our path through life is a light waxing brighter—an active ascension toward spiritual perfection.
Still, this is not only a theological reflection. Deeply
exploring mind science, the book challenges us to consider what is real, what
is illusion, and how readily our impressions fool us. Based on philosophy and
biology, Allen argues persuasively: our senses are the filter blinding us to
the endless truth; our mind is the veil. He precisely breaks down how memory,
perception, and physical experience are unreliable, but what is invisible is
always multifaceted and vibrantly alive.
This book boldly combines science, scriptures, and
spirituality to suggest that death is not an end but an upgrade. Our mortal
"jars of clay" are divine energy containers destined to be
changed—not thrown away—by spiritual development. Near-death experiences are
indications, sparks of what is to come in this amazing story, not aberrations.
And what approach? The Earth of Newness. Not as many,
though, as some might have expected. Allen reinterprets the idea of
"new" from neos (new in time) to kainos (new in nature), drawing on
Isaiah, 2 Peter, and Revelation. It's about transformation, not about
destruction. Restitution. dimensional development

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