A growing collection of devotional, research, and narrative works rooted in the continuity of the biblical witness.

What if the brief account of the wise men in Matthew’s Gospel carries a larger story than we have ever imagined?
Scripture tells us that Magi came “from the east” to worship the Christ Child (Matthew 2:1–12). It records their journey, their worship, and their departure. Then the narrative falls silent. Where did they come from? What became of them? Why would men from distant lands recognize what many in Jerusalem did not?
This 50-Day Devotional explores a historical and linguistic hypothesis: that traces of the biblical story may be preserved in the ancient characters of East Asia. Around the time of Christ, written characters were being formalized in regions connected by vast trade networks stretching from Jerusalem to the far eastern islands. Could fragments of memory have traveled those same routes?
Each day centers on a single Kanji character. You will see its structure, its component parts, and related Scriptures from both the Old and New Testaments. Through careful reflection, the devotional connects visual elements within the character to the unfolding story of redemption. From prophecy to fulfillment, from Bethlehem to Pentecost, the study follows the arc of Scripture while inviting thoughtful examination of linguistic history.
Designed for daily reflection, this volume combines biblical study, historical context, and linguistic exploration. It is written for readers who love Scripture, who value careful reasoning, and who are willing to explore how God’s redemptive story may have reached farther than we once imagined.

Centuries after the Magi’s final act of faith, an earthquake in southern Kyushu exposes the ruins of an ancient rice granary. Inside, archaeologists uncover a sealed clay jar containing a first-century scroll written in a mysterious blend of Hebrew, Greek, and archaic Kanji. The discovery sets off a global storm of intrigue.
Israeli intelligence officer Roy Ben-David, tasked with verifying the scroll’s authenticity, joins forces with Hiromi Nunotani, a Japanese news correspondent whose own family history traces back to the same region. What begins as a simple investigation quickly becomes a race against time, as powerful forces, religious, political, and academic, move to suppress the revelation.
The scroll’s content is staggering: a firsthand testimony from the Magi who witnessed both the birth and resurrection of Christ, encoded within the origins of Japan’s written language. As Roy and Hiromi decode the ancient symbols, they uncover connections between the Gospel and the Kanji that have been hidden for two millennia.
Pursued by assassins and betrayed by allies, the pair must risk everything to bring the truth to light. From Jerusalem to Tokyo, and from the caves of Qumran to the volcanic fields of Kyushu, their journey becomes a modern vestige of the Magi’s own, seeking not a child in a manger, but the enduring Word written in the heart of a nation.
In a climactic revelation, the ancient scroll speaks once more, bridging centuries of silence to reveal the fulfillment of Isaiah’s prophecy: “Listen to Me, O islands, and pay attention, you peoples from afar.”
The Magi Scroll is a breathtaking modern thriller of faith rediscovered, truth resurrected, and prophecy fulfilled, a final chapter where the hidden gospel of the East is proclaimed to the world.
Gospel Kanji
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