Two lost codices. A plain reader's guide to the Book of Enoch — the text 1,500 years of Christian tradition tried to bury. And forty maps of the world as scripture drew it: read against the ends of the earth.
Both delivered as illustrated PDFs, emailed within 60 seconds. Read on any phone, tablet, or computer.
A section-by-section index of both codices. Every chapter, every map, every reading laid out below.
The fall onto Mount Hermon and the covenant sworn there — the transmission that would set the rest of the book in motion.
Every fallen Watcher named plainly, with the forbidden art each one carried down to humankind.
Enoch's journey through the seven heavens, chamber by chamber, drawn from the primary text.
The trial, the binding, and what the text says still waits for them.
The kings and the mighty, the coming of the Son of Man — the section IBTimes UK and Brit Brief both cited from The Hermon Codex.
The 364-day calendar, the sun's twelve gates, and the reckoning of time as Enoch received it.
The Nephilim, the Giants, and the world washed clean — Enoch's account read alongside Genesis.
The cardinal seals as ancient cosmography drew them — north, south, east, west, and what each was said to hold.
Where scripture places the boundary of the known world, and what the text says waits beyond it.
The sealed range in the north as Enoch names it, mapped and cross-referenced to Ezekiel and Isaiah.
The reading the book is named for — the southern boundary, plate by plate, in full.
The four rivers, their sources, and the geography that ancient readers used to trace them.
How to read a scripture-map without a degree — every convention explained, plate by plate.
In 1773, a Scottish traveler named James Bruce returned from Ethiopia carrying three copies of a book the rest of the world had been told was lost forever. For over a thousand years, the wider Christian world had forgotten the Book of Enoch entirely. The Ethiopian church alone kept it — copied by hand, monastery to monastery, generation after generation, in an unbroken chain reaching back to before the New Testament was written.
What The Church Removed reads from that same primary tradition. A plain guide to the entire Book of Enoch — the Watchers, the Ascent, the Book of Parables, the Astronomical Book, the Days of the Flood — chapter by chapter, with the ancient context restored and no seminary background required.
The Southern Seal Atlas draws from Enoch, the Dead Sea Scrolls fragments recovered from Qumran, and the wider cosmography they inherited. Forty maps of the world as scripture drew it — read against the ends of the earth as the ancient text names them.
Both books cite every source. Every claim is traceable to a primary text.
What The Church Removed is a plain reader's guide to the entire Book of Enoch — the Watchers, the Ascent, the Book of Parables, the Astronomical Book, the Days of the Flood. The Southern Seal Atlas is forty cartographic readings of the world as Enoch and the Dead Sea Scrolls drew it — the four corners, the ends of the earth, the mountains of the north. They answer different questions. The first tells you what the text says. The second tells you what the text was pointing at.
No. Each codex is complete on its own. Most readers start with What The Church Removed since the guide gives you the language and the context for the Atlas. But you can begin with either.
Yes. You don't need any background at all. Both codices explain what they draw from as they go. If you can read English, you can read these.
These are offered as reader's guides to primary source texts — the Book of Enoch, the Dead Sea Scrolls, and the wider apocryphal tradition. They present what the ancient texts actually say. They are not doctrine and not a substitute for your own faith or beliefs.
Both are illustrated PDFs delivered instantly by email after checkout on Gumroad. Read on your phone, tablet, or computer — or print at home. Files arrive within 60 seconds of purchase.
Yes — the files are yours to keep and read across your own devices. We ask that you don't redistribute them publicly.
Yes. Every purchase includes lifetime updates to that edition. Every time we add material, clarify a passage, or restore a new source, your copy is refreshed at no additional cost.
What The Church Removed — $19. The Southern Seal Atlas — $27. The Codex Vault — $32.