
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Send us a text
In the quiet aftermath of battle, the Star-Bearers gather beyond Herod’s reach, carrying their wounded, their grief, and the fragile hope entrusted to them. As Gondophares clings to life and the company reunites around Mary, Joseph, and the Child, a new presence arrives at dawn: Mara ben Hannaniah, known among her people as The Listener at Dawn. With her comes the ancient discipline of listening—to light, to dreams, to wounds that still speak. Through healing, song, and silence, Mara reveals that light does not conquer by force, but by presence, restoring bodies, binding fractured souls, and preparing safe passage for what must yet remain hidden.
As Mara’s followers, the Therapeutae depart toward Mareotis with Gondophares, Brigomarus, and the Magi, the narrative turns inward, offering quiet commissions rather than prophecies. Adam is charged not to intervene, but to witness; Sophia is given permission to remember, to write, and not to look away. Amid farewells that widen rather than close the road, the caravan resumes its journey toward Egypt and Alexandria, carrying with it a truth that will echo through the Chronicles: that light does not accuse, it reveals, and those who truly listen will always find one another.
Send your comments to [email protected]
By Raymond ColauttiSend us a text
In the quiet aftermath of battle, the Star-Bearers gather beyond Herod’s reach, carrying their wounded, their grief, and the fragile hope entrusted to them. As Gondophares clings to life and the company reunites around Mary, Joseph, and the Child, a new presence arrives at dawn: Mara ben Hannaniah, known among her people as The Listener at Dawn. With her comes the ancient discipline of listening—to light, to dreams, to wounds that still speak. Through healing, song, and silence, Mara reveals that light does not conquer by force, but by presence, restoring bodies, binding fractured souls, and preparing safe passage for what must yet remain hidden.
As Mara’s followers, the Therapeutae depart toward Mareotis with Gondophares, Brigomarus, and the Magi, the narrative turns inward, offering quiet commissions rather than prophecies. Adam is charged not to intervene, but to witness; Sophia is given permission to remember, to write, and not to look away. Amid farewells that widen rather than close the road, the caravan resumes its journey toward Egypt and Alexandria, carrying with it a truth that will echo through the Chronicles: that light does not accuse, it reveals, and those who truly listen will always find one another.
Send your comments to [email protected]