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Becoming a Divine Messiah ~ The Day of Becoming and Remembrance, Book 1: New Earth Golden Age Trilogy

Becoming a Divine Messiah, written by Kerie Logan, is a spiritual fantasy framed as an awakening narrative, following Danica and her twin brother Ryan on their twenty-fifth birthday as they enter their “Becoming” and begin learning the hidden history of New Earth. Through the sacred library, Paula’s orientation, the Fields of Time, Tobias the white lion, Archangel Metatron, and the remembered legacy of Aislinn, the novel blends family inheritance, metaphysical instruction, galactic mythology, and a vision of humanity transformed beyond fear, money, hierarchy, and spiritual amnesia.

This book is most compelling when its cosmic scale softens into intimacy. Danica feeding goats, Ryan joking his way through heavy revelations, their mother buying cupcakes after the ceremony, and the tropical sunset room inside the library all give the story a tenderness that keeps its vast theology from floating away into abstraction. The ideas are earnest and enormous, sometimes overwhelmingly so, but there’s genuine emotional heat beneath them. The book is asking, with real ache, what kind of world might be possible if trauma were no longer treated as destiny. Its vision of money disappearing, medicine becoming more intuitive, and community replacing punishment can feel idealized, yet I appreciated that the author doesn’t present ascension as escape. Again and again, the book returns to shadow work, grief, forgiveness, and the body. That insistence gives the spirituality more weight than simple wishfulness.

The writing is lush, devotional, and unguarded. At its best, the writing feels luminous and prayerful, especially in the scenes with Tobias and in the later revelations about Aislinn. I was moved by the way the book ties personal pain to collective healing, particularly in the final chapters, when Danica’s understanding of Aislinn becomes less like family pride and more like awe. The dialogue carries long passages of teaching, and recurring ideas of 3D fear, 5D consciousness, remembrance, and divine purpose sometimes give the story a more meditative rhythm than a fast-moving narrative pace. Yet even when the prose becomes emphatic, it rarely feels cynical or calculated. It feels deeply believed, and that sincerity is the book’s most persuasive quality.

I came away from Becoming a Divine Messiah feeling that it’s less a conventional fantasy novel than a visionary spiritual testament shaped into a story. Its strongest moments return to a simple emotional center: the longing to feel loved, guided, healed, and awake to one’s own sacred purpose. That’s where the novel lands best, not merely in its expansive mythology, but in its compassionate insistence that no one is beyond becoming. I’d recommend it to readers who are drawn to New Earth spirituality, channeled wisdom, ascension themes, angelic cosmology, and reflective fiction that values healing and transformation over plot-driven suspense.

Pages: 371 | ASIN ‏ : ‎ B0GVDFVCLH

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