Book 2 of 4: Chronicles of the Apocalypse

Remnant: Rescue of the Elect

(Chronicles of the Apocalypse Book 2)

Price range: $5.95 through $27.95

The Hunt for the Apostle John and his Book of Revelation

Who are the 144,000? Who are the Two Witnesses?

Book 2 in the shocking controversial series Chronicles of the Apocalypse.

The isle of Patmos, 66 A.D. Roman warrior Severus is ordered by evil Nero Caesar to kill his target, the Apostle John.

But he is torn between his loyalty to Caesar and to the Christians who saved his life, Alexander and Cassandra.

When they learn the true meaning of the scroll of Revelation, they journey to Jerusalem to warn the Christians, only to find themselves caught up in a Jewish revolt led by fiery Zealots.

Ancient Israel’s world is ending as Nero’s Roman armies descend upon Jerusalem for desolation. Will the Christians escape the city before the demons of hell are unleashed?

An edge-of-your seat action-packed supernatural conspiracy thriller, written by Brian Godawa, respected Christian and best-selling Biblical author.

Spiritual Warfare, Angels and Demons

The human story is not the only one in this series. The book of Revelation unveils the spiritual warfare involved in Biblical prophecy. So Chronicles of the Apocalypseshows the evil plans and actions of Satan and his fallen angels, the Watchers masquerading as gods of the nations. This gang of demons is not going down easily.

EXTRA BONUS: Historical and Biblical Facts Behind the Fiction

 You’ll get extensive endnotes with each chapter that prove the historical fulfillment of the book of Revelation and End Times Bible prophecies as depicted in this novel. The story follows ancient Jewish historian, Flavius Josephus, for the events surrounding the destruction of Jerusalem and the temple in the first century.

PLEASE NOTE: If you are buying the LARGE PRINT edition of this novel, the endnotes do not come with the novel. You must purchase the Large Print Endnotes of the novel separately. Find the button that says “Endnotes Large Print” above.

Customer Reviews

Man dressed as a futuristic soldier pointing a gun indoors.

Read this and your end times view will be enlarged
This is classified as Christian fantasy, but there is very little in the premise of the story or the research that strays very far from Scripture that is carefully read and properly interpreted. You can enjoy the novel and not read a single footnote, but I loved the research and felt that it enlightened the action.

Prairie Mary

Man dressed as a futuristic soldier pointing a gun indoors.

Scripturally and historically sound.
To some degree these novels have an echo of “The Illiad” and “The Odyssey” especially when dealing with the powers and principalities. The human characters, like Odysseus, have their journey home from an unspiritual Troy to their Spiritual Ithaca with as many problems and adventures along the way.

Sean Frazer Williamson

Man dressed as a futuristic soldier pointing a gun indoors.

Carries the reader to the very streets of regions within Roman Empire A.D. 66
Remnant, the follow-up to Tyrant, is an expertly written piece of historical fiction that has the power to illuminate what responsible scholars have always pointed to being in plain sight in the annals of history; yet the cultural language of the people and places contained within, are brought to light in the most exciting and easy to understand way.

John Rife

Man dressed as a futuristic soldier pointing a gun indoors.

Carries the reader to the very streets of regions within Roman Empire A.D. 66
Remnant, the follow-up to Tyrant, is an expertly written piece of historical fiction that has the power to illuminate what responsible scholars have always pointed to being in plain sight in the annals of history; yet the cultural language of the people and places contained within, are brought to light in the most exciting and easy to understand way.

John Rife

Man dressed as a futuristic soldier pointing a gun indoors.

Can you, "handle the truth"?
The reader is forced to see in graphic detail the torture early Christians faced by refusing to deny Christ. The Bible and books about martyrs do not prepare us for this. Indeed, all the horrors detailed in the Book of Revelation were experienced.

David Von Schmittou

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