What if Christ never came to start a religion - but to restore rhythm?In A Millennial View on the Work of Christ, Emmie Em - a spiritual thinker rooted in Central Kenya's rich cultural heritage - reclaims the story of Jesus through African consciousness, Swahili rhythm, and decolonized faith. This book is not theology in robes - it is a remembering. It challenges the idea that salvation is guilt, that worship is performance, and that miracles belong to men on stages.
It is for the disillusioned believer, the spiritual rebel, the African soul who wonders, "Where do I belong in this gospel?"Blending scriptural depth, ancestral wisdom, and poetic clarity, Emmie Em leads us into: Christ as a consciousness, not a religion Sin as disconnection from rhythm - not moral dirt Swahili and Kikuyu proverbs as sacred theology Healing as memory, not magic The church as a gathering of aligned minds - not a building From Nyeri's misty highlands to the Swahili coast's spiritual rhythms, this is a book that sings, questions, heals, and remembers."You are not waiting for a miracle.
You are remembering you are one."This is not a Christian book. It is a Christ rhythm - for those ready to walk barefoot, speak boldly, and return to the sacred within.
What if Christ never came to start a religion - but to restore rhythm?In A Millennial View on the Work of Christ, Emmie Em - a spiritual thinker rooted in Central Kenya's rich cultural heritage - reclaims the story of Jesus through African consciousness, Swahili rhythm, and decolonized faith. This book is not theology in robes - it is a remembering. It challenges the idea that salvation is guilt, that worship is performance, and that miracles belong to men on stages.
It is for the disillusioned believer, the spiritual rebel, the African soul who wonders, "Where do I belong in this gospel?"Blending scriptural depth, ancestral wisdom, and poetic clarity, Emmie Em leads us into: Christ as a consciousness, not a religion Sin as disconnection from rhythm - not moral dirt Swahili and Kikuyu proverbs as sacred theology Healing as memory, not magic The church as a gathering of aligned minds - not a building From Nyeri's misty highlands to the Swahili coast's spiritual rhythms, this is a book that sings, questions, heals, and remembers."You are not waiting for a miracle.
You are remembering you are one."This is not a Christian book. It is a Christ rhythm - for those ready to walk barefoot, speak boldly, and return to the sacred within.