STRANGERS AT THE GATE Law, Mercy, and the Image of God in an Age of Power A Theological Novel, Moral Treatise, and Pastoral Reckoning
By
Yusun Y. Beck
Ordained Minister - Educator - Scholar - Philosopher
Disabled Veteran
Short Description
A theological novel and moral reckoning exploring law, mercy, and human dignity in an age defined by fear and power. A searching reflection on who the stranger truly is.
Recommended Age: 16+ (moral, theological, and political themes)
Who is the stranger?
And who decides?
In Strangers at the Gate, Yusun Y. Beck presents a work that is part theological novel, part moral treatise, and part pastoral reckoning. Set against the tension of law, authority, and national identity, this book wrestles with one central claim of Scripture: every human being bears the image of God.
In an age where power speaks loudly and mercy is often dismissed as weakness, this work asks harder questions:
- What is the purpose of law?
- Where does authority end and conscience begin?
- Can mercy exist without justice?
- Who taught us to fear the outsider?
- What does Christ demand of those who claim His name?
Rooted in Scripture and echoing the moral clarity of the prophets, this narrative confronts the collision between governance and grace. It does not romanticize disorder. It does not dismiss the need for boundaries. But it refuses to allow fear to silence the command to love.
This book explores:
- The Image of God (Imago Dei) as moral foundation
- The tension between sovereignty and compassion
- The Good Samaritan as political disruption
- Mercy as strength, not surrender
- The Cross as moral inversion of power
The stranger at the gate may reveal more about us than about them.
Law without mercy hardens.
Mercy without law dissolves.
But truth holds both.
This is not partisan rhetoric.
It is a theological reckoning.
Amazon Categories (3 Specific)
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Christian Books & Bibles > Christian Theology > Ethics
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Literature & Fiction > Religious & Inspirational Fiction > Christian Fiction
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Politics & Social Sciences > Social Issues > Human Rights