@dharashahauthor: The Last Days Of Summer by Sarra Manning. Thank you @bibliolifestyle @Harper Perennial for my gifted copy. #romcombooks #enemiestolovers #enemiestoloversbooks #romcombooktok #summerromance

Dhara Shah
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Wednesday 24 June 2026 18:13:20 GMT
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Sixty six books. One author. One promise running like a thread from the first page to the last. It starts in a garden with a tree of life, and the first prophecy in the Bible. A seed of the woman will crush the serpent. Genesis 3:15. The whole story is the story of that seed. The seed survives the flood through Noah. It is carried through Abraham, a seed, a land, and all nations blessed. It is redeemed at the exodus, where a lamb is killed and the blood goes on the door. It is throned in David, a king for ever. Then the kingdom splits, and Jeremiah warns that Jerusalem will fall, and the captivity will last seventy years. Babylon burns the city in 586 before Messiah. Here is the part most people miss. In Babylon, Daniel is reading Jeremiah's seventy years when Gabriel hands him the seventy weeks, a countdown to the Messiah, and tells him the clock starts the day someone commands Jerusalem to be rebuilt. Jeremiah named the destruction. Nehemiah finished the rebuilding in 445 before Messiah. The destruction and the rebuilding are the two ends of one prophecy, and that prophecy is a clock pointed at one man. The four kingdoms marched in order. Babylon, Persia, Greece, Rome. And in the days of Rome, on schedule, the seed arrived. Yahusha. Son of the woman, son of Abraham, son of David. Killed at Passover, the exact feast of the lamb. The new covenant was the same Torah, now written on the heart. Jeremiah 31:33. The nations were grafted in, exactly as Abraham was promised. Then the warned-of falling away. And then the last page answers the first. The serpent crushed for good, a new heaven and earth, the New Jerusalem, and the tree of life again, with the curse gone. Garden to garden. He came once, exactly when the clock said. The same prophets say he is coming back to finish it. The clock is nearly full.
Sixty six books. One author. One promise running like a thread from the first page to the last. It starts in a garden with a tree of life, and the first prophecy in the Bible. A seed of the woman will crush the serpent. Genesis 3:15. The whole story is the story of that seed. The seed survives the flood through Noah. It is carried through Abraham, a seed, a land, and all nations blessed. It is redeemed at the exodus, where a lamb is killed and the blood goes on the door. It is throned in David, a king for ever. Then the kingdom splits, and Jeremiah warns that Jerusalem will fall, and the captivity will last seventy years. Babylon burns the city in 586 before Messiah. Here is the part most people miss. In Babylon, Daniel is reading Jeremiah's seventy years when Gabriel hands him the seventy weeks, a countdown to the Messiah, and tells him the clock starts the day someone commands Jerusalem to be rebuilt. Jeremiah named the destruction. Nehemiah finished the rebuilding in 445 before Messiah. The destruction and the rebuilding are the two ends of one prophecy, and that prophecy is a clock pointed at one man. The four kingdoms marched in order. Babylon, Persia, Greece, Rome. And in the days of Rome, on schedule, the seed arrived. Yahusha. Son of the woman, son of Abraham, son of David. Killed at Passover, the exact feast of the lamb. The new covenant was the same Torah, now written on the heart. Jeremiah 31:33. The nations were grafted in, exactly as Abraham was promised. Then the warned-of falling away. And then the last page answers the first. The serpent crushed for good, a new heaven and earth, the New Jerusalem, and the tree of life again, with the curse gone. Garden to garden. He came once, exactly when the clock said. The same prophets say he is coming back to finish it. The clock is nearly full.

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