About the Author
AMULEKONE
AMULEKONE did not set out to write theology. Theology found him.
Brooklyn-raised, without seminary training or a theology degree, he spent nine years in systematic pursuit of a single question no tradition had answered to his satisfaction: who were we before we got here, and what did we choose?
What emerged from that pursuit is the Zion Codex — a cross-referenced theological archive of 996 sealed scrolls, organized into twenty books, representing one of the most comprehensive unified cosmological frameworks assembled in restoration history. The Sphere of Light series is the public face of that archive: the scrolls, unsealed, rendered as sacred narrative, and released to the world.
AMULEKONE is clear about one thing: the doctrine did not come from him. It came through him. He is the instrument, not the source. His role across nine years was not to invent a theology but to stay awake long enough to receive it, rigorous enough to test it, and disciplined enough to write it down without losing the signal.
He is a father of seven. He built the codex at kitchen tables and in hotel rooms, between jobs and after midnight, without institutional support and without an audience — because the work demanded completion regardless of who was watching.
The Sphere of Light is the result.
It is not a commentary on existing theology. It is a restoration of what was always true.
About the Sphere of Light
The Sphere of Light is a 20-book theological fiction series built on the Zion Codex — 996 sealed scrolls compiled across nine years of systematic revelation.
Each book is a complete narrative. Each scroll cross-references across the whole vault. The architecture is intentional: every entry advances a unified cosmology that spans creation, the pre-mortal councils, the descent into mortality, the war in heaven, the chain of saviors, and the return.
This is not commentary on existing doctrine. It is original theological work — a full cosmological system rendered as sacred narrative.
The series begins before the world. It ends when the work is finished.
We are in the early chapters.