Remembrance: A Return to the One - Adrianus Andrew Muganga (Ramadan)

By Adrianus Andrew Muganga (Ramadan)

Release Date: 2025-12-22

Genre: Religion & Spirituality

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REMEMBRANCE: A Return to the One is a reflective examination of faith, responsibility, and human division in the modern world. Rather than presenting doctrine, ideology, or argument, the book investigates how belief became separated from ethical accountability, allowing faith to be absorbed into identity, power, and institutional control.

Drawing on history, conscience, and shared moral patterns across traditions, the work traces a recurring process: an original orientation grounded in responsibility and humility becomes formalized, defended, and owned. As this shift occurs, worship is reduced to ritual, truth to membership, and God to an image shaped by fear and loyalty. The consequences religious conflict, social fragmentation, selective compassion, and normalized violence are examined as outcomes of misalignment rather than failures of belief itself.

This book does not speak on behalf of any institution, tradition, or movement. It offers no new religion, system, or identity. It does not seek agreement or followers. Its method is unveiling rather than persuasion, inviting the reader to examine inherited assumptions, attachments, and loyalties with honesty.

REMEMBRANCE emphasizes the restoration of individual responsibility, conscience, and shared humanity before the One beyond names. It calls for a faith that cannot be weaponized, a belief that cannot be owned, and a conscience that cannot be outsourced.

This work is written for readers willing to reflect beyond inherited certainty, to distinguish belief from fear, and to accept responsibility for what clarity reveals.

Remembrance: A Return to the One - Adrianus Andrew Muganga (Ramadan)

By Adrianus Andrew Muganga (Ramadan)

Release Date: 2025-12-22

Genre: Religion & Spirituality

(0 ratings)
REMEMBRANCE: A Return to the One is a reflective examination of faith, responsibility, and human division in the modern world. Rather than presenting doctrine, ideology, or argument, the book investigates how belief became separated from ethical accountability, allowing faith to be absorbed into identity, power, and institutional control.

Drawing on history, conscience, and shared moral patterns across traditions, the work traces a recurring process: an original orientation grounded in responsibility and humility becomes formalized, defended, and owned. As this shift occurs, worship is reduced to ritual, truth to membership, and God to an image shaped by fear and loyalty. The consequences religious conflict, social fragmentation, selective compassion, and normalized violence are examined as outcomes of misalignment rather than failures of belief itself.

This book does not speak on behalf of any institution, tradition, or movement. It offers no new religion, system, or identity. It does not seek agreement or followers. Its method is unveiling rather than persuasion, inviting the reader to examine inherited assumptions, attachments, and loyalties with honesty.

REMEMBRANCE emphasizes the restoration of individual responsibility, conscience, and shared humanity before the One beyond names. It calls for a faith that cannot be weaponized, a belief that cannot be owned, and a conscience that cannot be outsourced.

This work is written for readers willing to reflect beyond inherited certainty, to distinguish belief from fear, and to accept responsibility for what clarity reveals.

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