His marriage in
tatters and his career ruined by lies, Diplomatic Security Service agent Brian
Mullaney is at the end of his rope. Banished to Israel as punishment by his
agency, he's assigned to guard a US ambassador and an insignificant box. Little
does he know that this new job will propel him straight into a crisis of global
proportions.
Inside the box is a messianic prophecy about the fate of the world. And a dark enemy known as The Turk and the forces of evil at his command are determined to destroy the box, the prophecy, and the Middle East as we know it. When Ambassador Cleveland gets in the way, his life and his daughter's life are threatened--and Mullaney must act fast.
Now agents of three ancient empires have launched covert operations to secure nuclear weapons, in direct defiance of the startling peace treaty Israel and its Arab neighbors have signed. And a traitor in the US State Department is leaking critical information to a foreign power. It's up to Mullaney--still struggling with his own broken future--to protect the embassy staff, thwart the clandestine conspiracies, and unmask a traitor--before the desert is turned into a radioactive wasteland.
Fans of Joel C. Rosenberg, Steven James, and Ted Dekker will relish the deadly whirlpool of international intrigue and end-times prophecy in Ishmael Covenant--and will eagerly await the rest of this new trilogy.
Read an excerpt from Kregel by clicking here!
Inside the box is a messianic prophecy about the fate of the world. And a dark enemy known as The Turk and the forces of evil at his command are determined to destroy the box, the prophecy, and the Middle East as we know it. When Ambassador Cleveland gets in the way, his life and his daughter's life are threatened--and Mullaney must act fast.
Now agents of three ancient empires have launched covert operations to secure nuclear weapons, in direct defiance of the startling peace treaty Israel and its Arab neighbors have signed. And a traitor in the US State Department is leaking critical information to a foreign power. It's up to Mullaney--still struggling with his own broken future--to protect the embassy staff, thwart the clandestine conspiracies, and unmask a traitor--before the desert is turned into a radioactive wasteland.
Fans of Joel C. Rosenberg, Steven James, and Ted Dekker will relish the deadly whirlpool of international intrigue and end-times prophecy in Ishmael Covenant--and will eagerly await the rest of this new trilogy.
Read an excerpt from Kregel by clicking here!
About the author:
Terry Brennan is the award-winning author of The Sacred Cipher, The
Brotherhood Conspiracy, and The Aleppo Code, the three books in The Jerusalem
Prophecies series. His latest release, Ishmael Covenant is the first in his new series, Empires of
Armageddon.
A Pulitzer Prize is one of the many awards Brennan accumulated during his 22-year newspaper career. The Pottstown (PA) Mercury won the Pulitzer Prize for Editorial Writing for a two-year series published while he led the team as the newspaper’s Editor.
Starting out as a sportswriter in Philadelphia, Brennan became an editor and publisher for newspapers in Pennsylvania, Illinois, and New York and later moved to the corporate staff of Ingersoll Publications (400 newspapers in the U.S., Ireland and England) as Executive Editor of all U.S. newspaper titles.
In 1996, Brennan transitioned into the nonprofit sector, spending 12 years as VP Operations for The Bowery Mission and six years as Chief Administrative Officer for Care for the Homeless, both in New York City.
Terry and his wife, Andrea, now live in Danbury, CT.
More on Brennan can be found at www.terrybrennanauthor.com. He is also on Facebook (Terry Brennan) and Twitter (@terrbrennan1).
A Pulitzer Prize is one of the many awards Brennan accumulated during his 22-year newspaper career. The Pottstown (PA) Mercury won the Pulitzer Prize for Editorial Writing for a two-year series published while he led the team as the newspaper’s Editor.
Starting out as a sportswriter in Philadelphia, Brennan became an editor and publisher for newspapers in Pennsylvania, Illinois, and New York and later moved to the corporate staff of Ingersoll Publications (400 newspapers in the U.S., Ireland and England) as Executive Editor of all U.S. newspaper titles.
In 1996, Brennan transitioned into the nonprofit sector, spending 12 years as VP Operations for The Bowery Mission and six years as Chief Administrative Officer for Care for the Homeless, both in New York City.
Terry and his wife, Andrea, now live in Danbury, CT.
More on Brennan can be found at www.terrybrennanauthor.com. He is also on Facebook (Terry Brennan) and Twitter (@terrbrennan1).
An interview
with Terry Brennan,
Author of Ishmael
Covenant
What if three
ancient empires were poised to rise again and begin an epic battle for the land
they once occupied in the Middle East? What if this battle was the fulfillment
of a prophecy that would set into motion the end of the world as we know it?
Those questions were the launching point for award-winning author Terry Brennan as he began
writing his new series, Empires of
Armageddon. The series begins with Ishmael
Covenant (Kregel Publications), a
fast-paced, modern-day international thriller.
At
the center of the action is Diplomatic Security Service Special Agent
Brian Mullaney, who is assigned to protect Joseph Atticus Cleveland, the newly
appointed US ambassador to Israel. Mullaney is at the end of his rope as not
only is his marriage in trouble, so is his career. Now he’s been banished to
Israel as punishment by his agency where he is supposed to be guarding the
ambassador and what he considers to be an insignificant box. Little does
he know that his new job will propel him straight into a crisis of global
proportions.
Q: Tell us a little bit about your new
Empires of Armageddon series, specifically the first book, Ishmael Covenant.
The
three-book Empires of Armageddon series is a fast-paced, modern-day
international thriller, constructed around historical fact and historical
fiction. The story
envelops the lives of nearly a dozen key characters but is driven by three
primary characters: Diplomatic Security Service Special Agent Brian Mullaney;
Joseph Atticus Cleveland, the newly appointed US ambassador to Israel; and
their unknown but evident enemy, the Turk, an immortal agent of evil who serves
the One.
Out of the
chaos and conflict of today’s Middle East, it appears that three ancient
empires (Persian, Islamic, and Ottoman) are about to resurrect themselves. One
belief of the Islamic faith is that once an Islamic nation rules any part of
the earth, it rules that part of the earth forever. So, ultimately, each of
those empires would covet, and attempt to control, the same slice of land that each
empire once ruled—from the Fertile Crescent of Mesopotamia, through the rocky
desert known as Palestine, to the Nile Delta in Egypt. The collision of those competing empires could
trigger the climactic events in the Valley of Megiddo.
The series explores how this
potential clash of empires might impact current history, future events, and the
viability of the Jewish state. One immediate impact of an emergent Persian
Empire (an alliance between the majority Shia governments of Iran and Iraq) is
to drive their ancient enemies, the Sunni Arabs of Saudi Arabia, into a treaty
and mutual defense pact with, of all people, Israel. Thus the Ishmael Covenant,
the joining together of the tribe of Abraham and the tribe of Ishmael.
The plot is kick-started when the first of two messianic
prophecies, written in 1794 by the legendary Jewish Talmudic scholar the Vilna
Gaon, is revealed in Jerusalem. Mullaney accepts the responsibility of guardian of the Gaon’s second
prophecy and the box that protects it, which puts his life, and the lives of his
loved ones, in terrible peril and direct opposition to the Turk. The Turk and the
One have been focused on a singular purpose for thousands of years: if they can
prevent the fulfillment of one messianic biblical prophecy, they can eradicate
the validity of all prophecy and change the end of the Book—the outcome of the
Battle of Armageddon. What is contained in the Gaon’s prophecy could destroy their
plans.
That theme
of ultimate evil trying to overthrow the plans of God fuels the story of Ishmael Covenant, which utilizes
this geopolitical cauldron and its biblical ramifications as the backdrop for
an epic testing of one man’s character when faced with multiple adversaries who
threaten his family, his faith, and his country. How Brian Mullaney responds to
his calling could dictate the fate of this world—and the onset of the next.
Q: Is there a scriptural or spiritual theme
that inspired the writing of Ishmael Covenant?
My Bible is an NIV Study Bible with extensive explanatory
notes on almost every page. One of the longest notes and—for me—one of the most
impactful refers to Ephesians 1:3 where Paul writes about “heavenly realms.” In
part, the note explains that Christians are in a real, tangible war, what it
calls a “titanic conflict”: “In the Christian’s union with the exalted Christ,
ultimate issues are involved. . . . At stake are God’s eternal
eschatological purpose and the titanic conflict between God and the powerful
spiritual forces arrayed against him. . . . As a result, the
spiritual struggles of the saints here and now are not so much against ‘flesh
and blood’ as against the great spiritual forces that war against God in
heaven.”
I was struck by the idea that there are great spiritual
forces that war against God in heaven. More sobering is the idea that my
spiritual struggles here on earth have, in some way, an impact on that war in
heaven. Not all of us will come face-to-face with evil incarnate, as Brian
Mullaney and the other characters of Ishmael Covenant do. However, agents
of evil are at work in the world today, just as they have been since Lucifer’s
rebellion was crushed and banished to earth.
Q: How did
your studies while writing the book change your thoughts on the spiritual
warfare we face in daily life as Christians?
I don’t generally live my daily life conscious of the
part I play in this great spiritual battle in heaven. I most often perceive the
evil I face as personal. So, my wife and I pray against the spirits of evil
that try to steal, rob, and destroy in our lives, in our family, and in our
marriage, which is good to do.
Through digging deeper into the concept of spiritual
warfare for this book, I’ve learned that I need to reach beyond the personal
conflict of good and evil in my life and be more conscious of the vastness of
this titanic conflict around me. I need to be an example, a reflection, of
Jesus and his love for all souls. And I need to stand up for light—to be a
warrior-ambassador for light—in a dark world that often seems to be getting
darker.
But the bottom line is inevitable. Good triumphs. The end
of the Book will never change.
Q: What are some of the faith struggles your
main character, Brian Mullaney, faces?
Right from the outset, Mullaney is grappling with a great
chasm in his life. He desperately desires the forgiveness and affirmation of
his father, but now it is impossible to attain because the elder Mullaney has
died. Even though he is a man of character and integrity, admired by many,
reliable and effective in his career as an agent for the Diplomatic Security
Service, Mullaney struggles personally and spiritually with the insecurity that
he’s just not good enough.
Now, unfairly accused and banished to Israel from his
post in Washington, Mullaney is emotionally crippled by the fractures occurring
in his marriage. Add to that, he’s enlisted in a tangible, life-threatening
conflict with evil incarnate. A devoted, mature Christian, Mullaney openly
wrestles with and challenges God’s plan as he tries to save the lives of the
ambassador and those around him in the field while desperately trying to save
his marriage back home. His trust in God’s faithful provenance is ultimately
tested when he is tasked to obey an implausible heavenly command—hand over the
box of power while face-to-face with Satan’s emissary.
Q: How do aspects of actual history come
together with a fictional modern-day story in your book?
There are numerous threads of actual history woven
throughout the plot, threads that become critical catalysts in the unfolding of
Ishmael Covenant and the rest of the series.
The story of the Vilna Gaon—Rabbi Elijah ben Shlomo
Zalman (1720–1797)—that launches the narrative is accurate in all its
historical elements. He was the foremost Talmudic scholar of his age and a
renowned genius on both sacred and secular learning. The story of the Gaon’s
prophecy about Russia and Crimea, revealed by his great-great-grandson in 2014,
is true and led many to believe that the coming of the Jewish Messiah was near
at hand. The Gaon did attempt three trips to Jerusalem from his native
Lithuania; the last one, only a few years before his death, ended prematurely
in Konigsberg, Prussia. All of that history is extensively integrated into the
story arc that plays out over all three books. The story of the Gaon’s second prophecy is a product of my own
imagination.
The ancient biblical conflict between the nation of
Israel and the people of Amalek—the descendants of Abraham and Ishmael—is a
fundamental element in the conflict driving the series. Other historically
accurate elements of the book include the rise of ISIS in Syria and Iraq in
2014, the worldwide confiscation of Iranian financial assets following the
hostage crisis in 1979, NATO’s nuclear sharing project which still has sixty-one
nuclear bombs in bunkers at the Incirlik Airbase, the geopolitical weapon that
water has become in the Middle East, the history of the Hurva Synagogue in
Jerusalem, and the history of the Jews in Turkey. All were vital to the
development of this fictional series.
Q: What kind of research went into this
series? How much time have you spent in the locales where Ishmael Covenant takes
place?
I did an extensive amount of online
research on the history of the Vilna Gaon, his involvement with Jewish
mysticism (kabbalah), his continued influence on Jewish theology, and the role
his followers played in the building and history of the Hurva Synagogue in
Jerusalem. Much more contemporary research was required into the concept of
NATO’s policy of nuclear sharing as well as the structure of the US State
Department and the duties and layout of its operations center. Additionally, the mission
and makeup of the US military’s top-secret Joint Special Operations Command was
earnestly pursued and is factually portrayed, as was the structure and
assignment of the Diplomatic Security Service, one of America’s “armed
services” and the most widely represented law enforcement agency in the world.
Several years ago, my wife and I spent
three weeks in Israel, visiting almost all the locales in this and my previous
series, immersing ourselves in the history of the land and the culture of its
people. Engaging a Palestinian Christian as our guide provided us with some
unique access. Over the years, I’ve made many trips to Washington, DC, including
an exclusive trip to what was then called the Old Executive Office Building
inside the White House compound. By necessity, locales with high security or
limited access were researched online, often aided by visuals through Google
Maps.
As Christians, one of our foundational beliefs is that
Jesus Christ will return. Many believe his second coming will usher in the
final countdown to the end of time as we know it. There are many parts of the
Bible that prophesy about the second coming. Many scholars believe the creation
of the nation of Israel in 1948 started the “end-times clock” ticking. So, most
likely we are in, or on the cusp of, the end of days. The end really is near—whatever
“near” means in God’s timing. I believe any novel that weaves into its plotline
elements relating to how or when Christ will return, or its impact, qualifies
as end-times fiction.
It’s important to remember that end-times fiction is not
the book of Revelation. It’s not theologically deep or hard to understand.
Ishmael Covenant can be
characterized as an end-times thriller because there is a strong thread
connecting the plot of the book, and the series, to last-days events such as how
the quest of the protagonist may ultimately affect biblical prophecies. But
primarily it is simply a story of the conflict between good and evil, and how
that conflict plays out in the life of an ordinary guy.
At its core is an everyman protagonist—a Christian man,
accomplished and successful in his career, who is enlisted in a
life-threatening situation beyond his sphere of experience and understanding.
This lethal danger, projected not only against the man himself but also against
his family, is perpetrated by the Turk and his disciples, a shadowy gang of
murderous thugs who ruthlessly pursue our hero from one country to the next.
One complicating factor is that our protagonist realizes the spiritual
implications and consequences of the deadly conflict into which he was recruited.
As a result, his faith and character are challenged to the utmost as he
confronts a relentless string of obstacles to fulfilling his call.
Journalists are trained observers. They
absorb, analyze, and report on what they see. When I write, I see the
stories as movies. In other words, I’m writing what I see in my mind, which is
similar to what I did as a journalist, especially my ten years as a
sportswriter. I would watch an event and then replay it in my mind to
accurately recount it for my readers.
Perhaps the most tangible result of
being a journalist is that I approach my writing as a gardener, not as an
architect. Architects are the writers who have everything planned and
plotted out before they get started, including extensive biographies for all
their key characters and a detailed outline that is a road map for the entire
book. Journalists don’t have the time for such exhaustive planning. Journalists
are more like gardeners. You watch a game. You’re on deadline. You have an idea.
You start writing and see where it takes you. My characters generally reveal
themselves to me as I write. So, in writing novels, my process is normally to
see how the plot grows and matures and where my characters take the story.
But one of the first things I learned
as a writer is that novels are not written in the same way newspaper stories
are written. There is an age-old structure to the way fictional novels are
written, a structure that brings clarity to the story and comfort to readers.
So, I needed to be retrained for a new style of writing.
My nonprofit career, my second career, impacted the
series in a significant way. For twenty years I worked for agencies that
ministered to homeless people in New York City. While I was a journalist, I
really didn’t have a social justice bone in my body. After living in The Bowery
Mission for seven years, not only did my social justice perspective change by
seeing injustice, poverty, mental illness, and racism on a personal level, but
my heart changed as well.
Two of the primary characters in the series are black
men, one African American, one Caribbean. As a white man, they were challenging
characters for me to write because I wanted to get them right. I wanted to
accurately represent the reality of being a black man in America. I read a lot
and received solid counsel and guidance from those close to me who personally
experience a black man’s reality. I hope the characters and their worldviews
are portrayed honestly and accurately.
Q: Can you give us just a tease of what to
expect from the rest of the series?
The
entire series takes place in the span of a few days, so each book in the
trilogy picks up right where the other left off. The fight for power and
dominion between the empires escalates. The theme of spiritual warfare expands
as the series progresses and intensifies as the battle for the Gaon’s second
prophecy continues. And readers will find Brian Mullaney torn apart by
conflicting loyalties—protecting
the ambassador, salvaging his marriage and his family, unmasking a traitor in
the highest echelons of the State Department—while entangled in a lethal battle with the
emissaries of incarnate evil.
More on Brennan can be found at www.terrybrennanauthor.com. He is also on Facebook (Terry Brennan) and Twitter (@terrbrennan1).
My Review
This book read like I’m watching the news, maybe a movie? Or this could be real life, and yes this is fiction, but be sure to read the author’s notes. You should also know that there are two more books, and that will complete the story.
There is danger here around every corner, the book begins and end that way.
Will there ever be peace for Israel? Or is this the end times, and prophecies are coming true? The Evil one sure believes that the parchment in that box is worth taking, and many give their lives.
Will the mole be found? Will these nations get nuclear weapons? These and more questions still need to be answered.
I received this book through Read With Audra and the Publisher Kregel, and was not required to give a positive review.
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