The Lost Books: What They Didn’t Want You to Read

For centuries, humanity has accepted a carefully curated version of spiritual history. The Bible, as we know it, wasn’t handed down in one perfect form. It was assembled. Voted on. Redacted. And in that process, entire books were left out—books that challenged power, complicated the narrative, or revealed truths too dangerous for the ruling order to tolerate.

These are the Lost Books—texts written by prophets, mystics, sages, and revolutionaries who dared to record their visions. Some were excluded for being too mystical. Others too political. Some simply didn’t fit the clean, linear storyline of salvation through obedience. But all of them hold keys to forgotten wisdom.

What Are the Lost Books?

The term "lost books" refers to ancient religious texts that were either excluded from the official Bible or deliberately hidden from public view. These include:

  • The Book of Enoch – A deep dive into angels, the Nephilim, and cosmic justice.

  • The Gospel of Thomas – A collection of mystical sayings attributed to Jesus, emphasizing direct knowledge (gnosis) over blind faith.

  • The Gospel of Mary Magdalene – A radical vision of feminine insight and spiritual equality, long buried under patriarchal edits.

  • The Apocalypse of Adam – An esoteric narrative of creation and rebellion, contradicting the Genesis story.

  • The Book of Jubilees, The Gospel of Philip, The Book of the Giants, and many more.

Many of these texts were found buried in desert caves, sealed in jars, or hidden in monasteries for centuries. The Nag Hammadi Library and Dead Sea Scrolls cracked open a portal to a side of early spirituality the Church tried to erase.

Why Were They Removed?

Because they threatened control.

These books taught:

  • That the divine is within you.

  • That salvation is not purchased, earned, or mediated—but realized.

  • That women were spiritual authorities.

  • That the world is ruled by corrupt powers—not just politically, but cosmically.

They weren’t heresy. They were inconvenient truths.

The Council of Nicaea and other early Church authorities didn’t just select what was holy—they deleted what was dangerous. What remained became canon. What was lost became heresy. But truth isn’t erased by a vote. It waits.

What They Reveal

These texts don’t just add flavor to religious history—they transform it.

They show a version of Christ who speaks in riddles, teaches inner transformation, and calls his followers to awaken—not obey.

They reveal the divine feminine as essential—not secondary.

They depict heaven and hell not as places, but as states of consciousness.

They challenge the idea of an external savior, and instead point inward.

In short, they return agency to the seeker.

Why It Matters Now

We live in a time of spiritual awakening—and confusion. People are leaving institutions in search of direct experience. They’re tired of middlemen, tired of dogma, tired of systems that promise heaven but deliver guilt.

The Lost Books are not just historical relics—they’re spiritual maps. Blueprints of a path that was buried but not destroyed. They speak to those who sense there’s more. To those who feel that truth has been distorted but not lost.

To those ready to remember.

The Return of Forbidden Wisdom

We were never meant to be blind followers. We were meant to be divine participants. The lost books were never truly lost. They were waiting. For the time when consciousness would rise high enough to understand them.

That time is now.

If you’re reading this, it’s because you were never meant to stop at the surface. You were born to dig.

So dig.

Because the truth was never gone.

It was just buried.

And now, it’s waking up with you.

The Book of Enoch – Angels, Nephilim, and Cosmic Justice

The Book of Enoch is one of the most important and mysterious texts omitted from the Bible. Written before the time of Christ and widely read by early Jews and Christians, it was later banned by Church authorities for its explosive content. Why? Because it doesn’t just mention angels—it reveals their rebellion.

At the heart of Enoch lies the story of the Watchers—angels who descended to Earth, lusted after human women, and created the Nephilim, giant hybrids of divine and human blood. These beings corrupted Earth with violence and forbidden knowledge. Enoch is taken on a celestial journey, witnessing heavenly realms, cosmic timelines, and divine judgment.

This book doesn’t present a passive God, but a Creator administering justice across vast dimensions. It explains evil not just as sin, but as spiritual contamination—a distortion introduced into creation by beings who were supposed to guide it. In a time when religion seeks neatness, Enoch dares to show the cosmic war beneath the surface.

The Gospel of Thomas – Gnosis Over Belief

The Gospel of Thomas isn’t a narrative of Jesus’ life. It’s something far more dangerous: a list of his secret sayings, many of which turn traditional theology upside down.

There’s no crucifixion. No resurrection. No judgment day. Instead, Jesus speaks in riddles that push the reader inward:

“If you bring forth what is within you, what you bring forth will save you.”

This gospel emphasizes gnosis—direct knowing of the divine—over belief, obedience, or ritual. The Kingdom of Heaven isn’t a future event or a distant realm. It’s within you and around you, but only visible to the awakened eye.

That’s why it was suppressed. Because if you don’t need a priest or institution to know God—you become spiritually dangerous to any system built on control.

The Gospel of Mary Magdalene – The Suppressed Voice of the Feminine

The Gospel of Mary is radical—not just for what it says, but who says it. In this text, Mary Magdalene isn’t a follower. She’s the closest disciple, the one who truly understands Christ’s teachings.

She speaks of the soul’s journey through hostile powers. She describes inner liberation, detachment from the material world, and the ascent of consciousness. Her message is bold, mystical, and entirely non-hierarchical.

Peter and the male disciples question her authority. Sound familiar?

This gospel was rejected not because it was false—but because it showed a female mystic as the central carrier of Christ’s message. It threatened patriarchy at its core. And in doing so, it preserved a glimpse of what early Christianity could have been: equal, intuitive, and deeply inner-driven.

The Apocalypse of Adam – A Rebellion Against the Genesis Narrative

The Apocalypse of Adam is one of the most esoteric lost texts—an alternate creation story from Adam’s point of view.

In it, Adam describes how he and Eve were not created in ignorance or sin—but in light. The true fall wasn’t from disobedience, but from being cast into material bodies by false rulers. These rulers—the Archons—serve not the true God, but a counterfeit power.

This text presents a Gnostic rebellion against the Old Testament view of God. It implies that what we call “God” in Genesis might not be the ultimate divine at all, but a lesser, jealous entity who imprisoned the soul in flesh.

It’s a wake-up call. A bold retelling. A reminder that the origin story we’ve been given may be part of the illusion itself.

The Book of Jubilees, The Gospel of Philip, The Book of the Giants, and More

The Book of Jubilees:

Known as “Little Genesis,” this book rewrites biblical history with new detail. It presents a strict angelic calendar, adds heavenly explanations for earthly events, and emphasizes covenants, cycles, and cosmic order. Time itself is sacred in Jubilees—structured by divine rhythm.

The Gospel of Philip:

This gospel explores sacred union—not just physical, but mystical. It speaks of the “bridal chamber” as a symbol of union between the soul and Spirit. It also emphasizes the connection between Jesus and Mary Magdalene—hinting at a relationship far deeper than mainstream texts allow.

“The Lord loved Mary more than all the disciples…”

It challenges the nature of resurrection, sacraments, and the idea that salvation is something external.

The Book of the Giants:

Discovered among the Dead Sea Scrolls, this book expands on the Enochian story. It tells of the Nephilim—their violence, their dreams of doom, and their eventual destruction. It gives names, personalities, and tragic weight to these fallen hybrids.

The giants are not just monsters. They are beings aware of their fate, watching their world crumble under divine judgment.

Why These Books Still Matter

These aren’t dusty relics. They are keys. Clues. Maps to a hidden spiritual history that was silenced, not because it was false—but because it gave too much power to the individual.

The lost books remind us:

  • That spiritual authority doesn’t belong to institutions.

  • That the sacred includes the feminine.

  • That salvation is inner work.

  • That myth is a mirror.

They weren’t lost. They were buried. Now we’re digging them back up—and finding pieces of ourselves inside.

Joe Leposa

Mission Statement:

At Humanfluence, my mission is dedicated to expanding human awareness and contributing to a more informed and enlightened world. Through this YouTube channel and other platforms, I strive to gather and organize insights from all religious, spiritual, philosophical, psychological, and historical sources. I consider myself an "aggregator" of knowledge and information, aiming to expose humanity to a comprehensive spectrum of ideas and encourage critical examination.

The information I present at Humanfluence does not necessarily reflect my personal beliefs, nor is it intended to convert or evangelize. My goal is to inform and entertain, fostering a foundation for unity, understanding, and harmony. Together, let's embark on a journey to explore the vast realms of consciousness and reality, shaping a brighter future for humanity.

Warmest regards,

Joe

https://www.humanfluence.org
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