The Testament of Adam is a Christian allegory that looks beyond the familiar arc of fall and failure. It portrays Adam not merely as the man who doomed humanity, but as the first image-bearer of God: a beloved prototype of divinity, a sacrificial patriarch, a luminous echo of something older than time.
His legacy-distorted by fear, buried in shame, and long forgotten-returns not in judgment, but in revelation.
The Pilgrim's Progress meets The Screwtape Letters, woven with the prophetic resonance of Revelation and the elemental mythos of Genesis.
Thou art Adam.