Written Out: The Original People of Biblical History and the Distortion of Sacred Narrative
Who built the Tower of Babel?
You answered without thinking. Nimrod. Everyone knows that.
Now open Genesis 11 and read it. Not the version you remember — the words on the page. A unified people. A shared decision. A tower raised against the command to scatter. And no Nimrod. Not once. He does not appear in the account at all.
What you believed was never in the text. It was added to it — repeated so often, by so many trusted voices, that it hardened into a fact no one thought to check.
And Babel is only the beginning.
In Written Out, the first book of the Divine Identity Trilogy, biblical researcher Brian Waller does something deceptively simple: he reads the text as it is actually written, and separates what Scripture says from what tradition has quietly added in its place. The result is a careful, page-turning investigation into a pattern that runs from Genesis to Revelation — figures assigned roles they were never given, populations written out of a story they were always part of, and a sacred narrative far broader than the one most readers inherited.
This is not a different Bible. It is the same one — read closely, honestly, and without the filter you were handed.
For readers of Esau McCaulley, Lisa Sharon Harper, and Cain Hope Felder.