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I Escaped The Trap of Life – Book

About The Book

Book Title: I ESCAPED THE TRAP OF LIFE

A Fictional Novel

Author: Pastor Joel

Publisher: Open Heaven Christian Church

Genre: Christian Fiction / Inspirational / Spiritual Growth

Word Count: Approximately 28,000 words

Logline

A sixty-two-year-old man who has given everything to everyone β€” his wealth, his prayers, his silence β€” walks away from his entire life and disappears into the Alaskan wilderness, leaving behind a world that never once asked how he was doing, and discovering for the first time what it means to be truly known by God.

Overview

I Escaped the Trap of Life is a deeply moving work of Christian fiction that traces the spiritual journey of Edward James Newman, a man who spent six decades being everything to everyone while slowly disappearing from his own life. Rooted in Scripture and told with rare emotional honesty, this novel is both a cautionary mirror held up to the modern church and a profoundly hopeful story about the God who sees those the world has overlooked.

Drawing on the prophetic tradition of Elijah, Paul the Apostle, and the great biblical desert encounters, Pastor Joel Martin weaves a story that is at once intimate and universal: the story of a man who chose to stop dying slowly and began, at last, to live.

Plot Synopsis

Edward James Newman has spent sixty-two years being indispensable to everyone around him. A faithful husband, a generous church deacon, a trusted businessman, and an “emotional landfill” for the burdens of others β€” Edward is a man of profound quiet competence whose needs have never once been asked after. His business partner, Marcus Webb, takes credit for his work. His wife, Eleanor, talks at him for forty minutes each morning without a single question. His pastor of twenty-two years has never learned his middle name. His adult children call on birthdays, when they remember.

On a gray Tennessee morning, after Marcus falsely accuses him of undermining a major client, something in Edward quietly gives way β€” not in anger, but in the exhausted relief of a man who has finally stopped pretending. Over the following weeks, he makes a decision so radical and so methodical that no one in his life will see it coming: he will liquidate his fourteen-million-dollar estate, give the vast majority to charities, and disappear to a twelve-by-twenty-foot cabin on the Kenai Peninsula in Alaska β€” alone, off-grid, and entirely in the hands of God.

He tells no one. He leaves no note. On a Tuesday in October, he walks out of his old life and does not look back.

The novel unfolds on two tracks simultaneously. In Alaska, Edward builds a new life from the ground up β€” learning to fish, growing food in a small greenhouse, splitting wood through brutal winters, and praying in the raw, unperformed way of a man finally alone with God. He reads his Bible from Genesis to Revelation without the mediation of another person’s interpretation. He weeps. He laughs. He falls on the ice and lies under a sky so full of stars it seems structurally impossible, and feels β€” for the first time in his life β€” completely held.

In Tennessee, the world he left behind slowly unravels. Marcus Webb discovers that Edward held majority ownership of the company all along and has sold it without warning. Eleanor, speaking to a detective, realizes with horror that she cannot describe her husband’s inner life β€” because she never asked about it. Pastor Raymond Goode, sitting through a prayer vigil where forty-three people share memories of what Edward did for them without a single person recalling what they did for him, feels the weight of twenty-two years of pastoral neglect settle onto his conscience. His children β€” David and Renata β€” begin, tentatively and painfully, to reckon with what their silence cost their father.

Years pass. In the wilderness, Edward encounters Liz β€” a forty-five-year-old woman in a small Homer grocery store whose voice is like a soft wind in spring. Their love, born of unhurried conversation and genuine mutual seeing, becomes the human counterpart to Edward’s relationship with God: selfless, patient, and entirely without performance. Together they fish, plant, build, and live. They become, in the fullness of the word, one.

In his eighth year in Alaska, Edward begins to write β€” seven volumes of prophetic reflection that will eventually reach millions. He understands, at last, what he always was: not simply a good man, but a prophet, one whom God separated from the noise of the world so that the message he carried could finally be heard.

The novel culminates in the eighteenth year, as Edward approaches his eightieth birthday. His body is failing. On a November night of extraordinary Alaskan cold, as he sits by his south-facing window with his Bible open to Psalm 37, two angels appear in the room. They speak his heavenly name β€” Pure-Heart β€” and he is taken home not through ordinary death but through a chariot of fire, in the tradition of the prophet Elijah. His ending is not ordinary, because his life was not ordinary. It was a life entirely given to God, and God receives it entirely.

The epilogue returns to those he left behind, tracing the long spiritual ripple of his departure: Marcus humbled, Eleanor transformed, Pastor Goode reborn as a true shepherd, and a world that finally received β€” in his absence β€” the sermon his presence was never allowed to preach.

Themes

Invisibility and the cost of selfless service β€” The novel confronts the quiet epidemic of people who give without limit to communities that receive without noticing. Edward’s story is a portrait of what it costs a human soul to be perpetually unseen.

The trap of people-pleasing and the freedom of surrender β€” Edward’s escape is not a rejection of love but a surrender of a life built on the approval of others. The novel explores what it means to die to one’s constructed self and be raised into one’s true identity in Christ.

The prophetic calling and its loneliness β€” Like Elijah under the juniper tree, Edward carries a prophetic gift that the noise of conventional life makes impossible to exercise. His wilderness years are the desert of encounter, not of punishment.

The church’s obligation to its quiet ones β€” Through Pastor Goode’s transformation and the devastating prayer vigil scene, the novel holds a mirror to congregations that organize programs of service while failing to truly see the people beside them in the pew.

The love of God as the only sufficient answer β€” Woven through every chapter, the novel’s deepest conviction is that human love, however real and precious, cannot substitute for the love of the Father who knows our name before we are born and calls us home when our work is finished.

Scripture Foundation

The novel draws richly from the King James Version of the Holy Bible, with particular weight given to Luke 9:24, Jeremiah 17:5, 1 Kings 19:7, Revelation 2:17, Galatians 2:20, and Matthew 25:40. Each chapter concludes with a Scripture for Reflection, grounding the narrative in the Word of God and inviting the reader into their own examination of conscience.

Target Audience

I Escaped the Trap of Life will resonate deeply with readers of Christian fiction and inspirational literature, particularly those who have experienced the exhaustion of chronic selflessness, felt unseen within their families or church communities, or are navigating questions of identity, calling, and the will of God. It speaks with equal force to pastors and church leaders who may recognize in Pastor Goode’s journey a mirror of their own pastoral blind spots.

The novel will appeal to readers of Christian inspirational fiction in the tradition of works that combine spiritual depth with emotionally honest storytelling β€” readers who want not simply to be entertained but to be changed.

Author’s Note

Pastor Joel Martin is the founder and senior pastor of Open Heaven Christian Church. A minister, teacher, and spiritual counselor with decades of pastoral experience, Pastor Martin writes from deep familiarity with the hidden cost of selfless service and the quiet grief of those who pour themselves out for others. Though I Escaped the Trap of Life is a work of fiction, its spiritual convictions are drawn from a lifetime of walking alongside people whose greatest need was simply to be genuinely seen and loved β€” by their communities, and by God.

It is his prayer that every reader who has ever felt invisible in their own life will find in Edward Newman’s story not a fantasy of escape, but a testimony to the God who has always known their name.

β€œPrecious in the sight of the Lord is the death of his saints.” β€” Psalm 116:15 (KJV)

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I ESCAPED THE TR …

Joel Martin

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No portion of this book may be edited or reproduced. Copyright – 2026

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