top of page

The Divine Justice Series

1.jpg
2.jpg
3.jpg
4.jpg
5.jpg
6.jpg
7.jpg
8.jpg
9.jpg

Divine Justice is inspired by the brief but powerful Biblical account of Jael, found in the Book of Judges.

 

“Most blessed of women be Jael, the wife of Heber the Kenite, most blessed of tent-dwelling women. He asked for water, and she gave him milk; in a bowl fit for nobles she brought him curdled milk. Her hand reached for the tent peg, her right hand for the workman’s hammer. She struck Sisera, she crushed his head, she shattered and pierced his temple.” — Judges 5:24–26 (NIV)

This novel seeks not to reinterpret Scripture, but to explore the human heart and history behind a single, haunting act of obedience and courage.

This book began with a question: What does it mean to be wise… when no one listens?

 

Ahithophel, the counselor of kings, is rarely remembered. His betrayal is noted, his death recounted — but his life, his purpose, his silence, are often left untouched.

 

Yet without him, David’s reign would not have stood so long. Without him, Solomon’s throne would not have been steadied by precedent.

 

The Betrayer’s Counsel is not about the loudest voices in scripture. It is about the ones who whispered truth… …and watched the noise rise around them anyway.

Tamar’s story is one of the most daring, disturbing, and quietly triumphant narratives in all of Scripture. For centuries, her name has been whispered more than spoken, referenced more than revered, tucked into genealogies but rarely told with the weight it deserves. This novel is a response to that silence.

 

I did not write The Widow’s Right to embellish her story, but to re-center it. Tamar is not a footnote. She is a foundation. She is the first woman in the line that leads to David and—by every measure of faith and flesh—the Messiah. But more than that, Tamar is a voice for all who have been denied their right: to be seen, to be heard, to be remembered not just for what was done to them, but for what they did in return. She waited. She acted. She survived. And she became the vessel through which a kingdom was born.

 

Her story is not an isolated miracle. It is a pattern—still echoing today—of how women have preserved truth through generations of erasure, shame, and silence. The Widow’s Right is not just about a woman claiming justice in a corrupt world. It is about how justice survives when the world forgets to look for it.

 

If this story moves you, I ask only one thing: Say her name. Tamar. And pass it on.

The Queen's Counsel is based on the life of Bathsheba, whose presence in Scripture - though brief - is deeply significant. It is an offering of imagination, built on the bones of the Biblical story, meant to honor a woman often left in the shadows of history.

 

Her name has been spoken for generations more as caution than compassion, more as scandal than survivor. But in these pages, I've tried to listen to the silence. To the grief no one recorded. To the wisdom that wasn't quoted. To the mother who raised a king but never asked to be called queen.

 

Where Scripture is silent, creative interpretation has been used to honor her humanity and her place in the unfolding story of redemption.

This book was written for those who stood vigil when no one asked them to. For the women who were never named, and the children whose blood never made it into the scrolls, and the bodies left on the hillside while kings turned their faces.

 

Rizpah’s story was not told to preserve history. It was told to honor memory. To remind us that justice is not always a verdict or a throne— sometimes, it is a name spoken when silence would have been easier.

 

The world forgets the mourners. It forgets the concubine, the widow, the daughter of Aiah. But this time— we remember.

The Last Coin centers on a widow with two coins and no audience - except Heaven. Her gift was small in the eyes of men, but it became the very measure by which the kingdom of God would weigh generosity, faith, and worship forever.

 

This is the story of a woman whose name we do not know. She left behind no book, no legacy of descendants, no title. She did not speak in public. She did not teach. She did not lead. She simply gave. Two coins. All she had to live on. It was an act so quiet the world almost missed it. But heaven didn’t. Jesus didn’t. He saw her. He remembered her. 

 

The story of The Last Coin is not fiction. It is a reimagining of a single verse from the Gospel of Mark. It is a slow unfolding of the kind of faith that often goes unseen — but changes everything.

She was written out. Now she speaks. Dinah’s story in the Scriptures is short—a single chapter in Genesis, a single sorrow, and then silence. She was taken, used as a symbol, avenged without consent, and forgotten by the very ones who should have protected her. But silence is not the end.

 

The Silencing of Dinah reclaims the voice of one of the Bible’s most erased daughters. From the ashes of exile to the quiet fire of remembrance, Dinah emerges not as a victim—but as a keeper of names, a bearer of memory, and a voice that outlives every attempt to bury it. This is not the story they wrote. This is the story they couldn’t erase.

He was a thief. A nameless man. Crucified beside kings and criminals. Forgotten by the world before his body grew cold. But in his final breath, he spoke three words that echoed through eternity: “Remember me.” And Jesus did.

 

This is the story of the one who had nothing left to give. No legacy. No good deeds. No time to make things right. Only a whisper of faith —and a Savior who answered. Told with unflinching honesty and aching beauty, Remember Me follows the unnamed thief from the gutters of Jerusalem to the foot of the cross, and finally to the gates of paradise.

 

Along the way, we meet those who watched, doubted, and believed—including the voices history forgot. This isn’t a story about a criminal. It’s a story about mercy. And the One who never forgets

She had only a handful of flour, a drop of oil, and a dying boy. Then the prophet came. And everything changed— But not in the way she expected.

 

When famine grips the land, an unnamed widow in Zarephath prepares to die quietly. Instead, she becomes the vessel of a miracle—feeding a stranger with her last meal, only to watch her own child rise from the dead. But the fire does not stay. The prophet leaves. And she is left with an empty jar and the question that haunts every survivor: What now?

 

The Widow’s Portion tells the haunting, beautiful story of a woman whose greatest gift was not the miracle she received, but the faith she learned to carry when the miracles stopped. This is not just the story of what God gave. It's the story of what remained.

10.jpg
11.jpg
12.jpg

Mary Magdalene did not write a gospel that survived translation. She did not plant a church that bore her name. But she remained. At the tomb. At the cross. At the feet of the teacher who saw her before the world did. She saw what others would only later believe. And she believed without needing to see what others demanded.

 

She loved with her whole presence. She followed with her whole silence. She proclaimed with her whole being: “I have seen the Lord.”

 

This book is for her. For the one whose oil was not wasted. Whose tears were not weakness. Whose voice was not too soft. For the apostle they forgot—but Heaven did not.

There are men whose names live forever, not in glory, but in sorrow. Judas Iscariot is one of them. 

This is a work of historical fiction - a human attempt to imagine what the life and inner world of Judas might have been like.

Was Judas Iscariot damned to eternal darkness for his betrayal? Or was he, in some tragic and incomprehensible way, forgiven— because he was the one who set God’s final plan into motion?

 

It is a question the Scriptures do not fully answer, and one that generations of scholars, theologians, and ordinary believers have wrestled with. Without Judas’s kiss in the garden, there would have been no trial. Without the trial, no cross. Without the cross, no redemption. Was he merely a villain, acting out of greed and fear? Or was he a necessary instrument of a greater, divine will — a man broken by the unbearable burden he was chosen to carry?

 

We are left with only glimpses, and with sorrow. I leave this question to the heart of the reader — and to the mercy of the God who alone sees every soul clearly.

At the foot of the cross, the world was watching. But what about the men who held the hammer? Forgive Them follows three Roman soldiers who witnessed the crucifixion of Christ—each with blood on their hands, each forced to reckon with what they saw.

 

As rumors spread, as silence deepens, and as the world begins to divide around the memory of a dying man’s words, these soldiers must face a truth no empire can control. They were not prophets. Not disciples. Just men. And they will never be the same.

 

In this haunting and redemptive addition to the Divine Justice Series, M.D. White brings us to Golgotha through the eyes of those least likely to believe -- and the most in need of grace.

makerschains.jpeg

The Maker’s Chains Book 13 in the Divine Justice Series By M.D. White

 

He forged the nails that pierced the Son of God. Now he must face the fire that will remake him.

 

Damas is a blacksmith in Jerusalem—hardened by work, haunted by silence, and bound to the empire that demands his skill. When Roman soldiers order him to forge the nails for a crucifixion, he does as he’s told. But when he learns who the nails were for, something breaks inside him. What follows is not a journey of escape, but of reckoning. As whispers of resurrection stir the city, Damas carries the final unused nail—a symbol of his guilt, and of the mercy he cannot understand. Tormented, he hides it… until he finds the courage to forge it into something new.

 

From the shadows of Golgotha to the fire of Pentecost, The Maker’s Chains is a story of guilt, grace, and transformation. A man once complicit in death is invited to become a witness to life. Can a soul shaped by iron be remade by fire?

Mercy.jpg

No Mercy for the Mercied Book 14 in the Divine Justice Series by MD White

 

He was the son of a cursed man. He never asked for a name. Never demanded a seat. He simply stood—day after day—watching the temple rise from stone and silence. But when the fire of God fell from heaven, it did not descend for kings or warriors. It fell for the one who carried what others feared to touch.

 

In this stirring addition to the Divine Justice series, MD White tells the story of Ammihud, a gatekeeper who becomes the unlikely vessel for heaven’s holy flame. With themes of mercy, patience, and redemption, this quiet epic invites readers to see God’s justice not in thunder—but in the man who did not run when judgment came.

Forgotten Brother.jpeg
Forgotten Brother.jpeg

Enoch: Before He Walked Book 15 in the Divine Justice Series by MD White

He was not taken by death—he was claimed by heaven.

 

Before the flood. Before the Law. Before the cross. There was a man named Enoch. Born into a world of fallen angels, giants, and blood-soaked altars, Enoch was never meant to rise. But through obedience, he became a living scroll—a witness to a coming justice and a covenant not yet fulfilled.

 

Enoch: Before He Walked is a breathtaking biblical novel that reimagines the early life of the man who disappeared into God’s presence. Facing betrayal, forbidden knowledge, and a world unraveling from within, Enoch discovers that true strength is not found in stature—but in surrender. Walk with him. And see what happens… when the earth is no longer worthy of the man.

The Forgotten Brother Book 16 in the Divine Justice Series by MD White

 

What if the greatest betrayal was not in action, but in silence? Joseph’s story is well known—the dreamer cast into a pit, sold for silver, rising in Egypt to save a nation. But behind the famous tale lies another voice: a brother history does not name. A brother who stood at the edge of the pit and said nothing.

 

The Forgotten Brother tells his story—the story of silence heavy as stone, of guilt that lingers through years of famine, and of the shocking day when mercy shatters judgment. Through the eyes of the one who watched and did not speak, we see Joseph’s betrayal, Jacob’s grief, and the long road to forgiveness in a new light. In this powerful addition to the Divine Justice Series, M.D. White weaves an unforgettable tale of guilt, redemption, and the mercy that triumphs over vengeance. For anyone who has ever carried regret… For anyone who has struggled to forgive… For anyone who has longed for mercy greater than their silence… This is your story too.

bottom of page