The Trial of Adam T. Son is a theological courtroom drama that allegorically places all humanity on trial through the fictional case of a single man—Adam T. Son. But this is no abstract metaphor. The failures of Adam T. Son are not hypothetical—they are my own. His sins, weaknesses, and moral collapses are drawn directly from my life. I am the defendant. This is my trial. And through it, I invite readers into a raw and honest reckoning with the justice of God, the nature of sin, and the desperate need for mercy.
Set in a cosmic court of law, the story unfolds through dramatic legal proceedings that explore the doctrines of original sin, divine justice, substitution, and redemption. Every argument, testimony, and ruling is steeped in biblical language, shaped by scriptural logic, and aimed at revealing the impossibility of self-justification. While the case is allegorical in structure, it is deeply personal in content—anchored in real-life failure, and elevated by eternal truth.
The courtroom becomes a theater for theological exposition: the prosecution exposes inherited depravity and willful rebellion; the defense struggles to mount a case for human worth; and the Judge—righteous, holy, and unbending—delivers a verdict that only the blood of Christ can overturn. In the final act, the story crescendos into the revelation that justice and mercy meet only at the cross, where the Son of God steps forward—not merely as Advocate, but as Substitute.
This book is not just a literary experiment. It is confession in the form of allegory, a testimony wrapped in theology. It is designed to provoke thought, stir conviction, and awaken hope. The Trial of Adam T. Soninvites every reader to see themselves in the defendant’s seat, to grapple with the weight of guilt, and to behold the only Righteous One who stands in their place.