Rome had the nails. We had the memory.
Dagan is a road thief in Galilee in the years after Herod died. He has watched a city burn for one bad raid, buried his only friend in the wrong dirt, and learned the lower-city rule about mercy: mercy is what gets you killed when the patrol asks who you were drinking with.
Then a Galilean carpenter starts turning up in the same rooms. He does not preach at Dagan. He hands him water. He gives him bread. He pulls a woman out of a stoning and lets her walk. He gets killed under Roman procedure on a Friday morning. Dagan does not believe any of it. He keeps showing up anyway.
Sixty years later, Dagan is eighty-three and dictating to his twelve-year-old grandson. The Temple has fallen. The eyewitnesses are dying. The first writers are at work. The Miracle Was the Memory follows the witnesses across the lifetime they spent carrying a story that had no historical right to survive.
What this book is
Creative nonfiction. First-person witness from the edge of the canonical scenes. Sixty years of road, table, raid, marriage, scatter, and the slow building of a movement that was not supposed to survive. Forty-three chapters across seven parts, plus a full Source Method Appendix and chapter-by-chapter Endnote Packets.
What the book uses
The four canonical Gospels, Acts, Paul's letters, Josephus, Tacitus, Pliny the Younger, Suetonius, Mara bar Serapion, the Talmud, Lucian, Celsus - the documented record from inside and outside the early Christian world. Where the sources disagree, the book keeps the disagreement visible. Where the gospels show economy, the book follows that economy.
What it does not do
It does not claim to recover the private mind of Jesus. It does not flatten the resurrection into psychology. It does not import later Christian-versus-Jew categories backward into a Jewish renewal movement under Roman occupation. It does not add devotional torture details the gospels themselves do not contain.
The witness survived. The witness wrote. The book is a long walk beside that survival.
A work of creative nonfiction.