A spiritual quest.
A story you'll never forget.
The waters of the unconscious are a vault,
holding all that needs to be known—
revealed to those willing to do the work.
...all darkness is transitory.
Allow yourself to be guided from within
by the greater intelligence that lives inside.
And about what you call God,
know that God is boundless and incomprehensible
but yet He is experienceable.

the man who MET moses

Now Available!

A century after Moses vanished on Mount Nebo, his presence still lingers in the depths of the human soul.

Shemaiah, a fourth-generation descendant of the Hebrew slaves and a member of a privileged priestly lineage, lives securely within tradition—yet an irrepressible inner knowing tells him that Moses, the man who spoke with God, is not truly gone. Leaving behind family, status, and certainty, he embarks on a perilous journey in search of the prophet and the truth that still calls to him.

As his path unfolds through desert landscapes and inner sanctuaries, Shemaiah confronts the unconscious, encounters angels and archetypal forces, and wrestles with a paradoxical God whose justice inspires both terror and awe. Renamed Shemaiahu in the wake of profound transformation, he ultimately meets Moses and enters a revelatory dialogue that reshapes his understanding of God, mercy, and human destiny.

Blending biblical history, depth psychology, and mystical insight, The Man Who Met Moses is a visionary novel of individuation—an epic spiritual quest that reveals how surrendering the ego can open the way to unity with the Self and participation in the divine unfolding of life.

image of the author, Judith Merenfeld-Moscu

Judith Merenfeld-Moscu, PhD, is a Certified Jungian Psychoanalyst with over thirty years of clinical experience. Her psychotherapeutic work has been devoted to exploring the unconscious as the symbolic ground of meaning and psychological transformation. She is the author of the academic study The Unconscious and the Bible (2001), in which she examines psychological dynamics within biblical texts that remain central to contemporary psychoanalytic theory.

Through her literary writing, Merenfeld-Moscu continues to explore the reality of God as an immediate and lived experience. Her narrative style resonates with what Gabriel García Márquez described as realismo mágico (magic realism), allowing elements of historical reality to interweave with visionary, symbolic, and imaginative dimensions. Grounded in her psychoanalytic expertise, her fiction carries both psychological depth and narrative authenticity.

Her novel The Man Who Met Moses portrays an intimate and revelatory encounter between Moses—the prophet and visionary who, according to the Bible, stood with God “face to face”—and Shemaiah, a young Hebrew seeker driven by enduring human questions about the meaning of life, the nature of God, the nature of the soul, and the mystery of death.

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