Most people don't live their lives with the conscious, dominating understanding that they are a vital part of a universe that is full of divine meaning: From the smallest speck neutrino to God's to-be-crowned achievement of the whole Adamic race, all are significant. Through author Joseph Martin's use of this universal sense of all, a suitable allegory is offered in The Entrant, a focal point amid the span of time and eternity. In fact, personalized versions of The Entrant are given to each one who actually already arrived in heaven. It is an in-service manual about heavenly protocol, anachronously procured by such means as the plot includes, brought back to us now, an advance-copy perusal availed for our needy contemporary society. There's an interruption of explanations about the heavenly entrant's mind-blowing rewards, essentially composing an in-depth flashback, encompassing the bulk of the narrative taking readers to Luscious, a first-century man who discovered an earthquake-caused new access to the lower geologic plate, the setting and ruins of a separate, pre-Adamic race. After Luscious' inadvertent activation of an artifact from that era's lost science, its signals were perceived by Ekron--the last, immortal, earthly survivor from that prehistoric age. As the host of those signals, Luscious was detected through Ekron's powers and resultantly word-whisked (teleported) to a "chamber of timelessness" where he would be manipulatively commissioned by Ekron, constraining Luscious to enter upon a transmillennial course of action, offsetting such events of history that could doom the very fate of infinite-existence itself.
The Entrant