The Author
M. Dustin Brimberry
Author • Researcher • Portal Theologian
Dustin Brimberry's research into the antediluvian world began with a single offhand comment from Pastor Troy Brewer — a remark about fairy tales and their strange persistence across unconnected cultures. That thread, once pulled, unraveled years of assumptions. What looked like mythology turned out to be memory.
Drawing heavily on the groundbreaking divine council work of Dr. Michael S. Heiser, Brimberry became convinced that the Hebrew Bible's two-tier supernatural worldview is not background noise — it is load-bearing. Genesis 6 is not allegory. The Watchers were real. The Nephilim were their offspring. The Flood sealed a breach in the structure of creation itself.
That conviction sent him to the ancient sites. The Cyclopean walls of Mycenae. The megalithic terraces of Baalbek. The alignment stones of the British Isles. Everywhere the same signature: construction that defies conventional explanation, traditions that insist on giants, and an almost universal memory that the sky was once closer than it is now.
When Heaven Was Open is his first book — a synthesis of biblical theology, Second Temple literature, and comparative mythology that makes the case for the Watchers and Nephilim as historical realities. It is written for the serious lay reader who wants rigorous scholarship without the ivory tower distance.
The doors were open. Then they closed. And everything our ancestors tried to build afterward was an attempt to get back through.
"The myths are not the problem. The myths are the evidence."
— M. Dustin Brimberry, When Heaven Was Open
