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The Spirituality in SCIENCE: This book identifies how anyone can achieve immortality, invincibility, and expanding prosperity, here in this world. Kindle Edition
Be that as it may, this book introduces a new Global Phenomenon for the totality of mankind as a vehicle for the fulfilment of our ultimate mandate on this planet. This vehicle delivers tremendous power for everyone who cares to take a ride. They will become invincible, men and women of quiet power to control everything and collect advantages and privileges, and to vanquish every threatening situation confronting them. Eventually, everyone on-board this vehicle will quietly control all, compelling others to join or be left behind to perish.
Product details
- ASIN : B09WN5JHZV
- Publication date : March 27, 2022
- Language : English
- File size : 1.2 MB
- Text-to-Speech : Enabled
- Screen Reader : Supported
- Enhanced typesetting : Enabled
- X-Ray : Not Enabled
- Word Wise : Enabled
- Print length : 253 pages
- Page numbers source ISBN : B09WQB2QMF
- Best Sellers Rank: #3,934,421 in Kindle Store (See Top 100 in Kindle Store)
- #733 in Agnosticism (Kindle Store)
- #1,594 in Agnosticism (Books)
- #2,888 in Religious Studies - Science & Religion
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Benneth Iwuchukwu was born in Nigeria, West Africa, in 1958 in a Christian family of seven. His father was an ordained pastor of the Anglican Church of Nigeria. Benneth was educated at St. Gregory’s College, Nigeria; Yaba College of Technology, Nigeria; The Polytechnic of North London, U.K; and University of Westminster, London, U.K. He worked in managerial positions in the following establishments: Labstock Nig Ltd, Scientific Projects UK Ltd, and Sainsbury’s, Whitechapel, UK. He is married with four children and a beautiful wife. His personal contact email is Beniwuch@Gmail.com.
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- Reviewed in the United States on September 3, 2022Benneth Iwuchukwu presents a thought provoking look at what Christianity is and should be.
in his book The Spirituality in Science. If you have ever wondered, about religion and it’s role or purpose in your life, this narrative is based on the authors findings and is presented as hypotheses.
He explains how primitive people created and needed a god to explain the conditions of life that they could not comprehend. He states that as time has evolved mankind is at a point that they should be striving for a “God Consciousness” and that to experience the “Kingdom of God” we need to view things with a new consciousness. I found that his arguments were presented in a logical format and have left me with a series of questions to ponder.
- Reviewed in the United States on November 19, 2023The author attempts to simplify a heavy subject matter-- veering Christianity away from blind faith to science. He explains why religion encourages group think, which in turn can lead to destructive human behavior. However, the concepts of higher consciousness through meditation are explained in ancient Hindu texts which predate Christianity by at least five thousand years. By some accounts, perhaps even more. It would have been interesting to identify common threads in different faiths that lead to the same scientific understanding of spirituality. Perhaps the author can pursue that in his next book.
Top reviews from other countries
- The Book ReviewerReviewed in Australia on April 12, 2025
5.0 out of 5 stars Faith Meets Reason
What if Jesus Christ had a lab coat on?
In The Spirituality in Science, Benneth Iwuchukwu doesn’t just ask questions like this—he dares to answer them. Imagine a Sunday sermon colliding with a neuroscience lecture, and instead of chaos, clarity emerges. That’s the kind of experience this book offers.
I picked it up expecting dense theory or preachy platitudes. What I got instead was a challenge: to rethink everything I thought I knew about faith, science, and the elusive pursuit of happiness.
Iwuchukwu introduces ideas and terms that may sound heavy until he breaks them down like a patient teacher who genuinely wants you to understand. His explanations are simple without being simplistic, firm without being forceful. At one point, I caught myself nodding, not because I agreed with every word, but because I understood the path he was paving.
Is religion about mindless rituals or meaningful values? Can science help us become more spiritual—not less?
These aren’t just academic musings. They hit close to home, especially when Iwuchukwu invites readers to prioritise well-being and value creation over blind obedience. It’s the kind of advice your wise grandmother might offer—if she had access to psychological data and scriptural cross-references.
Sure, some points repeat. But maybe repetition isn’t a flaw here—maybe it’s the author’s way of turning foreign ideas into familiar ones.
If you’ve ever found yourself torn between your spiritual upbringing and your rational curiosity, this book might be the bridge you didn’t know you needed. Just don’t expect to walk away perfectly unchanged.