Posted on 02/19/2007 1:14:41 PM PST by Quix
Discovering the First Evidence of "DNA" in the Bible
What kind of evidence might support the hypothesis that the entire Old Testament had a single author? In this article, we will look at a phenomenon that at first appeared small, but then expanded into a sprawling, mind-boggling mega-structure of codes contained in an inconceivably small set of Hebrew letters that threads its way throughout the entire Old Testament.
In past Bible code investigations, we have been working with two dimensional matrices (like a crossword puzzle array or an expanded Scrabble board), or with multi-dimensional clusters, consisting of numerous matrices that all include a small segment of literal text. Now, we are looking at a one-dimensional straight line of Hebrew letters, like just one column of a very large Scrabble board, that contains the impossible: a column of only 372 Hebrew letters (at a skip of 3,806 letters between each successive letter) that includes the following collection of lengthy codes:

Table 1 The 13 Codes Found in a Single Column of a Code Matrix
How could there be 666 letters (and 85 sentences) of code within only 372 Hebrew letters? It is much like a DNA molecule. It consists of strands that wrap around one another in a double helix. However, this collection of codes also includes a few triple helixes and a few quadruple helixes as well. The letters in this single column matrix include letters from all but three of the 39 books of the Old Testament, tying together the entire book in a package. Only the very short books of Nahum, Haggai and Jonah are not touched by this single column of encoded letters, which is mind-boggling.

DNA diagram from
Just like a mutated gene, however, the content of this collection of codes is a series of messages about something bad, or defective, whether it be a person, a series of events, or a movement of history. It is not that the author of the text and codes is bad, but that the author could be describing something that didn't go according to the original plan, which was for good. It is truly remarkable how consistent the content of these codes is. There is a noticeable absence of positive subject matter in these codes.
That in itself is highly improbable. If these "codes" were random, one would expect that some of the content would either be positive or nebulous. But it is not. It is basically all bad.
In a previous article [WHAT NO CODE SKEPTIC CAN FIND link:
HTTP://WWW.BIBLECODEDIGEST.COM/PAGE.PHP/473
, we presented the codes that Moshe Shak had found after searching for extensions to a short code about Mel Gibson. Within a single column of only 147 Hebrew letters, he had found five codes nested within one another. In total, these codes consisted of 371 letters in 52 sentences, as summarized below.
Table 2 The Five Codes Found in a Single Column of a Code Matrix

After publishing this article, we thought Shak's investigations had been completed. Some months afterward, we noticed that three of the above five codes stopped just short of the end of the Tanakh. This suggested the possibility of the existence of wrapped extensions to these codes that would extend into the Torah after finishing up at the end of the Tanakh.
Shak found wrapped extensions to two of these three codes. One was 40 letters long (Code 1W) and included the phrase A rounded end, which Shak believes is strongly descriptive of the nature of a wrapped code. This increased the 147-letter-long code in the earlier article to 187 letters. The second wrapped extension was 29 letters long (Code 2W). It increased the 110-letter-long code in the earlier article to 139 letters.
We also asked Shak to check for extensions prior to the original five long codes he had found and he discovered one, increasing a 44-letter-long code to 54 letters (Code 4E).
Since he had found codes at double and triple the original skip of 3,806 letters, we asked him to check for other possible codes at double and triple the original skip. He found two more codes in an alternative triple skip to the two triple skip codes he had already covered. These codes were 30 and 10 letters long, respectively, and were separated by a single letter that was not part of either code (Codes 6a and 6b).
Having previously found codes at double and triple the original 3,806 skip, we asked Shak to search for codes at quadruple the original skip. He found four new codes, with lengths of 53, 44, 16 and 13 letters. Two of them were wrapped codes, running up to the end of the Tanakh and then continuing on in the Torah (Codes 7 & 7W and 8 & 8W). One of these (Code 7W) kept going beyond the end of the Torah, and continuing on into the rest of the Tanakh. The ninth code (Code 9) was in the vicinity of the beginning of the earliest discovered codes. The tenth code (Code 10) started at the beginning of the Torah and stretched well into the rest of the Tanakh.
The location of all of these codes is summarized in the following table. The yellow cells represent the codes presented in the prior article. The green cells represent wrapped extensions to codes found in the Tanakh, as well as Code 10, which started in the Torah and continued on into the rest of the Tanakh. The purple and rose cells represent newly discovered codes at three and four times the original skip.
The letter numbers in the first two columns are in reference to the first letter of the first previously discovered code. So the original 147-letter-long code appears in letter numbers 1 through 147. link:
HTTP://WWW.BIBLECODEDIGEST.COM/PAGE.PHP/473
.




The color scheme adopted above will be continued in the tables below to make it easier for the reader to follow which codes are which. Where an extension was found, we display the entire code, so the reader can get a sense of whether or not the extension fits with the earlier code.








How could all of the above ELSs, which appear to be about a single topic and which are in good Hebrew, just happen to appear within a single column of only 379 letters? To do so would require simultaneous orchestration, while maintaining a surface text that is intelligible and which has inspired millions over more than two millennia. To think that chance could explain this is not reasonable.
There Is Still More . . .
There is yet more that was found in Shak's review of these letter strings, which is not even included in Table 3.

This code runs backwards from letter number 277 to 191.
Shak also found the following code in the string of letters with half the skip of 3,806 (1,903), where every other letter was taken from the original column of Hebrew letters:

This code runs backwards from letter number 206 to 198.
We also sent Shak the letter strings from five times the original skip (19,030 = 5 x 3,806), within this same single column of Hebrew letters. He found the following code:

This code runs from letter 84 to 129.
All of these findings were made using Keys to the Bible software. Because of letter differences in the Hebrew texts used, comparable findings using other software would be different.
Continue to Closeness Comparisons: A SUBSTANTIVE BASIS FOR TESTING THE CLAIMED REALITY OF BIBLE CODES:
HERE: http://www.biblecodedigest.com/page.php/501
It's showing more evidence of God's timeless Authorship.
read later
Ditto
Amen.
PING to end times list
sorry keyboard still acting up.
It had one Author, all right... :) The masterfulness of how the Bible is tied together from book to book is beyond comprehension.
This article is too complex for my puny brain.
If God said it, I believe it. Nuf said.
-Jo-
More of a spinoff on "Bible Code" type stuff. Not very believable.
Run this skip code thingy on the combined speaches of Al Gore, John Kerry, and John McCain and see if there is any evidence that they were all written by a single author and get back to me.
Thanks!
Mel Gibson?
Is this sort of like an anagram?
Genesis ~ Moses
Exodus ~ Moses
Leviticus ~ Moses
Numbers ~ Moses
Deuteronomy ~ Moses
Joshua ~ Joshua
Judges ~ Samuel
Ruth ~ Samuel
1 Samuel ~ Samuel
2 Samuel ~ Samuel
1 Kings ~ Jeremiah
2 Kings ~ Jeremiah
1 Chronicles ~ Ezra
2 Chronicles ~ Ezra
Ezra ~ Ezra
Nehemiah ~ Ezra
Esther ~ Mordecai
Job ~ Moses
Psalms ~ (Mostly David)
Proverbs ~ Solomon
Ecclesiastes ~ Solomon
Song of Solomon ~ Solomon
Isaiah ~ Isaiah
Jeremiah ~ Jeremiah
Lamentations ~ Jeremiah
Ezekiel ~ Ezekiel
Daniel ~ Daniel
Hosea ~ Hosea
Joel ~ Joel
Amos ~ Amos
Obadiah ~ Obadiah
Jonah ~ Jonah
Micah ~ Micah
Nahum ~ Nahum
Habakkuk ~ Habakkuk
Zephaniah ~ Zephaniah
Haggai ~ Haggai
Zechariah ~ Zechariah
Malachi ~ Malachi
The Five Books of Moses subtracted from the Ten Commandments leaves five. Minus the brothers Jacob and Esau leaves three. It was reasoning like this that led Rabbi Yitzhok Ben Levi, the great Jewish mystic, to hit the double at Aqueduct 52 days running and still wind up on relief.
Did the Old Testament have just one author? Erm, yes, the same author as the New.
thx
Ecclesiastes 1:1
"The words of the Teacher, son of David, king in Jerusalem:"
Jeremiah 1:1
"The words of Jeremiah son of Hilkiah, one of the priests at Anathoth in the territory of Benjamin."
Etc...
This is idiocy.
NOTE TO ALL:
While my keyboard problem appears to be solved for the time being . . . I still have little to no inclination to defend or support the validity of the AUTHENTIC Bible Codes.
There is a link above . . . let me see . . .
http://www.biblecodedigest.com/page.php/501
RE:
A SUBSTANTIVE BASIS FOR TESTING THE CLAIMED REALITY OF BIBLE CODES
IF
someone were to cite a specific paragraph of that doc or a similar one, I MIGHT be willing to respond about the substance of the paragraph.
Most carping naysayers tend to avoid even seriously scanning, much less reading; much, much less understanding and discussing the merits of the statistical science and linguistic arts involved in authentic codes.
However, Drosnin's spurious stuff and a host of other spurious stuff aside, there is a considerable body of extremely solid peer-reviewed statistical documentation of the awesume validity of the Codes--that is, that what has been found
IN SCRIPTURE TRUMPS THAT FOUND IN ANY OTHER LONG HEBREW TEXT
BY A VERY, VERY, VERY, VERY WIDE MARGIN.
That's simply a fact. Naysayers to that fact will eventually paint themselves more overtly with the foolishness their absurd statements tend to be saturated with.
Bias is not a substitute for truth nor for scientific inquiry.
I'll likely ignore most naysayers on the thread unless I happen to feel particularly fiesty on occasion.
Blessings,
Cheers.
I continue to be of the opinion that God uses the Codes primarily to show forth His timeless all knowing majesty and to make sport of idiot naysaying scientists on the basis of their own criteria for truth.
IIRC several atheist Jewish scholars have come to a Saving knowledge of and a relationship with Jesus Christ because of the awesome statistical facts regarding AUTHENTIC codes.
There is plenty of mystery and certainly incredible complexity which we are only beginning to know how to make the least sense of. It is a rapidly involving discipline.
I don't know that the particular codes in and of themselves are the main points of this document. It is the awesome sweep of the codes and their sort of holistic gestalt in terms of the negative slant/tone of them. And, particularly that they take in almost the whole of the Old Testament.
THAT FACT ALONE indicates that SOME EXTERNAL AWESOME SOURCE had to do with the construction of the surface text in which the codes are embedded. The only plausible explanation is GOD ALMIGHTY. imho.
Blessings,
LUBB
IIRC,
[you can check it out at the BCD site]
There were some very fascinating codes when the Crucifixion movie first came out or just before it actually came out--regarding Mel Gibson.
There have been codes about Saddam Hussein and many other current and historical famous figures.
Some Jews believe that everyone's name can be found therein. But the issue is--would that be a statistically significant thing--usually not--as names in and of themselves are not long enough to be statistically significant.
IIRC, the science now insists that a code has to be AT LEAST 30 characters long to be statistically significant. A lot of Drosnin's stuff and a lot of other site's stuff falls well below that criteria.
It's conceivable that shorter codes could turn out to be authentic--in that they may be of God. But one cannot say that they have a statistically significant likelihood of occurring other than by chance.
Whew! That could fill an entire backboard with chalkline arrows.
Not sure what you're getting at.
I should check up on the number.
I have it in my head that it's 3-4 but I may be inflating the numbers.
Enosh, the "author" of all inspired scripture is the Holy Spirit.
Let's keep this between you and I.
(Mum's the word.)
Hallelujah!
'Bout time someone said it.
(Does the Holy Spirit speak in code?)
Enosh, the "author" of all inspired scripture is the Holy Spirit.
= = =
Goodness! EVERYone did NOT KNOW that???
Lawzee me!
A number of folks are convinced that Daniel's book he was told to seal up 'until the end'
is the authentic Codes.
I'm not absolutely convinced of that. But it's somewhat plausible.
Certainly Christ spoke of some things being hidden--such as from pharisee types . . .
Of course, not everyone chooses to believe THE LIVING WORD; THE MESSIAH; THE GOD AND CREATOR OF ALL THAT IS . . .
If you want to ridicule then that is fine, go ahead and ridicule. Personally I'm both ambivalent to and open to the fact that within the scriptures there is evidence of divine authorship. Personally I believe that every jot and tittle is in the scripture by divine appointment and that there is nothing superfluous.
Christ said that every jot and tittle would be fulfilled. That suggests that there is meaning not only in the words, but in the punctuation. There is evidence of divine authorship all through the scriptures, so if you want to ridicule what may very well be such evidence, then go ahead and do so.
If you have anything constructive to add to the discussion, I'm sure that everyone would be glad to discuss it with you.
And it shall be.
But this "Bible Code" stuff is humor.
As I said, I am ambivalent. I don't think it is in good taste to come on to a thead merely to ridicule those who are interested in this topic.
That being said, here is an interesting link you may wish to read.
Sometimes there is more to the scriptures than what simply appears on the page. Sometimes there is a deeper meaning if you are willing to look for it.
Adieu.
What a bunch of mystic OT nonsense!
Yet people still believe in OT mythology.
Adieu, Sir.
Please take a tinfoil hat with my compliments on your way out.
I gather you have not bothered to examine the evidence on it's merits and just enjoy throwing rocks for recreation and amusement . . . supposedly from some very lofty perch compared to those of us who just 'don't get' the humor you seem so enamored with?
Indeed. Great link to a good doc.
Thanks BTW, for your considerable charity and wisdom hereon.
Much appreciated.
Examining the evidence could prove a LOT more fruitful than throwing ill-informed rocks.
And, in terms of the OT, there is much life and fruitfulness in it's pages.
Of course, not everyone is in the market for gold or wisdom and walk blithely on by both.
I was actually opening the door so that you could leave. I guess you didn't catch my hidden meaning, eh?
I checked the preview several times but somehow still missed this error:
Don't know if it's possible or worth your bother, or not.
That truncated 2nd gif in the middle of this post evidently needs a
leftcaretBRrtcaret
after the IMG =SRC"link" coding above it??
I have a bias, a supposition, inference, extrapolation . . . that
A significant percentage of rock throwers--those who throw rocks at any hint of even a potentially SUPERNATURAL example of God manifesting in our time/space dimension . . .
that a significant percentage of that group . . .
ARE SERIOUSLY HYPER THREATENED on at least a subconscious basis . . . by even the possibility that GOD REALLY IS; REALLY IS WHO HE SAYS HE IS; AND REALLY CAN DO AND WILL DO WHAT HE SAYS HE WILL DO . . .
at some point . . . with even them.
I have in the past disturbed myself enough to examine the "merits" you mention and came away with only laughter.
Is that what you mean by "lofty?"
Perhaps we have nothing to exchange about it, then.
I'm skeptical about your examination of the merits.
How much training in stat have you had?
Mathematics--even statistics--is not a . . . personal opinion, personal interpretation sort of science.
At least not on the whole.
One can at some point out of bias declare that one disbelieves the evidence.
But the evidence is still vividly starkly there making a mockery out of the disbelief.
It is simply a fact that such results do not occur by chance.
There has never been a case in all of recorded history wherein such statistics were ever later found to have had anything to do with chance.
Denial of that may be humorous to some of us . . . but it is still denial.
I can't fix a reply post, but I can pull if you'd like to repost it.
Summary
In this article, we examine a collection of evidence of encoding in the Bible where the odds of chance occurrence are very remote (one in 373 million) and are based on a statistically significant sample of 50 independent observations. These observations are completely objective, being totally free of any subjectivity in the translation of Hebrew into English. In other words, this is hard, conclusive evidence that the phenomenon of Bible codes is real.
What kind of evidence is this? Suppose you searched for ELSs of David the King, where David is spelled DVYD (dalet, vav, yod, dalet). You noted the location of the 25 ELSs with the shortest skips in the Tanakh, and you recorded the shortest distance between any of the letters of each of these ELSs and literal appearances of the name David in the Tanakh. Table 1 presents the results, ranked by the shortest distance for each ELS.

That some of these David (DVYD) the King ELSs would be close to literal appearances of David in the Tanakh is not surprising. What is unexpected is that all but two of the 25 are quite close. How unusual is this? We derived odds of one in 52,632 of the above minimum distances being as small as they are being due to chance. Most unusual, and there is more.
An alternative royal title for David is The King David (DVYD). For this additional title, we noted the location of the 25 ELSs with the shortest skips in the Tanakh. The set of minimum distances were almost as small as a group as those shown in Table 1. We derived odds of one in 7,092 of the minimum distances being as small as they are because of chance.
Together the odds of chance occurrence of the minimum distances we observed for these two royal titles were one in 373,266,144, or one in 373 million. We are looking at an exceptionally non-random phenomenon using 50 observations not just a few pieces of isolated anecdotal evidence. From a statistical standpoint, that is a sample size large enough that a decisive inference can be made. This is clearly not a coincidence.
What is also intriguing about this evidence is that it is drawn from a collection of 50 ELSs, most of which have very large skips (for example, more than 10,000), that are scattered throughout the Tanakh. This is not just evidence of isolated encoding, but of general encoding over the entire Old Testament.
[Qx emphasis as usual]
General Introduction
Location, location, location . . . sounds like a realtor's mantra. Yet it could also be that of a Bible code researcher. Most if not all technically strong code researchers would attest to the validity of the link between the subject matter of the literal text and the content of codes found there. Their convictions are based on a long series of observations of unique situations, or what scientists call "anecdotal evidence." These researchers have observed this pervasive phenomenon, and are convinced of it. The problem with anecdotal evidence is that there is rarely enough of it of the exact same kind that it would add up to statistically conclusive proof.
Simply presenting yet another collection of new and intriguing pieces of anecdotal evidence is no way to convince skeptical scientists of the potential validity of any Bible code phenomenon. What is needed is some way to focus on the location phenomenon in a way that involves enough objective observations that a highly improbable result could possibly occur.
What is needed are 25, or 50, or 100, or more, observations of the same kind where a comparison can be made between actual and expected results. Just such a situation is described in this article, and the odds against chance occurrence are less than one in 27 million. Before we cover it, however, we will first look at a simple example that resembles the more complex one we are really interested in.
What sort of experiment would one conduct to test the general observation that there is a strong correlation between the subject matter of Bible codes and the literal content of the [surface] text where such codes appear? To be compelling, it would be most useful if the topic in the literal text were one that appeared a large number of times and if the subject matter of the ELSs were terms that were undisputable in their linkage to the original topic and in their spelling. If there were several terms, then selection of some obvious grouping of terms would also strengthen the credibility of the experiment.
Closeness of ELSs of The King David to Literal Appearances of David in the Tanakh
The name David appears exactly 1,061 times in the Tanakh. And the formal names of the kings of the House of David appear hundreds of times as ELSs in the Tanakh. What if we were to note the shortest distance (in letters) between each of the five ELSs of each king's proper title with the shortest skips and any literal appearance of David in the text? As a control, we would randomly scramble the letters of each king's proper title and then note the shortest distance between each of the five ELSs of ten scrambled royal titles.
In the Tanakh, David is spelled two different ways. It is dalet-vav-dalet in the earlier history books (i.e., 1 and 2 Samuel and 1 and 2 Kings), and it is dalet-vav-yod-dalet in the later history books (1 and 2 Chronicles).
Suppose we do this for the royal title, The King David (DVD). The following table displays the minimum distances of each of the five The King David (DVD) ELSs with the shortest skips in the Tanakh, followed by the corresponding minimum distances for twenty random scramblings of The King David (DVD).


As we can see, the sum of the minimum distances for the actual title, The King David, is dramatically less than it is for each of the twenty scramblings. Can we derive the odds against the sum of the minimum distances of the five The King David ELSs from this? In reality, we have too few observations to do this.
What scramblings were used? The King David is spelled (reading left to right) HMLKDVD (heh-mem-lamed-kaf-dalet-vav-dalet). The first 10 scramblings for which results are shown in Table 1 are:

These scramblings were obtained by assigning the numbers one through seven to the seven Hebrew letters of The King David. These numbers were then scrambled randomly and the corresponding Hebrew letters are shown above.
We also did the above for 10 scramblings of David the King, which has the same letters. This is how we obtained the sum of the minimum distances for 20 scramblings of The King David.
Comparison of Results with Those for Other Kings in the House of David
We could also do this for the royal titles of the different kings of the House of David for which at least 25 ELSs could be found. (A criteria of 25 ELSs was chosen because the situation we will focus on later involves a review of the 25 ELSs with the shortest skips for different royal names.) There are eight other kings, if we include King Saul. So there are nine royal titles for which we have 20 scramblings each. We, therefore, have 180 control results.
Suppose for now we just look at the actual minimum distances for the 18 real names of these kings, leaving out the scramblings of those names. These are shown below, where each is ranked from the smallest to the highest average of the five minimum distances.

As is obvious from the above, none of the ELSs of the names of the other kings have an average of the minimum distances that is anywhere as small as that for The King David. Yet, we still do not have enough results to begin to reasonably estimate the probability that the five shortest skip The King David ELSs would a total minimum distance as short as is the case. Adding the 10 scramblings for each of the twenty other royal names does help in this regard, however. Here is what the above table looks like for the 20 scramblings (out of a total of 200) with the shortest total minimum distance.

Since none of the 180 scramblings of royal names had an average of the minimum distances that was less than that for The King David (17), the odds of chance occurrence of this are less than one in 180, or less than 0.5556%. However, the fact that the actual average minimum distance of 17 is quite a bit less than the smallest total minimum distance for any of the 180 scramblings indicates that the odds are quite a bit less than one in 180. Getting a more accurate assessment of the odds would require running many more scramblings than 180. We are, however, discussing these results to familiarize the reader with our method of estimating the odds of chance occurrence of a given observation.
We continue discussing this example in order to illustrate some additional concepts. One phenomena that could easily skew the above results is the presence of one or more ELSs that are quite far from any literal mention of King David in the literal text of the Old Testament. This can easily occur because the first appearance of David in the text is in the eighth book of 1 Samuel, in chapter 16 and verse 13, at letter number 408,470. So any ELS confined to the first seven books would naturally be some distance from a literal mention of David. One consistent way to address this problem using a common statistical approach is to exclude a selected percentage of the results that are "outliers," that is, values that are among the X% of the largest values in the results. We might pick 10%, or 20%, or 50% for X. If we pick 20%, it would be the same as excluding the largest minimal distance among the five shown for each royal name. When we do that the last table changes to the next table.

The advantage of excluding the largest difference from the average distance is that it eliminates the distorting effect of including a result that is likely due to chance. When this is done, the average for The King David (3.75) is much less than the average for any of the other royal titles.
If we excluded 40% of the minimum distances, it would be the same as excluding the two largest minimal distances among the five shown for each royal name. When we do that the table above changes to the table below.

When the two largest minimum distances are excluded from the average distance, the average for The King David (0.3) is again much less than the average for any of the other royal titles.
The next table displays the minimum distances for each of David's four different royal titles. These distances are displayed according to the skip size of the ELS, from the smallest to the largest.


In Table 9, the minimum distances in Table 8 have been rearranged separately for each royal title, with the smallest minimum distances shown first. For comparison, the comparable results are shown for the two royal titles that had the smallest average minimum distances among all of the royal titles of the kings in the House of David. The distances highlighted in yellow below are clearly unusual in comparison to those for other royal titles.

Table 10 displays four different types of average minimum distances for the various royal titles. In the right column are shown the odds of chance occurrence of the average distance (excluding the two largest).

There is no question that it is quite unusual that three of the four royal titles of King David exhibit the shortest average distances to literal mentions of David in the Tanakh. The only issue is how unusual are these results.
Derivation of the Odds of Chance Occurrence
How improbable are the combined results for the two variations of the royal titles of David, spelled with four Hebrew letters? The results of each title are independent of those for the other titles. So we can take the product of the indicated probabilities shown in Table 10:
(1 in 52,632) x (1 in 7,092) = 1 in 373,266,144.
Brief Technical Addendum
How did we come up with the odds of chance occurrence shown in Table 10? In Table 3, we showed 10 different scramblings of the letters of the royal title, The King David. We worked with 80 different scramblings and recorded the minimum distances from literal appearances of David in the Tanakh for the ELSs with the shortest skips. We then recorded all these minimum distances and took random samples of 25 of these distances, and then calculated the resulting averages displayed in Table 10 (i.e., average all, average excluding the largest, average excluding the two largest and average excluding the five largest). We then ran one million trials of these averages, and we noted how many of them were as small or smaller than the observed averages for the different royal titles of King David.
For DVYD the King, the average distance excluding the two largest minimum distances for the 25 ELSs with the shortest skips in the Tanakh was 44. For only 19 out of one million trials was this average less than or equal to 44. This gives us odds of one in 52,632 (19 out of one million divided by 19).
For The King DVYD, the average (X 2) distance was 102. For only 141 out of one million trials was this average less than or equal to 102. That gives us odds of one out of 7,092.
For The King DVD, the average (X 2) distance was 1,887. For 159,459 out of one million trials this average was less than or equal to 1,887. That gives us odds of one out of 6.3.
All of these findings were made using Keys to the Bible software. Because of letter differences in the Hebrew texts used, comparable findings using other software would be different.
Continue to Hebrew Alphabet: Lesson Four
HEBREW ALPHABET LESSON FOUR HERE: http://www.biblecodedigest.com/page.php/499
You know, that was so gracefully done is was hardly noticeable.
Bravo!
Now then, back to the silly topic...
That's 17!
That's *Gasp!* !!! 72 !!!
Have you no Shame!?
Sometimes I regret not putting things in a caucus thread . . .
However . . . there is also . . . letting all perspectives stand or fall on their own merit . . . or . . . lack thereof . . .
Silliness seems to be like beauty . . .
I consider the human agents . . . scribes.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.