Copyright © Lyuben Piperov June 2004
A
Strange Code about AD 2006 Discovered in the Torah
Lyuben Piperov
Preliminary
Notes
Hebrew is written from right to left. In this
study, the most common “Absolute Method” of assigning numbers to each of the
22 Hebrew letters has been used. In this method, the five finals are assigned
the same numbers as their corresponding letters of the alphabet. The mapping
of the Absolute Method is given in the end of the document. The finals, however,
have been used accordingly throughout in the text.
Introduction
Recently I read the second Michael
Drosnin’s book on the Bible code: The Bible Code 2: The Countdown [1]. I read his first book some years
ago. At that time I was impressed by his codes about the years 2000 and 2006.
But these years are found as numbers expressed NOT as two thousand and two
thousand and six, respectively, but, according to the Jewish calendar,
as 5760 and 5766. In accordance with the rules, a certain year is written
as a number from 1 to 999, preceded by a letter indicating the millennium.
This letter indicates the number of whole millennia that have already passed
since the foundation of the world and corresponds to the serial number of
the letter in the alphabet. So, the years between 5000 and 5999 begin with
the fifth letter in the Hebrew alphabet, he
(ה).
This is similar to the expression of a number by the positional Arabic system
used everywhere. But this is valid for the first digit only. The number within
the thousand is expressed almost exactly as in the Roman system: a row of
letters always arrayed according
to the descending order of their respective numeric equivalents.
[1]
So, like the Roman numbers, their length varies according
to the number of letters required to add up to a certain value. For instance,
AD 2000 (התשס
= 5760) is a four-digit number, while AD 2006 (התשסו
= 5766) is a five-digit one.
Thus, due to the mixed expression of
the numbers, practically any year
could be found encoded even in a comparatively short text – say, a separate
book of the Bible. This is especially valid for the millennia, centuries,
decades or years that are expressed by relatively frequently appearing letters
such as the fifth letter, he. Even
with an added prefix indicating “in” (that is, beit, ב), the expression “in AD
2006”, בהתשסו, occurs 197 times
in the whole Torah and 9 times in its longest book: Genesis. “In AD 2000”
(בהתשס) occurs much
more often: about 2500 and 85 times, respectively.
[2]
In such cases the significance of a code is emphasized
by the skip-value: the occurrence at a lower skip is considered as an indication
of a higher significance. The significance of the code about 2006 illustrated
in both Drosnin’s books arises out of the fact that the occurrence is at the
lowest skip in the Torah: -11.
The belief that all the events even in the tiniest details
are hidden in the Torah has its origin as far back as the time of Moses. This
has been the reason for the enormously strict rules that were to be observed
through the ages in copying the Torah: even one deleted, added or mistaken
letter can destroy the information. In the pre-computer era, due to the limited
possibilities for checking the vast number of permutations of the letters
in the Torah, rare attempts for cracking a code hidden as an equidistant letter
sequence (ELS), or skip, has been made by learned Jewish rabbis only. These
have also been restricted to well known, fabulous events exclusively concerning
famous Jews.
In the recent years, however, the computers
provided the means for breaking codes concerning any event including Gentile
nations, persons, places and dates. The names of the individuals and places
can, basically, be spelt in various ways in Hebrew. Dates, on the other hand,
except for some very rare occasions, have always been expressed in accordance
with the Jewish rules.
An Ancient
Code Plays a Significant Role in This Study
This study appeared as a strange combination
of results obtained while trying to find out the significance of an eccentric
feature I knew from Dr. Jeffrey Satinover’s The Truth behind the Bible Code [2]. There, writing about the feast of
Purim, he refers to an odd tradition, kept for the book of Esther, of writing
the names of the ten Haman’s sons hung by the Jews after the foiled plot for
destruction of the God’s chosen nation designed by their father. Three of
the letters are written in smaller characters. The numeric value of the sum is 707. For centuries it has
been believed that this is a code for a year of a certain millennium. It has
been thought to be the sixth millennium because the only letter among the
ten names written in a larger character
is vav (ו)
– the sixth letter of the Hebrew alphabet. So, the year should be 5707 or
from September AD 1946 to the autumn of 1947. It was within this year of the
Jewish calendar, in October 1946, when the ten Nazi top officers were hanged
after being convicted to capital penalties for the crimes during the Holocaust.
The story is brilliantly described in the abovementioned book as an example
of perfect recurrences of historical events as if they are positioned along
a helix of time.
I read this story several years ago.
At that time, I had just have got a copy of the Hebrew Bible that friends
of mine brought for me from Britain and, intrigued by the story, decided to
check for other places that contain this feature. Browsing through the pages,
I noticed many more examples of this peculiar tradition. Once it has been
proved to be a code in Esther, the other places should also be codes, I thought.
Rarely, a word contained both
kinds of modified characters. One of the places that impressed me very much,
is an Aramaic word used only once in the whole Bible. The word is שפרפרא
(pronounced probably ShFaRPaRA) and denotes “very early in the morning”. (The
smaller character is also coloured in red, while the larger one is blue.)
It is found in the book of Daniel 6:19, when king Darius “arose very early in the morning, and went in haste unto the den of lions”.
There are two letters that are
written in these strange ways, the same situation as with the name of the
tenth Haman’s son, Vaizatha (ויזתא).
The latter word encodes timing. But the former one explicitly indicates time.
What then it should encode?
I believed it should encode something
important about our time. So I began trying with different years expressed
according to the Hebrew rules. Several matrices have been prepared but all
results appeared to be unsatisfying. Nothing foreboding a dawn has been spotted.
I was disappointed.
Then, suddenly, an idea came up to
my mind. What if we change the rules? Why shouldn’t we try directly
with 2000 instead of 5760 and neighboring numbers? But on one hand, the new
rule shouldn’t violate the Hebrew rule and, on the other hand, it should contain
the ancient tradition. If we add up tav (ת) after tav, we will follow strictly the Roman
method but wouldn’t distinguish the millennia, which wouldn’t be in harmony
with the spirit of Scripture. I didn’t like this idea on esthetical grounds
too.
So I decided to follow basically the
ancient principle, but combined with the Hebrew tradition of distinguishing
millennia by using all numbers denoting whole hundreds: tav (ת), shin
(ש), reish
(ר) and qof
(ק). After all, they just add up to 1000: 400 + 300
+ 200 + 100. Even more, the letters encoding the number 707 in the names of
three of the 10 Haman’s sons also appear in descending order. Arraying the
corresponding letters in descending order leads to the 4-letter sequence תשרק.
Then I decided to repeat it thus making 2000: תשרקתשרק.
This is already an 8-letter long row, so I expected that it may not occur
in the Torah. At this stage, the trial was like playing a game.
I was surprised to see that it occurs
exactly once: at skip 14965. I use the free Torah4u2.zip by Arikh
Anpin, Israel, US, so I couldn’t see how the row looks like in the matrix.
I was trying to prepare a matrix with some other items already there, so I
sent the latter item to the slide, although it was at some distance from the
core. I felt that a single occurrence of any 8-letter item in the Torah is
significant in itself. Therefore I adjusted the skip to that of the new item,
reduced the font size and looked at the window. Within a second I noticed
that the letter immediately below the second qof
(ק) is vav (ו).
This should already mean 2006! At once I forgot everything else and focused
all my attention on the newcomer.
I wrote all these introductory words
because subconscious played a significant role in the study. Intuition continued
to play its role in the course of the research that followed too. However,
the real investigation started here.
First Findings
With my scarce knowledge of Hebrew,
I began a search for three-letter words just around the stem. First of all,
I looked for salvation (ישע). This word occurs
very often but I distinguished five words creating an impression of descending
from above, winding around the trunk of a tree and ending with the roots:
the symmetrical ישע in the bottom
line at skip 4. All these words are shown as blue ovals in Figure 1.
Probably because I finished M. Drosnin’s
book just a week or two ago and my eyes were trained, the next 3-letter word
I detected was Bush (בוש)
(green ovals, skip 14964). It intersects both vav, which is the 6 in 2006, and shin in one of the words salvation.
Then I looked at the letter above the first tav.
It was aleph (א).
If the year is read in reversed order, it will be 2001. So there appeared
to be three years encoded together: 2000, 2001 and 2006. The first one was
the year of election, the next one – the year of taking the office in the
White House and the 9/11 Al Qaeda’s attack on NYC and the Pentagon.
[3]
This was the turning point in my research.
Then I realized that there probably IS a code indeed. I widened the area of observation and spotted the
longer diagonal sentence-like “expression”: salvation and the measure (or, measuring)
(of) the waters (ישעוהתכנהמימ),
rhombs, at the same skip as Bush. It appears encoded only once
in the Torah. The 3-letter word תכן (pronounced probably
TaKhaN) is referred to in the Wilson’s Old Testament Word Studies
[3] both as noun and verb. Measuring of waters with the use of תכן
is referred to in Job 28:25, where Job says about God: To make a weight for the wind. Yea, he meteth (תכן) the waters
(מים) by measure. Weighing of human actions is referred to in I Samuel
2:3, where Hannah thanks God for her firstborn child, Samuel: And by him actions are weighed. Finally, it is found in Proverbs 16:2, where The Lord
weigheth the spirits.
Water and spirit are linked since the
beginning (Gen. 1:2) and these three examples illustrate the idea of judgement. Sheep on the right and goats on the left (Matt. 25:33) at once has
been recalled. I checked for a word meaning division or, as a verb,
to divide. It was there: בקע
(pronounced BeKAh), intersecting the second qof
at skip -1 (ovals coloured in three different colours due to intersections).
This is what is written in [3] under “cleave”:
בקע
to
break, tear, rip up, cleave or split asunder with a noise; to break through
or into; applied to the cleaving of wood; to the cleaving of the ground; to
breaking forth of light; to the cleaving or opening of an enclosure, in order
to make a passage of it, particularly to open a passage for waters.
(Emphasis is mine.)
This word is used for the description
of the beginning of the Flood in Gen. 7:11: …were all the fountains of the great deep broken up…”, the division of waters during the exodus in Ex. 14:16:
…lift thou up thy rod, and stretch out
thine hand over the sea, and divide
it, in 14:21: …and the waters
were divided and in Numbers 16:31
when …the ground clave asunder that was under them [Korah, Dathan and Abiram].
Judgement couldn’t help me remembering the last
night of the Babylonian king Belshazzar and his kingdom (book of Daniel, chapter
5) and the writing on the wall in particular (5:25ff). I read again the passage,
especially 25:27: tekel; thou art weighed in the balances,
and art found wanting. Then I easily found tekel (תקל,
purple squares, skip -14965) close to the trunk.
Anticipated
Items in the Matrix
Up to that time, I was trying to identify
words by staring at the matrix. It was then when I started to assign words
for searching. The first word I looked for was end. But it was not
because I am obsessed with apocalyptic expectations. As I wrote before, there
are some places in the Hebrew Bible, where a letter in a word is written in
a character of different size. One of the instances is end in Ecclesiastes 12:13: This is the end of the matter;
all had been heard: fear God, and keep his commandments; for this is the whole
duty of man. End or conclusion is סוף (SOF). In the verse cited
above, the first letter, samekh
(ס),
is written with a larger character. I easily memorized this fact because the
whole word is the first part of the Hebrew spelling of Sofia (סופיה),
the capital of Bulgaria – the city where I was born and live - and every now
and then pondered on its meaning. Remarkably, it is also the Aramaic word
for end.
I noticed the pe (פ) adjacent to the trunk.
Vav is found often, so I began searching
for samekh. I couldn’t find any
nearby. Intrigued, I widened the area of searching step by step. Finally,
I managed to find one and checked for the whole 3-letter word. It fitted perfectly!
(Dark squares at skip 14954 on Figure 1.) I was so amazed that I wondered
if I have missed a ס
located closer to the stem. The skip seemed too large to me and I was trying
to find a shorter one. Just for satisfying my curiosity, I printed the matrix
with the stem and marked the letters samekh
and pe. The result is shown on Figure
2. There are four samekh-s (red
and blue ovals or green rhombs) altogether in the matrix and 14 pe-s (red and blue ovals and rhombs). The
blue line indicates the actual occurrence of סוף.
The red lines show the closer possibilities that are not materialized because
the central letter is not vav. But
even if they were materialized, the skips would be about two, respectively
five times, larger. There are few more possibilities at the periphery that
are not shown in the matrix (in order a 3-letter code to occur, both the number
of the rows and the number of the columns that we count from end letter to
end letter should be even). As a result, it appeared that the best theoretical
possibility has been realized in this case. This fact made me try a close
examination of this phenomenon.
What is remarkable even at first glance
is that there is a פ at the closest
possible distance form the stem, while the ס-s
are relatively remote. I checked the distances of all the letters in the alphabet
by kind from the 9-letter stem using the Pythagoras’ theorem. It appeared
that the farthest letter from the stem is ס,
the closest to the stem ס being those in
the red oval. It is about 15% farther than the next farthest letter – the
gimmel (ג)
on place 272488. This is not extraordinary because samekh, together with gimmel,
tet (ט),
and zayin (ז)
is among the less frequently used letters. However, even so, the probability
for a random hit in an area of such a characteristic is less than 20% (we
have to take into account some other letters too). On the other hand, the
distribution of the more frequent pe-s
is not less peculiar. They are situated almost exclusively along the periphery
of the matrix, designating a member of their group to stand almost exactly
in the middle for carrying out a specific task.
I was curious what the next letter
after פ is (isn’t it yod
(י) and then he
(ה) to make Sofia?). It was ה
(dark rhombus). I checked in the dictionary about the newly formed 4-letter
word. It was there: סופה (SOuFA), meaning
storm, tempest, or whirlwind. This is what
is written in [3] under “whirlwind”:
סופה
f. a whirlwind, which cometh suddenly, with great
violence, sweeping all away before it; it implies also great swiftness, Isa.
5:28; and waste, Hos. 8:7
Is this a warning? I tried to find
more significant 3-letter words in the stem and managed to spot the verb to
blast a trumpet, תקע (TaKA), ochre
ovals, at skip 44895. It is used often when the shofars, the ram horns, are blown.
I needed a pause to rationalize the
results obtained so far. But first of all I needed some rest. I prepared a
coffee and gazed blankly at the matrix while sipping it. I noticed the Irish
(אירי)
descending diagonally to the right starting with the aleph just above the tav
in the stem (not shown in the figures). I looked at the calendar hung on the
wall. It was June 16 2004, Bloomsday. The Irish presidency of the European
Union is due to end in two weeks. Well, enough with jokes, I’d better be serious.
Finding the
Key to the Code
During the pause I allowed myself I
became aware of the fact that we still haven’t got evidence that the code
relates to time. But we have got evidence that there IS a code, so
the key should be there, before my eyes. The Lord
always provides for what we need. The crucial thing we should do at this stage
is to define the task. Few years ago, I wrote a paper on the seventy weeks
prophecy in the book of Daniel [4]. This is one of my favourite books because
it contains some prophecies that are unique for the Old Testament but are
repeated almost literally in the New Testament, especially in the book of
Revelation. One of these is the “for
a time, and times, and a half time”. It
was then when I realized that I have already used unconsciously this principle
in defining the rules for the millennium. Indeed, if we define reish, ר,
as a time of 200 years, shin ש
and tav ת,
with their numerical equivalents of 300 and 400, respectively, will define
a different period of time each, i.e. they will be times. Finally, qof ק,
which is 100, appears as a half-period of 200, or a half of a time. The same is valid if tav ת, 400 is the time. Then shin ש
and qof ק will be the times
of 300 and 100 years respectively, while reish
ר will be the half of a time = 200 years.
I opened the Bible
and read Dan. 12:7 in Bulgarian and English. There was a reference to 7:25,
so I checked both places in the Hebrew Bible. But the terms used in each place
were very different! I was astonished for a while but then I realized that
chapter 7 is written in Aramaic. Adding the passage in Greek in Rev. 12:14
we have got a sheer Rosetta stone in the Bible!
I checked the Old Testament words first.
The Hebrew word for “time” used in Dan. 12:7 is מועד
(MOED), In [3], MOED is rendered as “appointed
time”, “feast”, “set feast” and meanings that have nothing
to do with our modern concept of time such as “congregation”. In fact, the 149 appearances of the latter word in
the whole Hebrew Bible outnumber all the occasions implying time. The Aramaic
word, עדן (EDaN), is translated in
[3]
as “time” but used exclusively to denote a “prophetic year”.
Then I checked the Greek text too.
But instead of the more familiar term χρονος (chronos), meaning time indefinitely
as well as period, season or space of time and where such well known words as chronometry and chronology derive from, another word has been used for time: καιρος (kairos).
This is what is written about καιρος in the Liddell and Scott’s Greek-English Lexicon [5]:
ΚΑΙΡΟΣ, ο, due
measure, right proportion,
fitness… II. of Time,
the right season, the right time for action,
the critical moment, Lat. opportunitas:
generally, convenience, advantage, profit… III. of Place, the right point, right
spot: also a vital part
of the body. (Emphasis is mine.)
So the first meaning was not “time”?! I was intrigued and checked in other
dictionaries because I felt the importance of understanding the correct meaning.
The Hebrew Bible was translated into Greek – the Septuagint – in the third
century BC by 70 learned men who were on familiar terms with both languages
and could discern the peculiarities of each specific case. Later, in the New
Testament, the Greek words were used in accordance with the terminology established
in the Septuagint. This is how W. E. Vine describes the contrasts between
time (chronos) and season (kairos) under “season” [6]:
KAIROS (καιρος), primarily, due measure, fitness, proportion, is used
in the N.T. to signify a season, a time, a period possessed of certain characteristics,
frequently rendered “time” or “times”…
The characteristics
of a period are exemplified in the use of the term with regard, e.g., to harvest,
reaping, punishment…
CHRONOS (χρονος)…
Broadly speaking,
chronos expresses the duration of a period;
kairos stresses it as marked by
certain features…
Chronos marks quantity, kairos,
quality… (Emphasis is mine.)
I did not hesitate to start with מועד.
If the other languages have some significance, it is definitely not associated
with a key for a code-matrix of the Torah, but probably with (an) auxiliary
role(s) which I couldn’t comprehend at that stage.
MOED appears 168 times in the plain
text of the Torah. (Significantly, 168 is the number of the hours in a week.)
If the word is distributed randomly, it could be expected to appear at the
average once in a matrix more than twice larger in area than that shown on
Figure 1. So when I found it 9 places to the right from the vertical (turquoise
ovals) I knew I am on the right way. As we saw, מועד
is used in the Torah mainly to denote congregation, although at its first
occurrence in the plain text of the Torah, in Gen. 1:14, it is in its plural
form and stands for seasons. Also, not in all 168 instances
it is a separate word – sometimes it combines parts of usually two words.
It is as a congregation – a whole
word – that it has been used in the plain text in our case. The lamed (ל)
before it, however, is the end-letter of the previous word. Then I read again
the whole expression in Hebrew in Dan. 12:7. There, lamed is a part of the single word for time in Hebrew!
The second word is MOEDYM (the plural
form) but the third one – that for half חצי
(ChaTsI) I have already noticed in the plain text but at reversed skip: –1
(squares). I checked it again and saw that it is actually part of the name
of Isaac (יצחק). There are also few more
3-letter strings בקע (division, divide
– see above) at skip -1 (squares), that are part of the name of Jacob (יעקב).
I checked the rate of appearance of חצי
and בקע at skip ±1 in the plain
text and estimated that the probability of finding them in such numbers in
the matrix is below 1/10.
In two occasions these two words go
together. I checked the expression in the plain text. It is (light grey ovals
in Fig. 1)
…to Abraham, to Isaac and to Jacob (וליעקב ליצחק לאברהם).
(The words commented above are coloured
in red.) This expression appears 11 times in the whole text of the Torah.
In 10 of these occasions it is part of the Lord’s words of promising the land to Israel. Both occasions
are among these 10. The expectation for finding even a single letter of one
of them by chance in such a small matrix is about 1/30. Chances to find two
expressions of this length entirely enclosed in the matrix is already less
than 1/1000.
I have finished recently a study on
codes about the Holocaust [7], so I am trained to spot Israel (ישראל)
in Hebrew texts. I have already noticed it above the stem (cherry rhombus
on Fig. 1) and I was aware that it is not present anywhere else in the matrix
and even in the larger matrix of Figure 2. It was rather against the odds
because in the case of Fig. 2, there were normally to be expected two appearances
in the plain text. But what amazed me in this case was the absolutely symmetrical positioning of ישראל
in relation of the vertical of the stem. However, I continued with the searching
of the key and decided to consider the question of symmetry later.
At that time, I still haven’t got the
details of the key but I have already outlined the idea of it. It should validate
the expression of the numbers 2000, respectively 2006 and possibly 2001. Therefore,
it had to be something about time encoded in the matrix. Starting with MOED, I tried to find another
MOED encoded with a skip ≠ 1, preferably intersecting the word in the
plain text. It was there – at skip -29918. There is no space for the plural
form, מועדים (MOADYM), to
be held in this matrix. I pressed further and within minutes I found and
a half (וחצי) at skip -14962
intersecting the encoded מועד
in its second letter, vav. Thus,
the encoded word intersects both its neighbouring words in a prophecy given
to Daniel centuries after the Torah was given to Moses. All these are in turquoise
ovals in Figure 1. So we have got the key and what a key indeed! Notice that
this key has been ANTICIPATED. The code contains all the expression for
a time, times and a half in Daniel 12:7 save two letters (in red):
וחצי מועדים
למועד
Although this suffices to justify our
approach, I felt somehow unsatisfied with the deficient red letters. At this
stage, I have already ceased to assess probabilities for all these codes appearing
by the blind chance – the overall probability, which is the result of the
multiplication of all single probabilities, has already dwindled to extremely
small value. I was absolutely certain that the Lord has encoded all these and He didn’t
put these two letters in the key because He has something else in mind.
Reflections
on Symmetry, Geometry and Physics
I returned to the matrix and little
by little began to grasp the special role the symmetry in its pure mathematical
sense plays in the code. I found two more occurrences of salvation (ישע) at skip 17 positioned
absolutely symmetrically around the stem, then one more – at skip -14 (blue
ovals), then another one at skip 24. It is not shown on Fig. 1 because I would
have to change the scale to hold it. It is shown on Figure 4. In Figures 2-4,
the stem is placed in the very centre. In fact, there are three shins
(ש)
in the stem column and the first ayin
(ע) on the row to the left of them has its symmetrical
counterpart - yod (י)
on the right side – to form the word salvation.
I contemplated on the skip values.
Why 17 and not, say, 18 or 19? I counted the letters in …to Abraham, to Isaac and to Jacob.
They are 17. And what about the skip 24? The ayin in the left is exactly under the dalet (ד) in the encoded MOED, as
if marking the end of the matrix (see Fig. 4). Also, it is the next
ayin to the left of the shin in the stem and it also forms salvation.
Let us return to the skip 17. The number
of the letters between any two neighbouring letters of the encoded
word is 16. The number 16 was regarded as a number of perfection by the ancient
Romans. On the other hand, 5760, which corresponds to the encoded year 2000,
is exactly 16 times 360. And we know that 360 is the number of the days in
a prophetic
year.
Then I returned to Israel. We know
that the plain text is related to the encoded items, so I checked the test
containing Israel. It is Exodus 20:22: And
the Lord said unto Moses, Thus thou shalt say unto the children of Israel, Ye have seen that I have talked
with you from heaven. I was intrigued by the word heaven
(השמים). As it proved,
this is the only place in the Torah, where the Lord says I have talked from heaven (דברתי
השמים מן).
Heaven appears 81 times in the
plain text. That is why I was surprised to see another word immediately above
and to the left of Israel in the
matrix. If the distribution of the word is random, the probability to be found
in a 21 x 42 matrix (Fig. 1) is 0.234. The probability of finding two words
decreases approximately as the squared probability of finding one word, i.e.
it is about 5.5 %. I looked for heaven
hidden in encoded form and for more words in the plain text nearby. I found
one encoded – at skip 5 in the bottom line of the matrix and two more in the
plain text. They are shown on Figure 3. The matrix is 75 x 21 = 1575 letters,
which is about 0.5 % of the entire Torah. The red ovals are 2006 (תשרקתשרקו),
positioned exactly in the central column. Heaven
is in turquoise ovals and Israel
is in blue ovals. The latter word is given for comparison because the 2.4
words present in the matrix represent approximately the normal rate of appearance
in the plain text for Israel (the actual value is 3).
The four words heaven (השמים) found in the
plain text in the matrix exceed about 10 times the normal rate. If Israel appeared at the corresponding anomalous
rate, the number of the words in blue ovals should be as high as 30. השמים
(heaven) should appear in average once in a 2.4 times larger matrix. Notice
that two of the words are located almost symmetrically on the both sides of
the stem on the row where the last letter of תשרקתשרקו,
vav, is positioned.
Heaven occurs
5 times in the Torah at skips between 2 and 5 (absolute values). So, the probability
of finding one of them in the matrix in Figure 3 is about 1/40. The overall
probability of the five occurrences of heaven is below 1/1200.
With all these data in hand, I was
trying to enjoy an intellectual feast, but I felt I have missed something.
As if the topic was unaccomplished and I wondered what makes me feel so. No
more I was looking intently at the matrix. I already perceived it as a whole
– as a picture or a plot. I mused on the meaning of the words. I knew that
the ancients felt comfortable with the notion that time and space form integrity.
We, modern people, are accustomed to the concept that time is a river that
flows independently of space, motion and matter. Although almost a century
ago Einstein proved that time cannot be separated from space, matter and even
gravity, we believe that his formulae concern abstract situations that have
nothing to do with our daily life. We are also unaccustomed to the quantum
theory stating that all physical quantities are discontinued in their quality
and persist in accepting them as continua.
But the words denoting “time” in a
prophecy stated in three languages bear dual meanings. In Aramaic, עדן,
used 13 times in the Hebrew Bible in the book of Daniel only, means specifically
a prophetic year. But years are counted as whole numbers or defined parts of them, usually halves, in prophecies.
In Hebrew, מועד is used most
commonly to denote “congregation” as well as “appointed time” but also “appointed
place”. And a congregation consists of a whole number of people. Finally, in Greek, the primary meaning of
καιρος is due measure, right proportion and right spot and, as a time, a period characterized
by harvest, reaping, punishment… Punishment
is the result of judgement.
Judgement is always associated with
balances. The symbol of the judicial systems of most of the Gentile nations
is the blindfolded Greek goddess Themis with a balance in hand. Suddenly,
the turquoise ovals resembled me a balance. The fulcrum is the intersectional
vav (ו).
Indeed, there are five letters to the left and five letters to the right of
it. It is in the column of the stem. The left arm is up because it is lighter.
The letters in the right resemble a scale pan. The balance is just off equilibrium
and has come to rest because the forces of gravity acting onto each side are
slightly different. It prompts us to add a small weight somewhere onto the
left arm to equalize it.
This resemblance so intrigued me that
I decided to check the “forces” in right and left. It is an easy problem from
a secondary-school textbook on physics. We consider the turquoise ovals, which
are the letters, as beads of the same mass and the imaginary balance beam
is weightless. The left arm is longer but the number of the beads and hence
the weights at both sides are equal. What makes the balance tilted are the
different distances of each bead from the vertical line that goes through
the knife-edge. The quantity that defines the force that acts on a point on
the arm of a balance is the product of the force (that is the weight) and
the perpendicular distance between the point and the said line and is called
moment (or torque). In our case, the perpendicular distance is just the number
of columns from the column of the letter to that of the stem.
Let us check the moments acting on
each side. The distance of the letter in the right side that is closest to
the vertical line, dalet (ד),
is 9 columns. The next one, ayin
(ע),
is 10 columns away, and so on up to the farthest, lamed (ל), 13 columns away. Because
the weights are identical, the calculation of the sum of the moments is reduced
to the sum of the distances. So we get
9 + 10 + 11 + 12 + 13 = 55
In the same manner, on the left side
we obtain
3 + 6 + 9 + 12 + 24 = 54
What we see corresponds to a real physical
situation! In reality, if weights on each scale pan differ slightly, the balance
will tilt but will eventually come to rest. And we see that the difference
between the moments in our case is unit, which is the smallest possible quantity
that we can operate with. Also, it is the side of the missing letters מ and י that is the lighter
one…
Apparently God the Encoder is urging
on us to look for something just slightly un-counterpoised.
The Torah4U program requires
some manual adjusting of parameters. In the course of the research I noticed
that the figure in the right column indicating the place of the first letter
in the median row in the matrix is 152760. This is very near to the middle
of the Torah – just few hundreds away. But up to then I had no idea about
the significance of this fact. On the other hand, I was used to approximate
calculations of numerical values. Suddenly I realized that no one of the last
four letters in the Hebrew alphabet can be found among the letters in the
turquoise ovals, so their numeric value should be about several hundreds altogether.
Let us calculate the numerical value.
ל
= 30 מ
= 40 ו
= 6
מ
= 40 ו
= 6
ח
= 8
ו
= 6
ע = 70 צ = 90
ע = 70 ד = 4
י = 10
ד = 4
Sub-total: 150
120
114
Total: 150 + 120 + 114 = 384.
The letter that
is exactly in the middle of the Torah is in position 152403. I expected that
it is the first shin (ש) in the date 2006, which is in position 152778 (Note:
The Torah4U program starts counting from 0 and ends it at 304804!)
that needs to be “corrected” with 384 to hit the centre. But 152778 – 384
= 152394, which is about 10 letters further back.
Then I noticed
the central letter in סוף (end, conclusion) about 10 letters to the left. All
the more, I realized that these three letters also form in a similar way a
tilted balance, which fulcrum is again the letter vav (ו)! I hastily checked its position: 152888 and then the
result of the subtraction: 152888 – 384 = 152404…
I was bitterly
disappointed. I checked this simple mathematical operation again and again
with the hope that I have erred. Alas, the value proved to be correct. Have
I come so far to miss the target by a single letter? It just cannot be! The
Lord is perfect! I have surely missed
something that will give us the right answer.
I recalled that
I have read some time ago that learned Rabbis, before the computer era, stated
that the letter in the middle of the Torah should be vav. This couldn’t be proved by counting but only speculated before
the computer has been invented. To count letter by letter hundreds of thousands
of letters is an enormously hard task. I cannot remember where I read it but
remember that I have checked and it appeared that the letter in the middle
is aleph (א). It is the next letter to aleph that is vav, but it
is on 152402nd place. So I am not alone: Rabbis have also missed
the target by a single letter. A slight consolation.
I went on thinking
about balances with knife-edges at the letter vav. I called to my mind my own adolescence when I was shopping for
my family. At that time, weighing scales were in use, especially in greengroceries,
that had arms of equal length. The product was put on one of the pans and
weights of different value were put on the other pan until the scales level.
Not always the set of weights allowed obtaining the weight of a commodity
by adding smaller denominations. In such cases, the salesman used to put some
weights in the pan with the product in order to equalize the scales. The value
of these weights was then subtracted from the value of the weights
on the other side and thus the actual weight of the commodity was calculated.
[4]
Then I imagined
the whole situation as a balance tilted slightly because the second half of
the Torah is two letters shorter than the first half – we need two letters
because in order to have a letter as a fulcrum the number of the letters should
remain odd. I was correlating the small weights to letters that are to be
put for a while – just to level the balance – and then taken back. They do
not need to be a part of the Torah.
Equalizing
the Balance
Suddenly I recalled
an article by Kevin Acres [8] that I had read just few weeks ago. It is on
the data integrity in the Torah. In it, Kevin maintains that the exact numbers
of letters not only of the Torah as a whole, but also the letters of each
of its books apart, are encoded in the transcendental number PI (widely known
as its approximate value 3.14). Interesting results have been obtained also
when specific calculations have been carried out. Everything is perfect except
for, ironically, the book of Numbers. The number of the letters in this book
is 63530. This number is two letters fewer than the required number 63532,
which puts the number of letters of Numbers in ideal harmony with a sequence
of calculations starting with the number of letters of the first verse in
Genesis, even with the very first word, and ending with the number of characters
of the last book of the Torah, Deuteronomy. But there are two characters, called
inverted
nuns (נ) in
this book as if placed there especially to adjust the number of the letters
of the book. They are not a part of the text but are always present, thus
making the number of letters in Numbers 63532. In contrast, it is shown in
the same study that 63530 fits better in determining the number of the letters
of the Hebrew alphabet, 22.
The question needed
additional elucidation, so Moshe Shak, in a bonus section on the number of
the letters in the Torah in [8], proves that 304805 fits better for Bible
code studies, giving better matrix parameters compared to the 304807 letters
including the two inverted nuns. Moshe has shown that under a condition,
304807 could be taken as the true number, so both numbers are reliable. What
the condition is has not been clarified. It seems that the two inverted nuns
should be counted only when calculations regarding numbers of letters
are to be performed, but they should not be used in codes proper.
Now let us return
to the tilted balance. We need just two letters and need them on the left
arm, that is, in the second half of the Torah. Remarkably, the inverted nuns
are there. The most incredible materialization of a ½ probability I have ever
encountered with.
Well, that’s all,
someone may think. But wait! Let us call to mind the two missing letters
from the text in Daniel 12:7 in our key. They are yod (י) and mem (מ), with numeric equivalents 10 and 40, respectively.
The sum is 50. The amazing fact is that 50 is the numeric value of the Hebrew
letter nun (נ)!
Attempts for
Interpretation of What has been Encoded
What does all
this mean and what predictions this code contain? Let us begin with the predictions.
I am among those Bible code researchers, who claim that they cannot be used as crystal balls and are
not a means of finding out details of future events in advance. Influenced
by Michael Drosnin’s books, I believed I have found the name of the American
President: (George W.) Bush (בוש).
As it was mentioned above, it is in harmony with two of the encoded years,
especially the year 2000. Does this mean that AD 2006 will be a fateful or
fatal period to Mr. Bush? I don’t know.
[5]
As we have shown, the code is related to judgement. Indeed,
practically all words we managed to find are associated with different aspects
of judgement.
It appeared that
the 3-letter word used to transcribe the English name Bush is a Hebrew word
bearing a meaning of its own. I checked the meaning of בוש (pronounced BOSh). It means ashamed and is used
frequently in the Bible, starting with Gen. 2:25. This is what I found in
[3] about this word under “ashamed”:
שׁוֹבּ
to be ashamed, to feel shame; denoting, more than the following,
that shame which is internal, and therefore that which may or ought to prevent
an action…
…but most commonly that which follows upon disappointment of opinion, hope
or expectation. Its primary idea seems to lie in paleness caused by fear; it is therefore used in confusion and consciousness
of disgrace and ignominy, or in respect of anything which causes a degree
of disgrace, as of a son causing shame…
Applied to enemies and wicked men
who are put to flight after vain attempts, and to persons oppressed with sudden calamity. (Emphasis is mine.)
I could hardly
find a more proper word for matching the atmosphere of the final judgement.
Just remember the reaction of king Belshazzar when he saw the fingers writing
on the wall. And Tekel (תקל) is very close to בוש in the matrix.
What about the
year 2006 then? It is definitely encoded. Yes, but… The Lord again has provided means to make us silent. There is a
year in accordance with the Hebrew rules, which is very close to the stem.
It is 5771 (התשעא),
at skip 14966,
[6]
which corresponds approximately to our 2011. It is not
shown on the figures but can be found easily – count 5 letters to the right
of the end letter of SOF pe (פ). It is he (ה). Start with it and go diagonally down to the left. It
occurs only twice in the Torah at skip 14964 to 14966 and 7 times at skips
between 14960 and 14970, so the probability for being such close to the stem
by chance is about 1/7000 in the first case and about 1/2000 in the latter
case. Interestingly, if we add the he
(ה) that follows the vav
(ו), the last letter in the number 2006 (though already NOT according
to the rules specified), we will obtain 2011 again.
Can we give an
interpretation of what we have found? I believe that there are two very important messages in this code.
The first one is that God has a special purpose with the Gentiles. Otherwise,
the fact that typically Gentile dating occurs encoded in the Torah would remain
inexplicable. This does not cancel out His purpose with Israel (I mean the
Jews) or diminish the significance of Israel as God’s chosen people. His purposes
differ, however, in the sense space differs from time. And, as we already
know that space and time unite forming the real physical 4-dimentional space-time,
the space is represented by Israel. That is why the promise for the LAND that
God will give to Abraham, Isaac and Jacob, is present twice in the matrix.
Israel is one of the symmetric items related to the stem in the matrix. Also,
the only name that intersects the stem is Jacob, who IS Israel. The promises
to Israel are time-independent. The promises of God, as well as the Torah,
are eternal.
On the other hand,
in relation to the Earth, Gentiles have been given practically space-independent,
especially in modern times, possibilities for obtaining knowledge. The Bible
codes are a part of this knowledge. These possibilities are, however, time-dependent.
And the code we have just discovered tells us that the time given to Gentiles
is running out.
The second message
is not less important. In order to illustrate it clearly, I deleted all items,
which are not symmetrical against the stem or, in the case of salvation
(ישע), do
not have a letter in the column of the stem and another letter adjacent
to it, across or diagonally or at least two adjacent letters to the
date 2006.. The only exceptions are End or conclusion (סוף) and tekel (תקל)
– the squares – see Figure 4.
What we see in Fig. 4 is the precise
symmetry of distribution of the letters. In my opinion, the symmetrical words
salvation
(ישע) symbolize the equalized
balances that our own ones should be on the Day of the LORD, which is the Day of the Judgement, in order to be vindicated.
The letters are positioned absolutely symmetrically on the both sides of the
stem. The overall number of letters of the words that have adjacent letters
to the stem is also the same on both sides: 5.
But the tilted balances symbolize our
inability to obtain perfection through our own efforts. However righteous
we may be, our balances will remain tilted. We will always be found wanting.
The tekel
(תקל), which is the shekel
(שקל) of the Lord’s standard, will always weigh heavy
on the test pan. And this code proves that the LAW, which is the 304805-letter Torah, will always condemn
us. It cannot
save. We need a Savior from outside the Law to provide for our
salvation. But, on the other hand, this code indicates that the salvation
should not annul the Law. The two inverted nuns
(נ) are the weight, which the Lord generously grants for the leveling of our balances.
So we need a Saviour
from above, from heaven, given freely by the Lord. The words salvation
(ישע) that
wind about the number 2006 (תשרקתשרקו) imply that we, the Gentiles, have had Him for
a time, times and a half. And the tilted balances in the matrix
of this code also hint at His name: The Lord saves.
June 29th 2004
Sofia, Bulgaria
References
[1] Michael Drosnin, The Bible Code 2: The Countdown,
Weidenfeld & Nicolson, London, 2002.
[2]
Dr. Jeffrey Satinover, The Truth behind the Bible Code, Sidgwick
& Jackson, London, 1998, p.188f.
[3]
William Wilson, Wilson’s Old Testament Word Studies, Hendrickson Publishers, Peabody,
Massachusetts, No date.
[4]
Lyuben Piperov, A Fresh Look at the Seventy Weeks Prophecy (2), The Testimony, London, September 2002,
p.347. Online at:
http://www.testimony-magazine.org/back/sep2002/piperov.pdf
[5] A Lexicon Abridged from
Liddell and Scott’s Greek-English Lexicon, 18th edition,
Clarendon Press, Oxford and London, 1879.
[6] W. E. Vine, An Expository
Dictionary of New Testament Words, Oliphants, London, 1978
[7] Lyuben Piperov, Safe States for Jews during the Holocaust
in Europe 1941-5 Encoded in the Torah, Part 1. Online at:
http://www.exodus2006.com/lyuben/Lyuben-holocaust-code-study.doc
http://www.carelinks.net/books/lp/holoindex.htm
http://www.ad2004.com/Biblecodes/articles/Holocaust%20code%20UK%20Part%201.pdf
[8] Kevin Acres, Data Integrity
Patterns of the Torah: A Tale of Prime, Perfect and Transcendental Numbers.
Online at:
http://www.ad2004.com/Biblecodes/articles/mathcodepaper.pdf
Contact Lyuben Piperov at: l_piperov@yahoo.co.uk
TABLE AND FIGURES
The Absolute Method of assigning
numbers to letters. The finals are coloured in red.
א |
Aleph |
1 |
י |
Yod |
10 |
ע |
Ayin |
70 |
ב |
Beit |
2 |
כ |
Kaf |
20 |
פ |
Pe |
80 |
ג |
Gimmel |
3 |
ך |
Kaf-final |
20 |
ף |
Pe-final |
80 |
ד |
Dalet |
4 |
ל |
Lamed |
30 |
צ |
Tzade |
90 |
ה |
He |
5 |
מ |
Mem |
40 |
ץ |
Tzade-final |
90 |
ו |
Vav |
6 |
ם |
Mem-final |
40 |
ק |
Qof |
100 |
ז |
Zayin |
7 |
נ |
Nun |
50 |
ר |
Reish |
200 |
ח |
Chet |
8 |
ן |
Nun-final |
50 |
ש |
Shin |
300 |
ט |
Tet |
9 |
ס |
Samekh |
60 |
ת |
Tav |
400 |
Figure 1.
Figure 2.
Figure 3.
Figure 4.
[1]
There are not
such pairs of numbers in Hebrew as the Roman IX (9) and XI (11) or XL (40)
and LX (60), expressed by the same numerals arrayed in reversed order.
[2]
For a comparison,
“in AD 1006” (בדתשסו)
occurs 44 times in the Torah and only 4 times in Genesis. With gimmel (ג)
indicating the fourth millennium, the occurrences for “in AD 6” are even
lower: only 13 times in the Torah and none in Genesis.
[3]
The opinion of
the author is that any encoded information for future events is ambiguous
and we cannot get definite knowledge in advance, but can only estimate it
on probabilistic basis. See the ambiguity of the word בוש
discussed later.
[4]
For instance,
we cannot avoid this procedure when weighing a mass of 4 or 9 grams if we
possess a measuring set of 1, 2, 5 and 10 grams, although we can weigh any
(whole number of grams) weight from 1 through 10 g. In such cases, we should
put the weight of 1 g on the pan with the mass to be weighed and weigh against
5 or 10 g, respectively.
[5]
Even in the matrix
with Michael Drosnin’s famous code about the assassination of the Israeli
Prime Minister, Yitzhak Rabin, there is salvation (ישע)
at skip -3, starting immediately below the last letter of the “manslayer…
that slayeth”, chet (ח),
or from position 263891 and going to the right. It intersects the name of
Mr. Rabin. Mr. Drosnin also claims that events are determined by human actions
and are not predetermined. We possess free will and are responsible for
all our actions.
[6]
התשעב
(5772 = 2012), although not with the same significance, also occurs starting
13 columns to the right from the stem at skip -14970 and going upwards to
the right.