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Secrets of the Universe - Bible Codes...

DLK123

New Member
Everyone likes a secret.

How would you like to hear about a Jewish secret, which has just recently been discovered in manuscripts from over a century ago....

The secret of 1820.

1820 is not just a number.

1820 is the amount of times that G-d's Holy name is mentioned in the Torah (The 5 books of Moses).

So, what's so special about that?
Well, if we look deeper into the Torah, we will see that 1820 repeats itself an endless number of times – in amazing situations.

For example:

If we check the amount of words mentioned in Jacob and his 2 wives names we will discover that:

The amount of words mentioned in Jacob's name is 1597
The amount of words mentioned in Rachel's name is 107
The amount of words mentioned in Leah's name is 116

In all: 1820 words!

If we check the amount of words mentioned in the 12 tribes' names, we will discover the following:
In the weekly Torah reading of:

Vayishlach = 53 words
Vayeshev = 313 words
Miketz = 794 words
Vayigash = 513 words
Vayechi = 147 words

In all: 1820 words!

The number 1820 can be found in relation to people, places, times, passages, sayings, verses, locations, prophesies and more….

Many more discoveries can be found at 1820.co.il

Your comments are welcomed!
 

sojourner

Annoyingly Progressive Since 2006
Lincoln was killed in Ford's theater.
Kennedy was killed in a Lincoln, built by Ford.
Lee Harvey Oswald and John Wilkes Booth both contain 15 letters.

So what?
 

Wandered Off

Sporadic Driveby Member
Everyone likes a secret.
Personally, I wouldn't like secrets kept from me in a document that's purported to be a guide to how I'm supposed to live. Clear communication is much more effective in helping me make reasoned and informed choices.
 

McBell

Unbound
Everyone likes a secret.

How would you like to hear about a Jewish secret, which has just recently been discovered in manuscripts from over a century ago....

The secret of 1820.

1820 is not just a number.

1820 is the amount of times that G-d's Holy name is mentioned in the Torah (The 5 books of Moses).

So, what's so special about that?
Well, if we look deeper into the Torah, we will see that 1820 repeats itself an endless number of times – in amazing situations.

For example:

If we check the amount of words mentioned in Jacob and his 2 wives names we will discover that:

The amount of words mentioned in Jacob's name is 1597
The amount of words mentioned in Rachel's name is 107
The amount of words mentioned in Leah's name is 116

In all: 1820 words!

If we check the amount of words mentioned in the 12 tribes' names, we will discover the following:
In the weekly Torah reading of:

Vayishlach = 53 words
Vayeshev = 313 words
Miketz = 794 words
Vayigash = 513 words
Vayechi = 147 words

In all: 1820 words!

The number 1820 can be found in relation to people, places, times, passages, sayings, verses, locations, prophesies and more….

Many more discoveries can be found at 1820.co.il

Your comments are welcomed!
Numerology is rather fun.
One can manipulate it to mean whatever they like.

However, as an opening argument for a debate, it is seriously lacking substance.
 

Trey of Diamonds

Well-Known Member
Just in case anyone is in the dark.

Bible Code or Torah Code

From the Wiki
Contemporary discussion and controversy around one specific encryption method became widespread in 1994 when Doron Witztum, Eliyahu Rips and Yoav Rosenberg published a paper, "Equidistant Letter Sequences in the Book of Genesis" in the scientific journal Statistical Science. The paper, which was presented by the journal as a "challenging puzzle", claimed to present strong statistical evidence that biographical information about famous rabbis was encoded in the text of the Bible, centuries before those rabbis lived.

An early seeker of divinely encrypted messages was Isaac Newton, who, according to John Maynard Keynes, believed that "the universe is a cryptogram set by the Almighty", and in the structure of the universe, Newton sought the answers to "a riddle of the Godhead of past and future events divinely fore-ordained".

The primary objection advanced against Bible codes is that information theory does not prohibit "noise" from appearing to be sometimes meaningful. Thus, if data chosen for ELS experiments are intentionally or unintentionally "cooked" before the experiment is defined, similar patterns can be found in texts other than the Torah. Although the probability of an ELS in a random place being a meaningful word is small, there are so many possible starting points and skip patterns that many such words can be expected to appear, depending on the details chosen for the experiment, and that it is possible to "tune" an ELS experiment to achieve a result which appears to exhibit patterns that overcome the level of noise.

See also Information Theory.
 
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