A
number of friends have written me about
hidden codes and numerology in the
Bible. The scripture that continually
comes to my mind is--
Deuteronomy
30:11 For this commandment which I
command thee this day, IT IS NOT
HIDDEN FROM THEE, neither is it
far off.
We
can see evidence for the scriptures in a
number of ways including prophesy which
separates the Bible from all other books
and the fact that it tells you about
yourself no matter what your culture,
etc. We published an online book
entitled "The
Divine Inspiration of the Bible"
by A.W. Pink which is a beautiful
apologetic on the divine inspiration of
the Bible. Something you can put your
hands on. Meaningful.
Some
scoffer ran some numerology on books
like "Moby Dick" and found
"miraculous" coincidences in
them too. The inspiration of the Bible
is not found in hidden codes, the
inspiration is plain to see…not
hidden.
The
following is an email forward I
received:
Does
the Bible Code Bear the Signature of
God?
Ed Christian Ph.D.
Department of English
Kutztown University
Kutztown, PA 19530
Perspective Digest, 5/3 (2000):52-56
A
"great earthquake" is forecast
for either 2000 or 2006! In 2012 the
earth will face annihilation by
"comet," but it will be a
false alarm! In 2113 a "great
terror" will leave the world
desolate! In "the end of days"
an "atomic holocaust" will be
narrowly averted! That's what Michael
Drosnin says the Bible reveals.
Did
God place a secret code in the Old
Testament? Did He know humans would
someday invent the computer and discover
this code? That's what some people
think. Is that how God works? In his
1997 bestseller The Bible Code (New
York: Simon & Schuster), Drosnin
claims that this code reveals the
assassination of Yitzhak Rabin and
Saddam Hussein's attack on Israel (both
the date and the kind of weapons). By
letting the computer adjust the number
of letters in each line of text, then
treating the result as a giant word
search puzzle, using what are known as
"equidistant letter
sequences," the author finds that
the Bible reveals the future. (In some
of these sequences, the letters are
equidistant, but separated by over
13,000 other letters. No wonder we had
to wait for computers to be invented!)
One
of the most popular purveyors of
prophecy, Grant Jeffrey, wrote about
this code in 1996 in The Signature of
God (Toronto: Frontier Research). Both
that and his 1998 book, The Mysterious
Bible Codes (Nashville: Word), have been
bestsellers in the religious market.
Drosnin is a secular Jew, and he doesn't
look for Jesus in the code. Jeffrey
claims that the Hebrew name for Jesus,
"Yeshua," is found encoded
throughout the Old Testament. So are the
names of the twelve disciples, and much
more.
Where
did this code come from? Exodus 32:16
says, "[T]he writing was the
writing of God, graven upon the
tables." Hidden in that verse,
however, revealed by the code, is the
phrase "it was made by
computer." The law of God on the
tablets of stone was computer generated!
My friend Ron du Preez points out that
on p.179 Drosnin writes, "The
message of the Bible code is that we can
save ourselves." I agree with Ron
that "this anti-Christian statement
should end the debate about the merits
or demerits of this spellbinding but
heretical work." Nevertheless, a
multitude of Christians are
investigating the Bible Code, even while
reviling Drosnin's take on the code's
message. Thousands have purchased the
software that allows them to do their
own word searches. I received e-mail
from one man who claims to have found
Ellen White and every General Conference
president in the Old Testament. In that
case, it must surely come from God,
right?
I
don't question Grant Jeffrey's
commitment to Christianity, even though
his livelihood depends on popularizing a
steady stream of poorly documented and
highly questionable "Astonishing
Biblical Discoveries." However, he
is gullible, he's no scholar, and he is
unwittingly leading many of his readers
into the arms of a supernatural
counterfeit of God and His ways. Perhaps
you have already read these books, used
the computer program, and are an
enthusiast. Perhaps you are about to
stop reading. First, let me explain why
I take this stance. Perhaps you will
change your mind.
For
about two years, Lori Eldridge ran the
"Torah Code Archives" as part
of Jack Van Impe's "Prophezine"
web site. She was a true believer, and
her web page was very popular. Then she
turned against the code. She explains
why in her article "Why I'm No
Longer Researching the Codes." When
she read the research of Hebrew scholar
Dr. James D. Price, she had the guts to
do an about-face, despite her
embarrassment, and give up her research.
What
did Price discover? He explains in three
brief articles, "Self-Contradicting
'Codes,'" "God is False?
'Codes,'" and "Two More
Negative 'Codes'". What Price did
was to take assertions about God,
supposedly discovered in the Bible Code
in Hebrew, restate them as negatives,
and see if they too were in the Bible.
In every case they were.
Using
the Bible Code, Price writes, one finds
the Hebrew phrase translated
"Jehovah is a liar" eight
times. "Jehovah is dead"
occurs twenty-three times. "There
is no Jehovah," Price writes,
"occurs dozens of times in the
Torah," as does "There is no
God." Price also found the phrases
"Satan is Jehovah" and
"Satan is God."
How
can a Christian continue to work with
these supposedly God-given codes after
reading this? Price has also used the
Bible Code software to find six thousand
Hebrew words (of the 9,597 in the Old
Testament) merely in Isaiah 53. Other
scholars report that if one uses the
criteria used in the Bible Code, one can
find just about any prophetic message
one looks for in a few pages of just
about any secular writing. By this
light, the code doesn't seem nearly so
inspired or prophetic.
How
does the Bible Code work? It's a giant
'find the word' puzzle with a number of
tricks which make it easier to find the
words you're looking for. These tricks
should be apparent to someone with even
the most rudimentary knowledge of
Hebrew, but in Drosnin's book the Hebrew
letters are shown in the code samples,
but they are never analyzed. He never
mentions whether the "word" he
finds is generally translated the way he
translates it, or whether his way is an
unusual alternative with many more
likely translations. For example, the
word he translates "assassin"
in connection with Yitzak Rabin's
assassination is generally translated
"murder" or
"murderer" in the Bible. While
some of the discoveries seem unlikely,
difficult to account for, here are some
things to bear in mind when considering
the validity of the code:
-
In
finding the code, the Torah or some
other text is placed on the
computer-equivalent of a cylinder
which can be expanded or contracted
until a match is found. With every
letter added to the horizontal
length of the lines, a whole new set
of words becomes possible vertically
and diagonally (they remain the same
horizontally). The reference to the
ten commandments being
computer-generated is found in a
segment only ten letters wide,
whereas some words have letters
spaced chapters apart—which can be
juxtaposed only by expanding the
cylinder to a thousand letters or
more in width.
-
The
hardest part to find is a person's
name, but given that the name can be
read in any direction, with any
number of equidistant spaces between
the letters, and that the computer
can adjust the line length, and that
any possible variation of spelling
is allowed, and that abbreviations,
initials, and nicknames are allowed,
the wonder would be if any name
could not be found. Code researchers
generally find the name vertically
by expanding or contracting the line
length, then look for the words
around it.
-
The
Hebrew used for code research is
"unvocalized," it does not
use vowel pointings, but Drosnin
uses the letters aleph, ayin, waw,
and yod as semi-vowels where
convenient. These semi-vowels can be
used to approximate a number of
vowels (yod might represent IH, EE,
EYE, EH, EI, for example). Thus,
exact spelling is not
essential—"sounds
similar" is close enough. If
none of these semi-vowels occur, the
word is simply read without vowels.
(For example, President Clinton's
name is spelled Q L Y N T W N.
"President" is N S Y A
which means "leader" or
"ruler" and is in fact the
Hebrew word for
"president" today, though
it could also be seen as
"Nazi." "Hitler"
is found as H Y T L R, and
"Nazi" as N A DZ Y.
"Shakespeare" occurs as Sh
Q S P Y R, "Macbeth" as M
Q B T, and "Hamlet" as
HMLT. Note the cavalier attitude
toward vowels.)
-
In
giving the computer names to search
for, every possible spelling is
used, whether or not the spelling
has ever been used. This increases
the likelihood of a match. Also,
usually the words used are Hebrew,
but sometimes they are English
(names).
-
Without
vowel points, a three letter Hebrew
root may have many meanings, thus
perhaps quintupling the likelihood
of a match. For example, the Hebrew
root 'Ayin–Lamed–He, "'LH,"
with one set of vowels, can mean to
ascend or break or excel or fall or
offer (and many more), or with
different vowels it means
"holocaust" or "burnt
offering"; or with yet other
vowels it means a branch or leaf, or
with other vowels it means occasion,
or, with other vowels, iniquity. But
Drosnin translates words in whatever
way seems convenient for the meaning
he wants to find.
-
Many
modern Hebrew words are based on old
words with ancient but related
meanings. This makes it easier to
find 'modern' words in the ancient
text, even though when written, the
words did not have the modern
meanings. For example, the word for
missile.
-
Hebrew
has letters which represent
different sounds but might be
transliterated in English by the
same letter. For example, he and
heth might both be represented by an
H, but the latter has a gutteral CH
sound. Kaph and Qoph might be
written as K, Q, or C. Taw and teth
might both be written as a T. Samech,
sin, shin, and zayin all might be
seen as S sounds. These are not used
interchangeably in Hebrew, nor do
scholars who transliterate Hebrew in
books and articles use them
interchangeably, but they are in the
Bible Code, whenever convenient.
This increases the chance of a
match.
-
The
letter field used is not made up of
random letters, but of Hebrew words
without vowels. This increases the
chance of a horizontal match in
Hebrew, of course, even if one
rearranges the letters. That is to
say, on any page, whatever the line
length, there will be many Hebrew
words already there, read right to
left. Read left to right, some of
these words have other meanings. If
one begins with the second letter in
a word rather than the first letter,
one may get yet more words.
-
The
dates are based on a letter / number
code in which each letter represents
a number. As the Torah is all
letters, this also makes a match
more likely. Also, modern Hebrew
dates often leave off the millennium
number (1891 would be written, in
Hebrew letters, 891). Thus,
Drosnin's finding of dates such as
"2013" could as well be
1013 or 3013. He never explains this
to his readers. Imagine finding your
name in code on one page of the
Bible and assuming that any word on
that page—out of context,
backwards or forward, up or down or
diagonal—is God's prophetic word
about your life.
-
Most
"pages" have a thousand or
more letters to choose from, nearly
every three of which constitute a
Hebrew word root, in any direction.
The chance of finding something
somewhat significant on a page with
a name on it is quite high. If
nothing is found, perhaps the
computer might find the name
elsewhere.
The
Bible Code is a modern day equivalent of
"them that have familiar spirits,
and unto wizards that peep, and that
mutter" and who are forbidden to
God's people. We don't need a secret
code when we have God's clear word:
"To the law and to the testimony:
if they speak not according to this
word, it is because there is no light in
them" (Is 8:19–20). The Bible
Code fails the test.
God's
word is PLAIN. We may not understand
every single verse, but there is a
enough that we DO understand to keep us
busy for a lifetime. Work on what you DO
KNOW. Stop sinning and START learning
what it means to live a holy, righteous
life. Stop fornicating. Stop watching
unlawful hellivision and movies. Start
helping the fatherless and the widow.
Start submtting to your husband and
loving your wife. Start giving God the
praise. This is PLAIN, not hidden.
God
bless you as you read the Holy
Scriptures just as they are written in
the Authorized Version, the King James
conformable to the 1611 edition.
for
Jesus' sake,
tracy
--
http://www.jesus-is-lord.com
…they
are impudent children and stiffhearted.
I do send thee unto them; and thou shalt
say unto them, Thus saith the Lord GOD.
And thou, son of man, be not afraid of
them, neither be afraid of their words,
though briers and thorns be with thee,
and thou dost dwell among scorpions: be
not afraid of their words, nor be
dismayed at their looks, though they be
a rebellious house.
Ezekiel
2:4, 6