The 72 Camelot In Day One Of Genesis

52 Words In Day One Of Genesis The FIRST Five and the LAST Five Words of Day One, have the values 1998 and 674. 1998 plus 674 is 2672. This is the value of the 72 First Letters of The Read More …

Day One of Genesis– “Internal Structure”

“Day One” — Hebrew Text The 197 Letters of “Day One” were dictated by God to Moses, letter by letter. Jewish/Rabbinic tradition says that Moses had at least some choice over how he divided the letters up into words. But Read More …

Maria “Gets The Last Word” In Cana (72)

The Wedding Feast In Cana Maria, (Mariam, Miriam, “Mary” in English), Mother of Jesus, spoke 9 recorded words in the John’s Gospel account of The Wedding Feast in Cana. This where/when Jesus turned Water into Wine. Her last recorded word, Read More …

Joseph of Arimathea, and Nicodemus

Joseph of Arimathea and Nicodemus Buried Jesus Joseph of Arimathea obtained permission from Pontius Pilate to remove Jesus’ body from the cross, and to “bury” Jesus in his (Joseph’s) tomb. Then he and Nicodemus placed Jesus’ body in the tomb. Read More …

The Sword of Moses

The 42 Letter “Sword of Moses” 42 Letters in, or spread across, 12 words. The text/words are verse Exodus 15:11. Exodus 15:11 Interlinear Text (from Biblehub) https://biblehub.com/interlinear/exodus/15-11.htm Word Values 50, 85, 73, 26, 50, 85, 255, 406, 257, 835, 375, Read More …

Nazareth & The 173 Keys

The 42 Letter Name of God is “part and parcel” with the 42 generations of Jesus in Matthew’s Gospel, with the structure of The Periodic Table of The Elements, with the 42 journeys of the “Exodus Israelites, and with the Read More …

Excalibur, Camelot and Australia

It is recorded in The New Testament: After the Martyrdom of Stephen The Deacon, there arose a great persecution of Christians in what was then Roman Palestine. Almost all Christians except the Church leadership were forced out of the region. Read More …

The Mountain Moving Power of Speech and Words – Faith That Moves Mountains

Aleph, the first letter of the Hebrew and Aramaic Alphabets, is “the beginning of speech” on several levels. Its Arabic equivalent (just a different accent) is Alif (or Aliph). The Greek equivalent is Alpha (part of our term “Alphabet”. Aleph Read More …