Question:
the Bible codes?
Jay R
2008-05-28 15:20:24 UTC
there are many codes in the bible that protected are past and future, and have suprisingly very very accurat, and personaly i beilive the bible codes, and i beailive that god wrote it. and one of the bibal codes says that a comet is set to hit are world in 2012. and i know there are many protections for things to happen in 2012 but i thinck this could be the correct one. so what do you guys thinck of this
Eleven answers:
bassdoc
2008-05-28 15:29:23 UTC
There ARE NO BIBLE CODES!!!

Jesus said his message as plain as day for anybody to understand (Let him who has ears hear!)

Pretending there are codes is a way to obscure Jesus' very simple message of sacrifice, love and redemption.

Gnostic cults tried long ago to destroy the message of Christ and they are still trying.
PraiseJesus
2008-05-28 15:33:30 UTC
ADAM (adomah) means “man.” This one makes absolute sense, since he’s the first one.



SETH means “appointed.” Eve said, “For God has appointed me another seed instead of Abel , whom Cain slew.”



ENOSH (anash) means “mortal,” “frail” or “miserable,” used in the context of incurable grief, sickness, woe or wickedness. It was in the days of Enosh that Man began to defile God.



KENAN means “sorrow”, “dirge” or “elegy.” Again, this was a dark period of history, and parents traditionally used names that referred to circumstances at birth, etc.



MAHALALEL (mahalal) means “blessed” or “praise” and (El) was the name for God. Therefore, Mahalalel traditionally means “the blessed God”. (Side note: you’ll see that many Hebrew names include El, such as Dani-el, “God is my Judge,” Nathani-el, “Gift of God,” etc.)



JARED (yaradh) means “shall come down.” Many scholars attribute this to the time when the “sons of God” “came down” to Earth to corrupt the daughters of men, resulting in the Nephilim (“fallen ones”).



ENOCH means “teaching” or “commencement.” Later in the Bible, we find that Enoch was the first of four generations of preachers.



METHUSELAH (muth) means “death” and (shalach) means “to bring” or “to send forth.” Therefore, his entire name means “his death shall bring.”



LAMECH (root still evident in today’s English meaning “lament”) means in Hebrew context here “despairing.”



NOAH (nacham) means “to bring relief” or “comfort.”

CODES ABOUT JESUS AROUND EXODUS 30:16

Name Begins Word Ltr Interval Ends Word Ltr

Yeshua 30:16 19 1 12 30:18 1 2

Nazarene 30:16 15 3 8 30:16 20 4

Messiah 30:13 12 3 60 30:18 3 2

Shiloh 30:14 7 1 40 30:16 12 2

Passover 30:9 7 4 -9 30:10 1 3

Galilee 29:19 7 3 -39 29:21 8 3

Mary 30:15 7 2 60 30:18 11 1

Mary 30:16 13 1 61 30:20 8 2

Mary 30:17 5 3 92 30:23 14 2

Peter 30:16 2 2 32 30:17 1 2

Matthew 30:20 8 2 20 30:21 6 2

John 29:19 9 1 14 29:20 12 2

Andrew 29:27 15 4 115 29:36 7 4

Philip 29:24 9 4 50 29:27 4 5

Thomas 30:18 14 4 11 30:19 7 2

James 30:7 6 2 -59 30:10 14 5

Simon 29:19 7 3 -39 29:21 8 3

Nathanael 30:4 8 2 -100 30:12 8 2

Judas 29:13 9 2 24 29:15 2 1

Thaddaeus 30:16 2 2 32 30:17 1 2

Matthias 30:20 8 2 20 30:21 6 2

Let Him Be

Crucified 30:20 1 1 8 30:20 8 1
anonymous
2008-05-28 15:40:12 UTC
There are other religions that use 2012 as the year something will definitely happen. I think we should be ready for anything; however, I also believe as a Christian that after Christ returns, he will reign for 10K years (as the bible talks about in Revelations 20:4) God is not going to destroy the earth in 2012. Something devastating may happen, but seriously, devastating things are happening all of the time... look at the death toll after the earth quake..... or all the tornadoes that have hit this year (A record). So anything can happen. Just prepare yourself and if you are Christian comfort yourself with knowing God says he'll take care of his children.
anonymous
2008-05-28 15:27:53 UTC
On the History Channel, they showed a guy do the same thing with Moby Dick, which tells me it's a load of hooey. They also showed a guy that said the code predicted the end of the world was going to start in 2003. So much for accuracy.



And I believe scientists would know if a comet was coming in 2012.
PaulCyp
2008-05-28 15:32:33 UTC
You seriously think that God inspired men 2,000 years ago to write things containing hidden messages that could only be found using computers?? It has been shown time and time again that similar random phrases can be "discovered" in any large volume of text using exactly the same software. There are only 26 letters in the alphabet. Obviously if you rearrange them millions of different ways, some of them will end up spelling something.
Poophowbouter
2008-05-28 15:27:20 UTC
They've been proven as a fraud. They are considered "postdictions" meaning the alleged prophesy is noticed after it happens. So nothing is really PREdicted.

Some researchers applied the bible code to Moby Dick and found all kinds of "relevant" prophesies.

Strange how you can apply the bible code to a particular page in one language and it will turn up a different prophesy if applied in another language.
n9wff
2008-05-28 15:26:49 UTC
the difficulty I see is twofold:

one, the Bible code book was written by an atheist.

two. when we look for a code instead of the message, we miss the basis of the Bible and Christianity - a relationship with God.
Kash
2008-05-28 15:24:43 UTC
LOL! Did you just get done watching the History channel too?



Honestly, to answer your question, I don't care. My soul is prepared.



It is funny though that there are other religions pointing to the same thing. I think the Mayan calendar says there will be a cataclysmic event in 2012.
LorBem
2008-05-28 15:24:29 UTC
I don't believe in Codes. I don't think God would do that to man write in codes for only a few to figure out. Since God wants to reach humanity, I think he tries to make it as easy as possible.
slcbtf
2008-05-28 15:23:11 UTC
This may help.....





by John A. Tvedtnes



The innerrantists are at it again, referring to the so-called "Bible Code" studies conducted in Israel as evidence that the text of the Bible remains as it was revealed directly by God thousands of years ago. Several articles and a book have resulted from the "Bible Code" study, which purports to demonstrate that hidden in the Hebrew text of the Pentateuch--the first five books of the Old Testament--are prophecies of future events. The researchers suggest that, because only God can know the future, this is evidence that even the very wording in the Pentateuch was inspired by God.



Orthodox Jews and fundamentalist Christians alike have hailed the study as evidence for the divine authenticity of the Bible. They point to the fact that most of the "Bible Code" researchers are statisticians, not theologians, which gives them some neutrality when it comes to religious matters.



In order to evaluate the study, one must first understand how it was conducted. The researchers developed a computer program that would take the Hebrew text of the Bible, then skip over a specified number of letters, printing out, for example, every fifteenth letter. These would then be arranged in a "matrix," usually a rectangular box, in which one could search for words, much like in game books readily available in our country. The words can be read horizontally, vertically, or diagonally. The words formed by this method are, in and of themselves, unimportant. It is when the researchers find several related words within the same matrix that they feel they have demonstrated their point. One of their most important finds is the name Yitzhak Rabin (reading vertically) and the words "assassin will assassinate" (reading horizontally) within the same matrix.



The "prophecies" that can be found using this method vary according to how many letters are skipped. Thus, a lengthy Bible passage could, theoretically, produce more than one such message, depending on whether each tenth, eleventh, or twelfth letter is picked.



There are several problems with this methodology. One is that the definition of proximity of the various words is rather arbitrary because of the matrix design. Another involves the nature of the Hebrew text. There simply is no single version of the books Genesis through Deuteronomy. Though there is a standard text used in the synagogue, different ancient manuscripts vary in their readings. For example, among the Dead Sea Scrolls, there are several different versions of the book of Exodus that vary widely. The omission or change of even a single word can affect the results of the computer search.



We then have the question of orthography. Some words have more than one possible spelling in the Bible and, in fact, are spelled differently in in the same passage in various manuscripts. Originally, some Hebrew letters were used only to represent the semivowels y and w, as well as h, but were later used to also denote vowel sounds (i, o or u, and a). This led to misreadings in some later manuscripts that would also affect the results of the computer search.



But the coup de grace came when the "Bible Code" issue was examined by two Bible scholars in the pages of the August 1997 issue of Bible Review. Ronald S. Hendel of Southern Methodist University entitled his review "The Secret Code Hoax." Rabbi Shlomo Sternberg, who teaches mathematics at Harvard, called his article, "Snake Oil For Sale."



Examining the question of Yitzhak Rabin's assassination, Sternberg noted that "the computer found that if you skip every 4,772 letters, the name Yitzhak Rabin is embedded in the biblical text. In other words, there is a yod, the first letter of Yitzhak, followed by 4,772 letters later by the second letter of his name, and so on. This means that if you print out the letters of the Hebrew Pentateuch (using the Koren edition) in rows 4,772 letters wide, the name Yitzhak Rabin will appear in a vertical column." To Sternberg, this stretched credulity too far.



Sternberg also took up the challenge launched by the principal "Bible Code" researcher, Michael Drosnin, in an article published in the June 9, 1997, issue of Newsweek, in which he said, "When my critics find a message about the assassination of a prime minister encrypted in Moby Dick I will believe them." Sternberg asked an Australian mathematics professor, Brendan McKay, "to search Moby Dick for such encrypted messages. He found 13 ‘predicted' assassinations of public figures, several of them prime ministers or presidents or their equivalents." Two examples appear in Sternberg's article. One has a message reading, "Pres - Somoza - dies – he was shot - gun." The other has "IGandhi" in a vertical line intersected by a horizontal line reading "thebloodydeed." Using the same reasoning for Sternberg's study as that employed by the "Bible Code" researchers, we would have to conclude that God also dictated Moby Dick and that Herman Melville was a prophet! The truth, however, is that with enough permutations, one can find such "prophetic" messages in any lengthy text.



Unfortunately, some Latter-day Saints have bought into the "Bible Code" nonsense and I frequently get questions on the subject. Some even want to run the program on the text of the Book of Mormon to prove its authenticity. Some critics have challenged us to do just that, believing that the test will fail and thus prove that while the Bible is divinely-inspired, the Book of Mormon is manmade. None of them has stopped to consider the fact that the "Bible Code" studies were done on the Hebrew text, not on a secondary English translation, and that performing such a test on the English Book of Mormon would prove nothing. Still, in view of the fact that Moby Dick has proven to be "prophetic," I suspect that even the English version of the Book of Mormon would provide some interesting results. But I have better things to do than waste my time with this kind of nonsense.
TASC ranger
2008-05-28 15:35:52 UTC
I agree you shouldn't get worked up about it


This content was originally posted on Y! Answers, a Q&A website that shut down in 2021.
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