I've gone over it repeatedly now, from multiple angles/methods. It does not work as advertized. The total is 3617. Anybody want to show me where I went wrong? (I'll attach an image of my spreadsheet so everyone can see it all one letter/number at a time.)
So we're not only adding numbers that came from different languages & alphabets, but also counting different kinds of items in the triangle now (first individual points/circles, now rows of them)?
Also, is that really a phrase in Hebrew? Each word independently (in Hebrew letters) gets 400000-500000 search hits, but together, they only get 102000, and those pages just contain both words somewhere, not a phrase combining them both like this. The closest thing I can think of is one English-speaking guy in one video several years ago who kept saying "Jehovah God" like it was all one word or at least an established phrase such as "Jesus Christ", while saying he was summoning alien spaceships and pointing his camera up at some recently-released shiny helium balloons in the sky. The reason the phrase stood out to me was because I never heard anyone else saying that, and I don't think I have since then either. And without that as a phrase, you're adding together the numerical values of two words that don't really belong together... to get them to equal a number of
rows in a triangle that was previously defined by its number of
points/circles... when the number of
those in that triangle doesn't match the Bible verses that it's supposed to match anyway.
Multiply the letter values by the number of letters, then divide by the word values multiplied by the number of words and you have the first 5 digits of pi (error 1 in 90000).
I can't really tell exactly what the procedure is here, but I do know there's no way it fits the actual numerical systems we're supposed to be working in. Values less than 1 were handled by fractions, not decimals, there was no way the system even could possibly have handled decimals because there was no decimal symbol or zero, and counting how many letters there are in a word or how many words there are in a phrase/sentence instead of adding up the individual numerical values was never the way anything worked (that would have been treating all letters/numbers as if they were #1, א). The letters'/numbers' values were what they were, and not any others. This is like claiming that there's a system of hidden numerical values in our modern base-10 digits based on the arrangements of loops, straight strokes, angles, and end points the written symbols have, instead of what numbers the symbols actually represent.
Repeat exactly the same procedure with John 1.1. And you obtain e, again with an error of 1 in 90000). They are equal and opposite too, so summing gives almost complete cancellation.
That doesn't make any sense. The two numbers you were just talking about (π and
e) are not each other's negatives, or numerical pallindromes or any other such thing. And the Hebrew & Greek number systems didn't have negatives. And simply declaring one of them negative would not only be going against the way anything actually ever was in either of the relevant languages or alphabets or numerical systems, but also wouldn't get you "equal & opposite" values anyway because π and
e weren't the same thing to start with as positives.