Crown of Thorns
1332 ... double beast... oohhh... watch out.
443556... beast multiplied by beast. Even worse than double beast.
ok... the beast jokes have been the most useful part of this thread so far.
I am starting here with the above throw-away post because it reminded me of a line of investigation that I abandoned several years ago.
Over the years, I have informally classified the emergent content of the Genesis Seal into categories of ‘primary’ and ‘secondary’ quality. The number
443556 quoted by RobDegraves is something I identified long ago in the G1 Square, but decided it was of only secondary interest. However, I have now reviewed that decision following the above post, and in light of recent discoveries.
Figure 32 shows the G1 Square in its numerical guise. Here, I have highlighted the digits of 443556 (ie 666x666) where they take up a moderately interesting configuration. However, the greater surprise begins with a cluster of letters in the alphabetic view of the same square (Figure 33), displaying bi-lateral symmetry over the same axis as the 443556.
Most of the letters in this cluster have little or no independent literary significance, except for the word
y’hiy (let it/there be…) that sits like a crown over the rest of the group. Taking a broader view, it will be found that this group serves mainly as a place-holder, following the Principle of Reserved Locations. It demonstrates a symmetry that will persist through every square view of the Genesis Seal, but so far only seen in the G1 Square. The G2 Square is shown in Figure 34.
The thing to note in this view is the 5-letter palindrome in the square’s horizontal diagonal. This retains the identical symmetry about the same vertical axis as before. An additional significance of this group begins in that four letters read from either end would be pronounced ‘
Ahava’. And that is a name found only in the Old Testament book of Ezra, where he writes:
And I gathered them to the river that flows to Ahava, and there we abode in tents three days. (Ezra 8:15).
Noting that Ahava is pronounced like the principal Hebrew word for ‘love’, we might ask where this river may be found. Is it in Babylon, where Ezra was leading his flock out of exile? Whether it exists there or not, there is a more ancient template for this river in Figure 34, where the meandering Lamed River terminates in the middle letter of the 5-letter palindrome. What is more, the first four letters at the left of the palindrome also reserve a place for the expression ‘
in a tent’ that replaces it in the G4 Square. For this reason, Ezre 8:15 is predicated on Genesis 1:1-2.
The G4 Square, which reproduces much of the same content as G3, is particularly effective in continuing the offset symmetry from G1 and G2. Figure 35 highlights a small Y-shape, composed from four copies of the letter
aleph, that again sits over the same vertical axis as the features I highlighted in G1 and G2.
In this illustration, I have reproduced the course of the Lamed River (from G2), to show that the new Y-shape shares its middle component with the terminal component of that river, and with the middle of the palindromic ‘love’ in G2. Also, the persistent axis of symmetry extends above this Y-shape, in the form of the ascending word
ariy (a lion), and the reverse spelling:
yara (to flow), hence
…the river that flows to Ahava. Everything converges onto the same elements, even in several aspects of the Genesis Seal.
So far in this post, I have followed the route dictated by a persistent bi-lateral symmetry (albeit offset from the symmetry of the main Square), which began with the number 443556 (ie 666x666). Now I shall set a course towards an earlier landscape, and return there by an alternative route. But first, notice the horizontal word
keter (a crown) in Figure 35 that passes through the stem of the small Y-shape.
Figure 36 shows the same G4 Square in its numerical guise, substituting the appropriate qatan value for each letter (see Table A at the end of this post.).
Notice that the two letters of the stem of the small Y-shape are each the origin of a horizontal 121, the square 11x11. Alternatively, the pivotal middle element of the Y-shape is the origin of two copies of 121, like adjacent sides of a square. The vertical 121 is, of course, derived from the ‘lion’ and the
yara (to flow). Suppose, then, that this surfeit of 121s is a hint at the importance of its arithmetical square: 121x121 = 14641. Where might this lead?
Looking at all
four numerical squares reveals not a single, linear 14641. And only in the G1 and G2 squares are there any noteworthy, non-linear occurrences of that number. In both squares, there is a 14641 in the far left corner, and another in the bottom corner. The latter case belongs to the triangular foundation of the headline Y-shape in G1, which can be understood as a crucified man. But the G2 Square (Figure 37), includes two additional examples of a 14641 that contribute to a splendid graphical interpretation.
Here, in the G2 Square, there is an 8-element, closed cycle consisting of a 14641 and a 666. What is more, there is an alternative 14641 that breaks out of the cycle, to terminate in the left-hand corner. Seen as an extension to the closed cycle, the total effect is like an exaggerated Hebrew letter
samech. Significantly,
samech is traditionally symbolic of a thorn. Finally, the horizontal 464 at the point where the 14641 breaks out of the cycle also coincides precisely with the position of the word
keter (a crown) that we saw in Figure 35.
I give you the discarded Crown of Thorns, in the G2 Square that marks a transition precipitated by the death of the crucified man.
Having elected to deal with the topic of this post, it has also made up my mind what the next contributory post should be about. A word that links this post with the next is ‘horse’. Have you ever wondered why there are so few references to horses in the Bible? A rare exception is Pharaoh’s chariot army, which chased the Israelites as they fled their bondage in Egypt. Evidently, horses are not meant to have any role in God’s purpose. So, near the end of Moses’ life he anticipates a future when a new generation of Israelites will demand to have a king of their own. Moses lays down certain ground rules for Israelite kings, including a specific injunction not to collect large numbers of horses, and certainly not Egyptian horses. A thousand years later, Ezra copied the role of Moses in leading his own people out of exile, while declining to ask for an escort of horse-soldiers.
My focus on horses is neither random nor frivolous. The Hebrew word for ‘a horse’ is
sus, which has two connections with Figure 37, above. That illustration reveals an image of a letter
samech, incorporating a 666 sequence. The three-letter word ‘
sus’ begins
and ends with the letter
samech, and it is the only word in biblical Hebrew that confers a qatan digit sequence of 666.
Midway between the times of Moses and Ezra, King Solomon had collected thousands of horses and chariots, many of them Egyptian. And he received 666 talents of gold in tithes in a single year.
