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by ggturner on 20 December 2011 - 17:12
Language--Latin? Many other languages developed from it.
Verifiable constant in the Bible: truth (that the Bible is God's inspired, infalliable word)

by Ninja181 on 20 December 2011 - 18:12
That's because it contained the secret receipe for Hebrew Franks.
Sorry, couldn't resist having a little fun!

by GSDtravels on 20 December 2011 - 19:12

by GSDtravels on 20 December 2011 - 19:12
Language--Latin? Many other languages developed from it.
Verifiable constant in the Bible: truth (that the Bible is God's inspired, infalliable word)"
Okay, so numbers are symbolic, in your opinion. What do they symbolize?
Many languages developed it. So which parts of the Bible were more likely to translate literally?
Verifiable How? What verifies it for you?

by GSDtravels on 20 December 2011 - 19:12

by GSDtravels on 20 December 2011 - 20:12
But if there was a code as to which numbers hold the most significance and which ones are just flashing signs, how would you go about cracking the code? Which numbers matter most, and WHY?

by GSDtravels on 20 December 2011 - 20:12

by GSDtravels on 20 December 2011 - 20:12
What is unique about the number itself, without any Biblical thought?
Where does it appear in the Bible and what, specifically, does it symbolize?
Is that the only place it appears?
Does it have more than one symbolic meaning, or is it there to drive home a particular point?
Is it repeated in a different way many times, but really has the same symbolic meaning?
What are the similarities?
If it means something different, symbolically, in different places, what are the major differences?

by GSDtravels on 20 December 2011 - 21:12

by Ninja181 on 20 December 2011 - 21:12
God's attributes are three: omniscience, omnipresence, and omnipotence.
There are three great divisions completing time: past, present, and future.
Three persons, in grammar, express and include all the relationships of mankind.
Thought, word, and deed, complete the sum of human capability.
Three degrees of comparison complete our knowledge of qualities.
The simplest proposition requires three things to complete it; viz., the subject, the predicate, and the copula.
Three propositions are necessary to complete the simplest form of argument: the major premiss, the minor, and the conclusion.
Three kingdoms embrace our ideas of matter; mineral, vegetable, and animal
In the Hebrew, seven is (ba#$e (shevah). It is from the root (ba#$&af (savah), to be full or satisfied, have enough of. Hence the meaning of the word "seven" is dominated by this root, for on the seventh day God rested from the work of Creation. It was full and complete, and good and perfect. Nothing could be added to it or taken from it without marring it. Hence the word tba#$af (Shavath), to cease, desist, rest, and tb@af#$a Shabbath, Sabbath, or day of rest. This root runs through various languages; e.g., Sanscrit, saptan; Zend., hapta; Greek, epta (hepta); Latin, septem. All these preserve the "t," which in the Semitic and Teutonic languages is dropped out; e.g. Gothic, sibun; German, sieben; English, seven.
It is seven, therefore, that stamps with perfection and completeness that in connection with which it is used. Of time, it tells of the Sabbath, and marks off the week of seven days, which, artificial as it may seem to be, is universal and immemorial in its observance amongst all nations and in all times. It tells of that eternal Sabbath-keeping which remains for the people of God in all its everlasting perfection.
In the creative works of God, seven completes the colors of the spectrum and rainbow, and satisfies in music the notes of the scale. In each of these the eighth is only a repetition of the first.
The #666:
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