Grammatical
Proof that the Bible is Written in a Symbolic Code
At last, after 13 years of research we have found something that for most of
that time we believed was going to be there. We have found a set of rules that
the wording of bible accounts must obey.
1. A bible account
is a stand alone bible story. If the bible is a play then the books of the bible
are the acts in the play and the bible stories, the bible accounts, are the
scenes in those acts. These bible stories often, but not always, coincide with
the chapters of the book. One of Jesus’ parables can be a bible story for
example.
Prospective Rules
for a new account:
[1] New location
which was not a part of the previous narrative
[2] New time frame which was not a part of the previous narrative
[3] Completely new audience, who were not a part of the previous narrative
[4] New lead character who was not a part of the previous narrative.
2. Every bible
account is either literal, symbolic or partly literal and partly symbolic. Every
literal bible account has one literal meaning and can also have one or more word
symbolic meanings. Every symbolic bible account (such as a parable) has an event
symbolic meaning and can also have one or more word symbolic meanings.
3. An event
symbolic meaning is the symbolic interpretation of the events that a symbolic
account is describing. A word symbolic meaning is the symbolic interpretation of
the words that are used to describe the events of a bible account. It is not an
interpretation of the events themselves.
4. A Countable Noun
is a Greek or Hebrew noun in the original bible text that acts as a noun and not
as a possessive adjective. Greek nouns in the genitive preceded by prepositions
or by improper prepositions are countable, they are in the genitive not due to a
possessive use but due to the genitive case being taken by the preposition.
Hebrew absolute nouns preceded by a construct noun are possessive and therefore
not countable - for more see codeC8
5. A Successive
Designation is a countable noun followed or preceded by one or more successive
nouns, or one or more successive words or phrases acting as nouns, all
describing the same object in the account. For example ‘Nebuchadnezzar the
king’, or ‘John the Baptist’, or ‘Jesus Christ’. The successive nouns
can be implied rather than stated. Here is the full definition...
The double or triple or quadruple or quintuple or
sextuple designation (which we use to mean two, three, four, five or six
successive designations), is the most important prophetic form in the bible.
Here is the definition and the effect of this form...
If a character or item designated by...
1. A noun acting as a noun
2. An adjective acting as a noun (which almost invariably means that it is
preceded by 'the' i.e. is definite or is in the construct in Hebrew)
3. A participle, (a verb used as an adjective), which adjective is acting as a
noun, (which means that it must be preceded by 'the' i.e. is definite - such as
'the scorched [one]' or is in the construct in Hebrew)
4. A gerund (a verb acting as a noun such as a 'smoker')
5. The implied phrase 'The [one]' where '[one]' is implied and is of course
acting as a noun.
6. The word 'tiV' meaning a certain one.
7. The word 'eiV' meaning 'one'.
is referred to by two or more successive such
designations, both/all of which are definite or both/all of which are
indefinite.
And if all the designations when taken separately in
the context of the verse act as nouns and the verse makes sense with each
designation standing alone (which means that the designations must all be in the
same case in Greek). In the case of parallel account, you can use the
information in all the parallel accounts to help make sense of each separate
designation.
And if the first one of the successive designations is
actually a noun acting as a noun (i.e. is a countable noun).
And if any possessive pronoun in one of the successive
designations is also in all other succeeding or preceding designations.
Then we have a successive designation, and there are
two or more Word Symbolic meanings to that account. The account possesses
two or more Word Symbolic threads/strands/meanings.
For more - see CodeC6b.
6. The total number
of literal and symbolic meanings of any account is the number of threads of that
account.
7. Every literal or
symbolic bible account which has no successive designations and which has every
countable noun appearing an odd number of times in the account, has only one
meaning, only one thread. It has no word symbolic meanings.
8. Every literal or
symbolic bible account which has no successive designation and which has at
least one countable noun which appears an even number of times (having the same
meaning each time), in the account has one word symbolic meaning and therefore
has two threads.
9. Every literal or
symbolic bible account which has a successive designation, has a number of Word
symbolic threads equal to the number of designations in the largest successive
designation in the account. So if it has a triple successive designation then it
has 3 word symbolic threads, and therefore it has 4 threads in all, since every
account also has either a literal thread, an event symbolic thread, or a part
literal/part event symbolic thread in addition to any word symbolic threads.
10 A countable noun
chain is a countable noun qualified by one or more possessive nouns, such as:
The tractor of the slave of the king.
Having made the
above detailed grammatical definitions, here is the big picture…
Rule 1: The
total number of different meanings that a countable noun takes in all the
threads of a literal or a symbolic bible account is the largest number, that is
less than or equal to the number of threads in the account, which divides the
number of times that the noun appears in the account. So if a countable noun
appears a prime number of times in an account and if the number of threads of
the account is not that prime number, then the noun only takes one meaning in
all the threads, it is invariant in every thread. But if the noun appears six
times and the account has 3 threads, then the noun takes 3 meanings, a different
meaning in each thread. This is how we work out what the greater meanings of the
various nouns in bible accounts might be. Only nouns take greater meanings in
bible accounts.
Check 1: The total number of countable nouns in a literal or in a
symbolic account is divisible by the number of threads in that account. If
literal or symbolic account has 3 threads then it has 3, 6, 9, 12, 15, 18, 21,
24, 27, 30, 33, 36, 39, 42, 45, 48, 51, 54, 57, 60 etc nouns in it. If literal
or symbolic account has 2 threads then it has an even number of countable nouns
in it etc. This is a simple grammatical proof that the bible is inspired. This
count is called the CNC (Countable noun count). LCNC is the literal CNC and SCNC
is the symbolic CNC.
Check
2: The total number of distinct countable noun chains (with length 1 or
more), in a literal or in a symbolic bible account, is also divisible by the
number of threads in that account as defined above. This count is called the INC
(Interpretable noun count) or (Interpretable noun chains). LINC is the literal
INC and SINC is the symbolic INC.
Check 3: If
the literal account has a symbolic sub-account then the SCNC and the SINC of the
literal account match the number of threads either in the literal account itself
if it has symbolic words embedded in it, or in one of the symbolic subaccounts.
If there are no symbolic subacounts then SCNC and SINC can be anything. In other
words once there is a symbolic subaccount, then the SCNC and SINC of the whole
literal account must match one of its options (either the literal account itself
if it has symbolic words, or any symbolic subaccount).
Check 4: Any account with which has a double designation and which
does not have any adjective acting as a noun must contain a countable noun which
appears a number of times which is a multiple of the number of designations in
the largest successive designation in the account. So for example if the largest
successive designation in an account is a double designation then either there
is a countable noun repeated a multiple of 3 times in that account or there is
an adjective acting as a noun in the account. This is because there is no point
in having a word symbolic thread in which no noun or word acting as a noun takes
a greater meaning.
Check 5: This one is more complex - Here are the rules:
[1] From the Repetition Principle and the Successive
Designations Principle, we know that every literal or symbolic bible account
which does not have a Successive Designation but which does have an even number
of incidences of a given noun acting as a noun, must have precisely one word
symbolic thread.
[2] From the Successive Designations Principle, we know
that every literal or symbolic bible account which has a Successive Designation
has at least two word symbolic threads and therefore certainly has one word
symbolic thread.
[3] From the Designations Principle, we know that any
character or item in an account referred to by a given number of non successive
differing nouns has these nouns standing for that number of different characters
or items in the totality of all the various word symbolic threads of the account
(if such exist).
[4] From the Repetition Principle, we know that a noun
acting as a noun which appears n times in an account with m total literal/event
symbolic and word symbolic threads, takes a total number of meanings in all the
word symbolic and non word symbolic threads equal to the largest factor of n
which is less than or equal to m.
If you put all these 4 together, then for bible accounts with at least one
word symbolic thread (which is most of them) and with at least one multiply
designated character or item (which also is a large fraction of them) we have
two equations for the same thing (so long as none of the multiple designations
stand for more than one character or item per symbolic meaning).
So long as each of the multiple designations only stands for one character or
item per meaning then we have two ways of calculating the total number of
meanings (which is the total number of characters or items) represented in the
word symbolisms by a multiply designated character or item in the account. We
can calculate the number of incarnations of a character or item from the number
of designations of that character or item. And we can calculate the total number
of meanings of all of the designations of a multiply designated character or
item from the number of repetitions of each of the designations themselves.
Since both of these calculations must yield the the same answer we have now
established a relationship between the number of different designations of a
character or item in an account and the number of recitals of each of these
designations in the account. There is of course no reason for such a
relationship to exist unless the bible is indeed in a grammatical code.
Furthermore by showing that this relationship holds true in all of a reasonable
number of bible accounts, then we 'prove' that the bible is in a grammatical
code. It is like the apostle Paul said:
5 Not that we of ourselves are
adequately qualified to reckon anything as issuing from ourselves, but our being
adequately qualified issues from God,
6 who has indeed adequately qualified
us to be ministers of a new covenant, not of a written code (grammatoV),
but of spirit; for the written code (grammatoV)
condemns to death, but the spirit makes alive (2 Corinthians 3).
The Lords' Witnesses are (perhaps) adequately qualified to be ministers of a
further new covenant of a written code which condemns an entire world to death
an Armageddon. The Greek word for written code is basically 'grammar', which is
the code of writing.
So let us examine a whole load of Gospel accounts just to see if these
predicted relationships hold true. Checks 1 and 2 are the most powerful since
they are simple noun counts and work for every bible accounts. In order to check
a bible account to see if it obeys the rules above we need to create a code
preserving translation from the original language. All of the accounts below
from the Gospels, have been amended directly from the Greek so as to make them
code preserving translations. We simply ensure that Greek countable nouns become
English countable nouns etc. The reader can check this using a Greek Interlinear
Bible and a Greek Lexicon - see recommended
books.
Rules for counting Greek Nouns
Orange text is for successive
designations
Blue text is for explanations
Black text for literal countable nouns
Green text for symbolic countable nouns
Brown text is for possessive nouns (which are not
countable)
Red is for word where Mounce and Barclay Neuman
Lexicons disagree!
Purple is for Hebrew words which are not proper
Greek words
Wine red is for literal explanations
Countable nouns
All nouns are countable except when they are genitives which are not being
used as nouns. There are only 4 types of non countable genitive nouns...
[a] 'Noun of noun' Genitive nouns used as possessive adjectives to a
noun or to a word used substantively (Son of Joseph)
[b] Genitive nouns used comparatively which are true possessives in Greek
do not count (Greater [meizon] [one] of Jacob)
[c] Genitive nouns used as characterizers for incomplete adjectives (full
[plhrhV] of holy spirit)
[d] Gentive nouns used as non possessive adjectives to a nouns or to a
word used substantively (roll
of myrrh)
11
Truly I am saying to you, in [ones] generated of women
not has been
produced greater [one] of John,
the Baptist [i.e. John the Baptist's greater one
has not been produced] (Matthew
11).
36
But I have the witness
greater [meizw]
of John
[than
the [one] of John, possessive] (John 5).
Something more [pleion]
than/of Jonah is here [counts,
not a possessive]
Greater [meizon] [one] of Jacob
exw, esw, exwqen, eswqen
These words are used be used substantively when static or when definite and
as improper prepositions when motive and indefinite...
40 Unreasonable [ones]! He that made the
outside [exwqen] made also the inside [eswqen]
[both used substantively], did he
not? (Luke 11)
They led him out, outside [exw]
of the city [outside
is used staticly]
They led him inside [exw]
of the courtyard [inside is used
motively]
Authority
[exousan]
of cities
Authority [exousan]
of to trample upon serpents [adjectival
phrase]
Authority [exousan]
of unclean spirits
Need of Witnesses
[not a witnesses' need, not possessive, but
adjectival, descriptive]
Being filled of holy spirit,
of rage, of
madness, of
fear, [Genitive
indirect object]
Incomplete noun characterized adjectives such as worthy of, full of, guilty
of etc. take non countable completing genitive nouns...
Produce fruits, [ones] worthy [AcioV]
of repentance
A worker is
worthy of his wages
He is guilty of death
He was full [plhrhV] of holy spirit
He is full [plhrhV] of leprosy
Son of
Abraham
[genetically]
Son of
Abraham
[by covenant]
Face
of
God
[Metaphorical, he has no human face, but does have a invisible countenance
detectable by angels]
Face of
Heaven/Sky
[Taking face to mean visible countenance. Animals have a visible countenance.]
Stumbling block is
metaphorical
Devil and Wilderness and Jews and Enemy, look like nouns but are adjectives.
MoicaliV is a noun meaning 'adulteress' (Mounce), but
it is mistranslated as adulterous, an adjective in in Mark 8:38, Matthew 12:39
and Matthew 16:4.
All other types of genitive nouns, such as partitive genitives, genitive
direct objects, genitives of prepositions, genitives of improper prepositions
etc. are countable. That is the whole of the law of noun counting. But Greek has
some irregularities which complicate the application of this law.
1. A noun that is in the genitive due to being preceded by a proper
preposition or an improper preposition (which is not used substantively) is
countable, that genitive is not possessive.
epi, peri, ek, dia, meta, pro, eiV, proV, apo, para, uper,
upo
2. Partitive Genitive Nouns count unless preceded by a noun. 'Some [tiV]
of the boats' and 'One [eiV] of the boats', 'None of
the men', 'The older [ones] of the people', have boats/people/men in the
genitive but count, effectively there is an implied 'ek'
meaning 'out of'. The largest [one] of the vegetables would also count
'vegetables' since the genitive is again partitive. 'Another of the disciples'
counts in Matthew 8:21.
The 'remainder of the chickens' or 'the multitude of the fish' have partitive
genitives preceded by partitive/quantitive nouns so 'remainder' and 'multitude'
count but 'chickens' and 'fish' do not.
The Greek word plhrwma meaning: that which fills
up, a filling, a plenitude, enough to fill, takes a genitive for whatever is
being filled, but this noun appears to count. So plhrwma
kofinwn is translated: ones-filling baskets, not: plenitudes of baskets
and plhrwma spuridwn is translated: ones-filling
provision baskets.
3. Genitive singular nouns following comparative adjectives are descriptive
and so do not count. He is stronger than an ox, in Greek is: He is stronger of
an ox. Which is really: He is the ox's stronger. We do say the Paul is Peter's
stronger in English. So the genitive is possessive, so it does not count. But
plural genitive nouns following comparative or superlative adjectives do count,
since these are partitive. The largest [one] of the vegetables, would count
'vegetables', since it is just another way of picking a vegetable. The same
would be true for 'the larger of the vegetables'. There is essentially an
implied 'ek'. But a debtor greater besides [para] all men (Luke 13:4) with
an explicit comparative preposition has the genitive 'men' not counting. There
is no implied 'ek', it is not partitive.
4. Herodian (Mark 3) is a noun (Mounce agrees). But Cananaean (Matthew
10:4 and Matthew 15:22) is an adjective like Judaean and Galilean, their
neighbours! (Mounce is silly here, he has KananaioV
as a noun and CananaioV as an adejctive!) Galilean
and Judean are adjectives. But we must be careful about ioudaioV
meaning jewish and ioudaia meaning Judea. The only
disagreement which we have with Mounce is kuklw which
he has as an adverb but we have as a dative noun which is plainly its
derivation.
5. plhqhoV does not count in the INC since it
means 'a multitude' or 'a large number' [of] which is not symbolically
interpretable - see Mark 3:8. Likewise the Greek word for number 'ariqmoV'
also has no INC count - see John 6:10. Also 'meroV'
meaning 'part' is not symbolically interpretable and so has no INC count unless
part of a possessive noun chain - see Luke 11:36, Matthew 1:22, Matthew 15:21,
Mark 8:10, Luke 15:12. In general quantifying nouns (integral multipliers or
fractional multipliers) have no INC not being symbolically interpretable. But
noun chains starting with: Multitude, Number or Part, have INCs if their
possessive nouns are not already known from separate appearances.
6a. Any word that takes two literal meanings in an account counts twice in
the INC. So far we have seen
this for: Day (12 hour or 24 hour), Time [cronoV](a
time of the day or a number of times), Heaven (the atmosphere or God's home).
6b. 'Son of the man' means
son of pre-fall Adam actually. Whereas 'sons of men' means sons of sons of
post-fall Adam. True but this distinction goes in the symbolic meaning. So if an
account has 'Man' and 'Son' then we do not need to symbolically interpret 'Son
of Man' so it would not add to the 1NC count.
7. hyato meaning to attach oneself [to] is from aptw
which is one of a number of Greek verbs which take a genitive direct
object (rather than the normal accusative one). Another such verb is kratew,
meaning to rule. Another is epilambanomai to lay hold
upon, to seize upon. Another is antilambano to come
to the aid of. aptw only takes the genitive in middle
voice which is the Greek voice between active and passive, it is a generalised
reflexive voice. geuomai meaning to taste takes an
accusative direct object when meant literally and a genitive direct object when
meant metaphorically - if only all Greek was this precise! There are others to
do with emotion and sharing apparently - katafronhshte.
Also mimneskw, (mnhsqhnai) meaning
to call to mind, takes a genitive direct object in some circumstances. Arcw
meaning to rule over, takes a genitive direct object in certain circumstances. Akouw
meaning to hear, takes a genitive direct object in certain circumstances
- John 7:40 Having heard of the words. But properly it takes an accusative
direct object for what is heard and the genitive for the source of what is heard
- Liddell and Scott. In Luke 15:25 we have: Heard [the sound] of a symphony.
Here the genitive is a possessive to an implied noun. So the genitive does not
count. The verb Tugcanw meaning to hit or to gain,
takes a genitive direct object when it means to gain - Luke 20:35. These
genitive direct objects are countable, since they are not being used
descriptively or possessively.
8. Metaphors and Metonyms...
Metonyms are a way of referring to a whole by one of its key features. Eg:
Michigan passed a law. Hollywood has gone for it. Wall Street is down.
Metaphors are words the symbolise things due to a conceptual similarity. Eg:
Lets cross that bridge when we come to it. The axe is lying at the foot of the
tree. Christmas has come early.
Definition: A Metonym is word for a facet or part of a whole which is used as
a label for the whole.
Eg: The suits have arrived. He has lost his crown. Put yourself in the other
persons shoes.
The point is that executives have suits, kingshave crowns and everyone has
shoes.
Defintion: A Metaphor is a word or phrase which describes something
isomorphic or similar to the subject which is used as a label for the subject.
Eg: He is a pig. Fetch my slippers petal. We will cross that bridge when we
come to it.
The point is that no man is a pig but many have the characteristics of a pig,
and no woman is a petal but some have the characteristics of a petal and we are
not going to cross any literal bridge, but we are in an analogous situation to
someone who is.
So the phrase: He is betrayed into the hands of sinners is a metonym for he
put into the control of sinners, because hands are the means of control for
human beings.
But the phrase: Put this into your hearts is a metaphor for accept this
emotionally because the heart is the engine of the body and emotion is the
engine of the mind. So the heart is a metaphor for emotion.
But 'Heart' is understood metaphorically in Greek to mean 'emotional centre'
in normal usage. Since it is used almost esclusively metaphorically in regular
Greek, it appears to have become a metonym organically. A noun does not count as
being symbolic when the bible uses it in the standard metaphorical way, it
counts as being literal. Nouns count symbolically if they take a non standard
symbolic meaning. In English we all know that a broken heart does not require a
visit to the cardiologist. But 'Stumbling-blocks' although often used
metaphorically in everyday Greek, counts metaphorically in scripture.
There is an old testament
scripture which uses the word heart both literally and metaphorically...
14 To this Joab said: Let me not hold
myself up this way before you! With that he took 3 shafts in his palm and
proceeded to drive them through the heart of Absalom while he was yet
alive in the heart of the big tree (2 Samuel 18).
Where heart means centre of something, then it is metaphorical, eg: the heart
of the earth.
But Gehenna, the valley of Hinnom, the urban incinerator outside Jerusalem,
is used as the name for the second death, this is a symbolic use that was not
known to the Greeks of the first century until it first appeared in the sermon
on the mount...
22 However, I say to you that everyone who continues
wrathful with his brother will be accountable to the court of justice; but
whoever addresses his brother with an unspeakable word of contempt will be
accountable to the Supreme Court; whereas whoever says, You despicable fool!
will be liable to the fiery Gehenna (Matthew 5).
So Gehenna counts symbolically since its symbolic use comes from the holy
spirit not from everyday language. But the 'hands of the enemies' a metonym
and the 'hearts of men', a metaphor which has become a metonym, counts
literally. The arm of God or the hand of the Lord, or the bosom of the father
are metonyms applied to non humans who do not have physical arms or hands or
bosoms, so a symbolic step is taken, so this is metaphor, a metaphorical metonym
in fact. The metonym gives them a metaphorical arm, hand or bosom. So these are
symbolic and do not count literally. The 'hand of his enemies' is a metonym
since the enemies do have one hand between them.
Way of Peace
is a metaphor.
Stumbling block is a metaphor.
Heart the motor for the physical body is a metaphor
for the motor of our spirit, which is our emotions. But it is used so commonly
like this that it is taken literally.
House of Jacob
is a metonym for the ancestral house of Jacob
The word
remained in the disciples
is a metonym, since the word remains in the memory of the disciples
The disciples
remained in the word
means they kept his literal word.
9. carin, the accusative of the noun cariV,
meaning grace, beauty, favour, is used as an improper preposition meaning by
virtue of, or to the account of, or on account of. So its object in the genitive
is countable, but carin is not.
10. peran an adverb meaning 'the other side' is
not the accusative of peraV a noun meaning 'the end,
the limit, the boundary' (its accusative is peraV).
It is used as an improper preposition with the genitive meaning 'across'' and it
is also used substantively meaning 'the other side' - Matthew 8:18, Matthew
14:22. When it is used substantively it is preceded by 'the'. When used as an
improper preposition it is not preceded by 'the'. So genitive nouns following a
substantive peran are not countable, but genitive
nouns following a non substantive peran are
countable. In general 'improper prepositions' which are used substantively,
take genitive nouns which do not count. Whereas improper prepositions which
cannot be used substantively or are not being used substantively are taken as
prepositions and so the subsequent nouns that they take in the genitive do
count.
Eg: peran tou Iordanou, 'across the Jordan',
'Jordan' counts, but to peran thV qalasshV, 'the
other side of the Sea', 'Sea' does not count.
Eg: pantipera an adverb meaning 'opposite' is
exclusively used as a non substantive improper preposition with the genitive in
the bible so genitives nouns following it are countable.
10a. exw an adverb meaning 'outside' or 'outer' is
used as an adverb (to be outside of something) with a possessive genitive noun
or as a substantive (the outside of something). Likewise exwqen
an adverb meaning the same thing (but always used substantively, the outside of
something). Eg: [the] outside of the man - Mark 7:15, [the] outside of the cup -
Luke 11:39. To the outside of the city (Mark 8:23). But in Luke 13:33
'destroyed outside [exw] Jerusalem', 'Jerusalem' does
count. So exw works like peran.
When it is used substantively then the genitive noun does not count. When it is
used as an adverb then the genitive noun does count.
11. MesoV, meaning 'midst', 'middle', is an
adjective even though Arch, meaning 'start',
'beginning' is a noun and TeloV, meaning 'end' is a
noun. The phrases 'in the midst of' or 'up the midst of' which basically mean
'among' are improper prepositional uses so they take a countable genitive noun.
But come to the midst of the house uses 'midst' substantively so 'house' is
possessive so would not count.
12. Flying Genitives such as...
1 Now in
the 15th year
of the reign
of Tiberius Caesar,
[epi 'upon' or at the time] of Pontius,
Pilate being-governor of Judea
(Luke 3).
19
Now [at the time - epi]
of Herod
having deceased, look! The angel
of [the] Lord
appeared in
a dream to
Joseph in
Egypt (Matthew
2).
1
Now [at the time - epi]
of Jesus
having been born in Bethlehem
of Judea
in [the] days
of Herod,
the king,
look! Magi
from eastern-parts
[anatolh]
came into Jerusalem
(Matthew 2).
5 But [on account - epi]
of the delaying [genitive] bridegroom
[genitive, due to implied epi
used causally], they all nodded and
went to sleep (Matthew 25).
73 the oath
that he swore to Abraham,
the father of
us,
74 [the oath] [on account - epi]
of the [following] to grant us, having been
rescued from the hand
of hostile [ones], to be rendering- sacred- service to him fearlessly
75 in loyalty
and righteous-acts
before him all our days.
76 But you, young-child,
you will be called a prophet
of the Most High [one]. For you will go in advance in-sight-of/ before [the] Lord
to make ready his ways/roads,
77 [on account - epi]
of the [following] to grant knowledge
of salvation
to his people
in forgiveness
of their sins,
78 Due to [the] intestines
of mercy
of our God.
In which a daybreak
[literally: an East]
will look upon us out of [the] height,
79 to shine upon the [ones] sitting in darkness
and the shadow
of death,
[on account - epi] of
the [following] to direct our feet
in the way/road
of peace.
80 And the young-
child went on growing and
getting-strong in spirit,
and he continued in the desolate [places] until the day
of showing himself to Israel
(Luke 1).
In nearly all cases, the flying genitive counts as if the absent implied
preposition epi is actually there, so it is
countable. If the flying genitive is a stand alone genitive definite article,
then it normally means 'on account of the following'. But not in Matthew
Chapter 1 wouldn't you know? Here the sense dictates the absent implied noun -
Descendant...
17
All the descendants,
then, from Abraham
until David,
were 14 descendants,
and from David
until [the descendant, Josiah] of the deportation
of Babylon
14 descendants,
and from [apo]
[the descendant, Jeconiah] of the deportation
of Babylon
until the Christ
14 descendants
(Matthew 1).
Sometimes the sense of the account before hand fills in the gap, for
example...
22 Also,
when the days of the purification
of them according to the law of Moses
were fulfilled, they brought him up into Jerusalem
to present [him] to the Lord,
23 just as [kaqwV] it is written in [the]
law of [the] Lord:
Every male [andreV]
opening a womb will
be called holy to the Lord,
24 and [they brought him up] [on account - epi]
of the [following] to offer sacrifice
according to the [thing] having been said in the law
of [the] Lord: A pair
of turtledoves or 2 chicks
of pigeons [An
adverbial phrase] (Luke 2).
These stand alone genitives are not a joker situation where you can count
them however you like. The sense of the account tells you whether there is a
missing epi or a missing dia
or a missing or a missing ek or a missing noun or
earlier phrase. For example Luke 3 misses the noun 'Son' 75 times!
Occasionally the word ek meaning 'out of' is
omitted...
37
Answering he said to them: You give to them to eat. At this they said to him:
Having gone off shall we buy loaves
[implied ek] [out] of
200 denarii and
give to them to eat?
13. Some Greek and more Hebrew words have two meanings in the natural for
example in Greek, the word mastiV means scourge. This
can mean a whip or a disease, in the sense of the scourge of a disease. So in
the normal everyday language this word has a literal and a symbolic meaning. So
even if the word appeared a prime number of times in an account it could still
take its two different standard linguistic meanings.
14. A 2 threaded literal account can have a 3 threaded parable in it. If it
says the Kingdom of God is like a man a householder, then the entire like
statement has the number of threads of the parable.
15 The word palin meaning 'again' or 'further' or
'furthermore', if referring a second parable to a first parable, links the two
parables together into one symbolic account. And likewise it links two
successive literal accounts if the thing the happens again in the second account
happened in the first account. The word euquV meaning
'immediately' appears also to link two successive literal accounts. The word exhV
meaning of subsequence, or next, appears also to link two successive literal
accounts. Jesus dismissing the crowds ends an account unless it is joined to the
next account by 'immediately' or 'again' or 'next'.
16. The phrase: in that hour, or in that season, or in that day, is a
temporal sequence disconnect (however minor), it is a new timeframe, it defines
a new parallel temporal thread, which is a new account, unless the context
dictates otherwise. Likewise 'then' tote can
also be a temporal disconnect.
17. OyiaV the genitive of OyioV,
the adjective meaning late, is often used substantively as the noun 'evening'.
But since the word is an adjective is does not count, even when used
substantively. Adjectives such as ponhroV have
related nouns such as ponhria, but OyioV
has no such related noun. Oye is an adverb meaning
late.
18. Kuklw, meaning in a circle, or round about,
the dative of KuloV, meaning circle, is used as an
adverb. But since it is in fact a noun in the dative it counts as a noun in the
dative. Many nouns in the dative act as adverbs. He wrote in-haste for
example is he wrote hastily. This is the only Greek word where we disagree with
Mounce. We say it is a dative noun, he says it is an adverb.
19. Anw, meaning 'top' or 'upper part', is listed
in the lexicons as an adverb, we now believe that to be correct. See John 2, the
wine of Cana account.
[[We used to believe, incorrectly, that it counted as a noun when it acts as
a noun, although often used as an adverb - can't find its derivation in the
lexicons. It might have been created from ana the
preposition meaning 'up' and w the old doric for ou
the genitive of oV meaning 'which'. The combination
would then be 'up of which', or 'upwards of which' or 'the top' or more
precisely the 'upper part'. But epanw, meaning 'on
top of' or upon or above, is an adverb taking the genitive, which is often used
as an improper preposition and counts as such. We see this noun behaviour of anw
in John 2:7 (Water into wine).Likewise its opposite, Katw
, from Kata and w also
counts as a noun meaning 'bottom' or 'lower part' - John 8:6. So we are saying
that properly anw is a noun meaning 'top' but it is
often used as an adverb meaning above or up or upwards. Anw
and Katw are of course indeclinable, but so are
Israel, David etc.
Anw becomes the adverb epanw (above,
on top of) when prefixed with epi. This acts as an
improper preposition, like 'upon' taking a genitive countable noun. See
Luke 4:39 (Peter's mother-in law), Luke 10:19 (the 72 return) and Matthew 21:7
(Palm Sunday).
In fact anw must
be a noun because epanw
exists and prepositions do not
prefix prepositions. They prefix nouns and verbs. Likewise upokatw
is used by Mark 12:36 and
Matthew 22:44 and Plato (Liddell & Scott) meaning under the bottom of or
beneath or below, so katw
must be a noun.]]
20 In general, the count goes with the 'true grammatical parsing' of a word,
not the particular usage, for this is a grammatoV, a
grammatical code.
21. Aramic words Talitha Cumi, etc, are not Greek words and so in particular
are not Greek nouns and so do not count. However Boanerges although a
Hellenization of the Hebrew is a proper noun, a name, and so is a noun in Greek
and so does count?
Messiah
and Rabbi
and Rabboni
and Beelzebub
and Talitha
and BarJonah and
BarTimaeus and
BarSabbas and Iscarioth
(Iskariwq of Issachar, but not Iscariot - iskariwthV)
do not count since they are Aramaic/Hebrew titles and are not proper nouns, they
are not Hebrew names of people or places. 'Bar' is the Aramaic for 'Son',
whereas 'Ben' is the Hebrew. So BarJonah is an Aramaic-Hebrew cross. BarTimaeus
is an Aramaic Latin cross. Beelzebub is a title given to the demon named Satan.
But Cephas and John and Jesus and Nathaniel and Daniel do count being proper
nouns, names of people or places. Bethzatha
and Gabbatha
and Manna
are titles of a pool and a pavement and a food. They are titles of things, not
places so they do not count. Golgotha
is a place name, like Bethlehem.
Cephas is a
regular Hebrew name.
24 The Phrase: 'Let him having ears listen', is used to start or to end
parables. Two ears refer to the literal story and the event symbolic meaning.
You need to get them both to fully understand what Jesus is really saying. Jesus
never said: Let him who has an ear listen. Here are all the 7 incidences.
15 Let him that has ears listen (Matthew 11).
9 Let him that has ears listen (Matthew 13).
43 At that time the righteous ones will shine as brightly
as the sun in the kingdom of their Father. Let him that has ears listen (Matthew
13).
9 So he added the word: Let him that has ears to listen
listen (Mark 4)
23 Whoever has ears to listen, let him listen (Mark 4).
8 Some other fell upon the good soil, and, after
sprouting, it produced fruit a hundredfold. As he told these things, he
proceeded to call out: Let him that has ears to listen, listen (Luke 8).
35 It is suitable neither for soil nor for manure. People
throw it outside. Let him that has ears to listen, listen (Luke 14).
25. Comparative speech, figurative speech, figures of speech, can look very
literal and be literally applied. For example...
Physician Cure yourself
A worker is worthy of his food
- And so therefore are you
A disciple is not greater than his teacher
and a slave is not greater than his
master
Every kingdom or house
or city divided against itself will
fall - So if Satan is so divided,
then how will his Kingdom stand?
Jesus was a kind of physician. The disciples were spiritual workers. The
disciples called Jesus Teacher and Lord, being his slaves. Satan has a kingdom.
The point being made here is that applying an analogy literally does not stop it
being an analogy. An analogy about doctors, is still an analogy even when being
related to a group of doctors! As a more familiar example consider the phrase:
The Cobbler's son is always the worst shod.
This means that the children of someone in any trade are generally lacking in
the fruits of that trade. But if one were to recite that above illustration at a
shoe manufacturers convention, it would still nonetheless be an illustration, a
parable.
Whenever Jesus says: which one of you or who of you, he is talking
figuratively.
11 Indeed,
which father is there
among you who, if the son
asks for a fish, will
perhaps give to him a serpent
instead of a fish?
12 Or if he also asks for an egg,
will hand him a scorpion?
An illustration is an implied comparison an
implicit comparison, the nouns will be green. A literal comparison or an
explicit comparison has the nouns black it is literal comparative speech. So the
statement...
6
But whoever stumbles one of these little [ones] the [ones] putting-faith in me,
it is better for him that a millstone
of-an-ass should be
hung around his neck
and he should be
sunk in the watery-deep
of the sea
(Matthew 18).
Is a literal comparison
which confusingly uses an illustration for a means of physical death. It is
basically the statement, it is better for you to die physically than to stumble
a spiritually naive person and therefore die spiritually. But a graphic example
of a method of physical death is employed. But this is not a parable, there is
no implicit comparison to be made.
26. If we have two Greek words which have precisely the same literal meaning
such as [danion] Debt/Loan and [ofeilhn]
Loan/Debt (Matthew 18:28-32) or [usterhsiV]
Need/Want and [usterhma]
Want/Need (Mark 12:35-44), then they take the same symbolic meaning and
so only one counts for the INC. This is because symbolically interpreting the
one gives the symbolic interpretation of the other. Since symbolism is a
bijective map. And the noun count adds their recitals. But if you have
Father and Mother, then you do not have 'Parents' and if you have night and
day12hour you do not have day24hour. The symbolism may not preserve the literal
relationship.
The Sign of Jonah,
the Prophet has two INC entries, Sign of Jonah and Sign of Prophet.
This is because both have to be interpreted, since we have a possessive double
designation.
But Joanna, the woman
of Chuza, foreman of
Herod does not produce a double INC count for Woman of
Chuza and Woman of Foreman of Herod unless the account has 3 word symbolic
threads.
And book of
the genealogy
of Jesus,
Christ, son of David, son of Abraham, does not produce a double INC
possibly because the possessive double designation does not immediately follow
the first noun.
'The home of Simon
and Andrew' counts as
'The home of Simon
and the home of Andrew'
in the CNC and the INC. Since we must interpret both noun chains to get its
meaning.
'Righteous and holy
male', a double description, counts as 'righteous
male and holy
male' (Mark 6:20). Because that is what it is
saying. It is in the same form as home of Simon
and Andrew. It is a double
description which forces each word thread to have two fulfilments, one for righteous
male and one for holy
male, one for home of Simon
and one for home of Andrew.
Double descriptions forms with pronouns in cannot be parsed and so
are not doube descrptions and so do not double the noun counts. For example...
The village
of Mary
and of Martha,
her sister [this
is not a double description due to the pronoun which prevents parsing for the
two fulfilments].
(John 11:1).
If we have Son, Prophet, then we have Son of Prophet
Symbolic meaning (a) of Symbolic meaning (b) = Symbolic meaning (a of b)
But if we have Son, Prophet, Son of God we do not have Prophet of God, since
one cannot work out the symbolic meaning of (b) from the symbolic meaning of (a
of b).
In other words we can work out the symbolic meaning of (a of b) from the
symbolic meanings of a and b, but not conversely.
27. Two parables in the same literal account form one symbolic sub-account if
they both symbolise the same thing in two different ways eg: The leaven hidden
in the flour and the mustard seen in the garden (Luke 13) eg: The two children
sent to the vineyard and the vineyard cultivators (Matthew 21).
28. 'King Nebuchadnezzar' uses 'King' as an adjective? and 'Nebuchadnezzar
the king' uses it as a noun. 'Jesus Christ' is two nouns, since Christ is a noun
in Greek - John 1, Matthew 16.
When do accounts start and when do they end?
1. A new time frame or a new location or a new focus will start a new account
unless it is overriden by the sense of the account.
2. Accounts contain whole sentences only. One cannot split a sentence between
two accounts.
3. The word 'immediately' [euquV] does not connect
or disconnect two successive accounts. It is just a fast time frame. The word
'again' [palin] can join two accounts together since
it may well maintain the sense of the previous account.
Further observations on the symbolic code
'Jesus' can mean the remnant even in the literal designation because Jesus
was the name for Michael's fleshly body and the remnant are Michael's fleshly
body.
'Jerusalem' means God's earthly organisation first, (from the days of
Melchizedek, the king of Salem) and means the town in Judea second.
'Woman' can mean a covenant in the literal meaning, presumably since Paul
defined it as such in Galatians, even though he explains that woman stands for
covenant in a symbolic drama in Genesis. Since in the account of Mary weeping on
Jesus' feet Woman appears 5 times but 'hairs' appears twice. So she has symbolic
hairs, which must go on a symbolic woman, which Paul has said is a
covenant.???!?!
A noun recited only once can represent any person or anything which takes
that noun as a literal designation. So Zerah in Matthew 1, recited once, is the
brother of Perez and the angel of the same name. And Jesus in Matthew 4, is
Jesus and is the remnant who are Jesus' body which really is the thing that had
Jesus' name in the first place. And Jerusalem was the name given to
Melchizedek's organisation, for he was King of Salem. So Jerusalem, the city, is
actually a secondary thing to be given that name. Jerusalem is primarily the
name for the earthly organisation of God.
Two parallel accounts one with 2 threads and one with 3 threads, combine to
make a 3 threaded concatenated account (wherein the third thread only exists for
the 3 threaded subaccount of the concatenated account). So the CNC and the INC
are divisible by 3.
Each Parallel account must not count properly (as a stand alone account) in
either the CNC or the INC or both. If they count properly then they are not
parallel unless CNC = INC in which case they may or may not be parallel. Two
literal accounts are parallel if they describe the same event in the same place
at the same time. In terms of speech this means the precise same set of words
from the same person to the same audience in the same place at the same time. So
an account that sets a scene but describes no events and has no speech such as
Mark 1:13...
13
And he was in the desolate [place] 40 days,
being tempted by [upo]
Satan,
and he was with [meta]
the wild-beasts,
and the angels
were ministering to him (Mark 1).
cannot be parallel to anything.
The bible has literal accounts and subaccounts which can have symbolic words
or parables within them. It also has Symbolic accounts and subaccounts which can
have literal words within them. A literal account has a number of threads
determined from the literal nouns and a symbolic account has a number of threads
determined from the symbolic nouns. But the symbolic nouns in a literal account
do not obey any CNC or INC rules, unless the literal account has a symbolic
subaccount. Likewise literal nouns in a symbolic account do not obey any CNC or
INC rules unless the symbolic account has a literal subaccount.
Parables are parallel if they describe the same story, they do not need to be
said at the same time or in the same place. They can be extracted from their
literal contexts and concatenated and treated as one symbolic account.
For the INC, if A and B are two possessive noun chains in the account, then
the noun chain 'A of B' does not count towards the INC, since it has
already been interpreted once you have interpreted A and B. However if 'Kingdom
of God' and 'God' and 'Heaven' are in the account, then 'Kingdom of Heaven' does
count towards the INC, because 'kingdom' does not appear in the account. We
cannot infer that we have interpreted 'Kingdom', from having interpreted Kingdom
of God and God. The noun chain 'Glory of him and of his Father' collapses
to 'Glory of Father' as regards the INC, the pronoun is ignored. The noun chains
'House of Simon' and 'House of Simon and of Andrew' are distinct for the INC.
A 2 threaded parable in a 3 threaded literal account behaves like a double
designation in a 3 word threaded account. It goes 1-2-1. Likewise a 1 threaded
parable in a 3 threaded account goes 1-1-1. Unless the parable can be dropped
from the threads that it does not have??
LCNC is the Literal Countable Noun Count of the story. All the literal nouns
acting as nouns
LINC is the Literal Interpretable Noun Chain count (Unique noun count). All the
different literal nouns and possessive noun chains that need to be symbolically
interpreted.
LT is the Number of Threads in a literal story. The number of meanings to a
literal story.
SCNC is the Symbolic Countable Noun Count of the story. All the symbolic
nouns acting as nouns.
SINC is the Symbolic Interpretable Noun Chain count. All the different symbolic
nouns and possessive noun chains that need to be symbolically interpreted.
ST is the Number of Threads in a symbolic story, such as a parable. The number
of meanings to a symbolic story.
This table is out of date...
|
Account
|
Matthew
|
Mark
|
Luke
|
John
|
LCNC
|
LINC
|
LT
|
SCNC
|
SINC
|
ST |
|
LITERAL ACCOUNTS
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Paternal Genealogy Jesus
|
1:1-17
|
|
|
|
99
|
51
|
3
|
|
|
|
|
Gabriel visits Joseph
|
1:18-25
|
|
|
|
33
|
21
|
3
|
|
|
|
|
Luke is chronological
|
|
|
1:1-4
|
|
7
|
7
|
1
|
|
|
|
|
Gabriel visits Zechariah
|
|
|
1:5-22
|
|
68
|
40
|
4
|
|
|
|
|
Zecharaiah goes home
|
|
|
1:23
|
|
2
|
2
|
1
|
|
|
|
|
Elizabeth bearing John
|
|
|
1:24-80
|
|
162
|
87
|
3
|
|
|
|
|
Egypt, Magi, Herod
|
2:1-23
|
|
|
|
90
|
51
|
3
|
5
|
5
|
1
|
|
Shepherds and Bethlehem
|
|
|
2:1-20
|
|
57
|
39
|
3
|
1
|
1
|
0
|
|
Jesus Circumcised
|
|
|
2:21
|
|
5
|
5
|
1
|
|
|
|
|
Simeon receives Jesus
|
|
|
2:22-35
|
|
45
|
39
|
3
|
|
|
|
|
Anna thanks God
|
|
|
2:36-38
|
|
16
|
16
|
4
|
|
|
|
|
Jesus 12 in temple
|
|
|
2:39-52
|
|
39
|
30
|
3
|
|
|
|
|
John’s baptism
|
3:1-12
|
1:1-8
|
3:1-18
|
|
84
|
54
|
3
|
54
|
28
|
2
|
|
Jesus’ baptism by John
|
3:13-17
|
1:9-13
|
3:21-22
|
|
39
|
21
|
3
|
2
|
1
|
0
|
|
Maternal Genealogy Jesus
|
|
|
3:23-38
|
|
2
|
2
|
1
|
|
|
|
|
Satan tests Jesus (1)
|
4:1-11
|
|
|
|
32
|
22
|
2
|
1
|
1
|
0
|
|
Satan tests Jesus (2)
|
|
|
4:1-13
|
|
34
|
22
|
2
|
|
|
|
|
Fishers mending nets
|
4:12-23
|
1:14-21
|
|
|
69
|
39
|
3
|
4
|
3
|
0
|
|
Fulfils Isaiah escapes hill
|
|
|
4:14-30
|
|
51
|
42
|
3
|
|
|
|
|
News spreads, crowds cured
|
4:24-25
|
|
|
|
9
|
9
|
1
|
|
|
|
|
Expels ‘Nazarene’ Demon
|
|
1:22-28
|
4:31-37
|
|
36
|
18
|
3
|
|
|
|
|
I want to, leper (1)
|
8:1-4
|
|
|
|
10
|
10
|
1
|
|
|
|
|
Centurion’s slave + Nain
|
8:5-13
|
|
7:1-17
|
|
78
|
45
|
3
|
|
|
|
|
Peter’s mother-in-law
|
8:14-17
|
1:29-39
|
4:38-41
|
|
42
|
27
|
3
|
|
|
|
|
I want to, leper (2)
|
|
1:40-45
|
|
|
9
|
9
|
1
|
|
|
|
|
Crowds find Jesus praying
|
|
|
4:42-44
|
|
6
|
6
|
1
|
|
|
|
|
Boats almost sink with fish
|
|
|
5:1-11
|
|
39
|
24
|
3
|
|
|
|
|
I want to, leper (3)
|
|
|
5:12-16
|
|
13
|
13
|
1
|
|
|
|
|
Jesus calm’s storm at sea
|
8:18-27
|
|
|
|
24
|
16
|
2
|
4
|
4
|
1
|
|
2 gadarenes then swine
|
8:28-9:1
|
|
|
|
17
|
15
|
1
|
|
|
|
|
Get up, pick up bed, walk
|
9:2-8
|
2:1-12
|
5:17-26
|
|
86
|
34
|
2
|
|
|
|
|
Calls Matthew and dines
|
9:9-17
|
2:13-22
|
5:27-39
|
|
54
|
21
|
3
|
54
|
13
|
1
|
|
Ruler’s daughter raised
|
9:18-26
|
|
|
|
24
|
18
|
3
|
|
|
|
|
Pluck grain on sabbath
|
12:1-8
|
2:23-28
|
6:1-5
|
|
48
|
20
|
2
|
|
|
|
|
2 blind 1 possessed in house
|
9:27-34
|
|
|
|
16
|
12
|
2
|
|
|
|
|
Sheep without a shepherd
|
9:35-38
|
|
|
|
11
|
11
|
1
|
5
|
4
|
1
|
|
Withered hand Sabbath (1)
|
|
3:1-6
|
6:6-11
|
|
30
|
12
|
3
|
|
|
|
|
Have boat available
|
|
3:7-12
|
|
|
18
|
15
|
3
|
|
|
|
|
Call 12 apostles mountain
|
10:1-4
|
3:13-19
|
6:12-16
|
|
66
|
30
|
3
|
|
|
|
|
Does Satan expel Satan (1)
|
|
3:19-35
|
|
|
24
|
21
|
3
|
|
|
|
|
Instructs 12 apostles (1)
|
10:5-11:1
|
|
|
|
90
|
60
|
3
|
22
|
17
|
1
|
|
John sends disciples
|
11:2-19
|
|
7:18-35
|
|
78
|
45
|
3
|
6
|
3
|
3
|
|
Mary weeps feet hair
|
|
|
7:36-50
|
|
40
|
20
|
2
|
|
|
|
|
Sower (1)
|
|
|
8:1-21
|
|
42
|
30
|
3
|
20
|
14
|
2
|
|
Sower (2)
|
|
4:1-34
|
|
|
38
|
18
|
3
|
42
|
27
|
3
|
|
Stormy lake, Legion
|
|
4:35-5:21
|
8:22-39
|
|
132
|
54
|
3
|
|
|
|
|
Jairus’s daughter resurrected
|
|
5:22-43
|
8:40-56
|
|
90
|
45
|
3
|
|
|
|
|
Hid wise given babe (1)
|
11:25-30
|
|
|
|
15
|
9
|
3
|
|
|
|
|
Sheep pit sabbath
|
12:9-13
|
|
|
|
10
|
4
|
2
|
4
|
4
|
1
|
|
Pharisees counsel to kill
|
12:9-14
|
|
|
|
2
|
2
|
1
|
|
|
|
|
Does Satan expel Satan (2)
|
12:15-50
|
|
|
|
84
|
54
|
3
|
30
|
18
|
3
|
|
Sower (3)
|
13:1-35
|
|
|
|
51
|
27
|
3
|
51
|
30
|
3
|
|
Weeds explain, dragnet etc
|
13:36-53
|
|
|
|
30
|
20
|
2
|
30
|
22
|
2
|
|
No prophet honoured home
|
13:54-58
|
6:1-6
|
|
|
39
|
24
|
3
|
|
|
|
|
Instructs 12 apostles (2)
|
|
|
9:1-6 |
|
17
|
17
|
1
|
|
|
|
|
Authorises 12 apostles (3)
|
|
6:7-13
|
|
|
16
|
16
|
1
|
|
|
|
|
Herodias daughter dances
|
14:1-12
|
6:14-29
|
9:7-9 3:19-20
|
|
99
|
36
|
3
|
|
|
|
|
Feed 5,000 (1)
|
|
|
9:10-17
|
6:1-15 |
69
|
42
|
3
|
1
|
1
|
0
|
|
Feed 5,000 (2)
|
14:13-22
|
6:30-45
|
|
|
70
|
26
|
2
|
|
|
|
|
Walking on water
|
14:23-33
|
6:46-52
|
|
|
42
|
20
|
2
|
|
|
|
|
Gennesaret cure (1)
|
14:34-36
|
|
|
|
4
|
4
|
1
|
|
|
|
|
Gennesaret cure (2)
|
|
6:53-56
|
|
|
10
|
10
|
1
|
|
|
|
|
Eat with dirty hands
|
15:1-11
|
7:1-15
|
|
|
82
|
32
|
2
|
|
|
|
|
Words defile not food
|
15:12-20
|
7:16-23
|
|
|
51
|
30
|
3
|
|
|
|
|
Crumbs under table
|
15:21-28
|
7:24-30
|
|
|
48
|
27
|
3
|
|
|
|
|
Deaf and Dumb Decapolis
|
|
7:31-37
|
|
|
12
|
12
|
1
|
|
|
|
|
Feed 4,000
|
15:29-38 16:5-12
|
8:1-21
|
|
|
84
|
36
|
2
|
|
|
|
|
Blind cured - men like trees
|
|
8:22-26 |
|
|
9
|
7
|
1
|
|
|
|
|
Pharisees: Give us a sign
|
15:39-16:4
|
|
|
|
11
|
9
|
1
|
|
|
|
|
Peter: You are the Christ
|
16:13-23
|
8:27-8:33
|
9:18-22
|
|
78
|
36
|
3
|
|
|
|
|
Gain world lose soul? (1)
|
16:24-28
|
|
|
|
16
|
12
|
2
|
|
|
|
|
Gain world lose soul? (2)
|
|
8:34-9:1
|
9:23-27
|
|
28
|
16
|
2
|
|
|
|
|
Transfigured 2Peter1:16-18
|
17:1-13
|
9:2-13
|
9:28-36
|
|
114
|
42
|
3
|
|
|
|
|
Couldn’t expel demon
|
17:14-20
|
9:14-27
|
9:37-43
|
|
66
|
30
|
3
|
|
|
|
|
Only by prayer
|
|
9:28-29
|
|
|
4
|
4
|
1
|
|
|
|
|
Son of man hands of sinners
|
|
9:30-33
|
|
|
7
|
7
|
1
|
|
|
|
|
Son of man to be betrayed
|
17:21-23
|
|
|
|
5
|
5
|
1
|
|
|
|
|
2 Drachmas Tax
|
17:24-27
|
|
|
|
12
|
10
|
2
|
7
|
7
|
1
|
|
Little child is greatest etc
|
18:1-35
|
9:33-59
|
|
|
78
|
42
|
3
|
48
|
21
|
3
|
|
Little child is greatest (2)
|
|
|
9:44-50
|
|
16
|
14
|
2
|
|
|
|
|
Samaritan village rejects
|
|
|
9:51-56
|
|
15
|
12
|
3
|
|
|
|
|
Let the dead bury the dead
|
|
|
9:57-62
|
|
10
|
8
|
2
|
|
|
|
|
Woe Chorazin & Bethsaida
|
11:20-24
|
|
10:1-16
|
|
58
|
30
|
2
|
10
|
7
|
1
|
|
Satan falling like lightening
|
|
|
10:17-20
|
|
13
|
13
|
1
|
|
|
|
|
Hid wise given babe (2)
|
|
|
10:21-22
|
|
12
|
6
|
3
|
|
|
|
|
Prophets & kings didn’t see
|
|
|
10:23-24
|
|
4
|
4
|
1
|
|
|
|
|
Good Samaritan
|
|
|
10:25-37
|
|
13
|
11
|
1
|
|
|
|
|
Mary and Martha
|
|
|
10:38-42
|
|
18
|
12
|
3
|
|
|
|
|
Lord's Prayer
|
|
|
11:1-13
|
|
6
|
6
|
3
|
26
|
24
|
2
|
|
Satan Divided (3)
|
|
|
11:14-36
|
|
48
|
30
|
3
|
28
|
20
|
2
|
|
Pharisees kill build graves
|
|
|
11:37-54
|
|
36
|
30
|
3
|
|
|
|
|
Pilate mixing Galilean blood
|
|
|
13:1-9
|
|
5
|
5
|
1
|
|
|
|
|
Woman bent down 18 years
|
|
|
13:10-21
|
|
26
|
18
|
2
|
|
|
|
|
Narrow door and Herod the fox
|
|
|
13:22-35
|
|
30
|
24
|
3
|
|
|
|
| Certificate of Divorce |
19:1-9 |
10:1-9 |
|
|
46 |
22 |
2 |
|
|
|
| Kingdom Eunuchs |
19:10-12 |
|
|
|
10 |
8 |
1 |
|
|
|
| Suffer Children, Teacher Good |
19:13-22 |
10:10-16 |
18:15-17 |
|
38 |
20 |
2 |
|
|
|
| Camel Needle Good Teacher |
19:23-20:16 |
10:17-31 |
18:18:30 |
|
102 |
39 |
3 |
33 |
18 |
3 |
| Son of man Abused Killed Rise |
20:17-19 |
10:32-34 |
18:31-34 |
|
27 |
12 |
3 |
|
|
|
| James John Cup Baptism |
20:20-28 |
10:35-45 |
|
|
33 |
18 |
3 |
|
|
|
| 2 Blind men road out of Jericho |
20:29-34 |
|
|
|
14 |
8 |
2 |
|
|
|
| Bartimaeus in out Jericho |
|
10:46-52 |
18:35-43 |
|
36 |
16 |
4 |
|
|
|
| Zacchaeus climbs tree gives ½ |
|
|
19:1-28 |
|
26 |
18 |
2 |
|
|
|
| Palm Sunday x4 |
21:1-17 |
11:1-11 |
19:29-48 |
12:12-19 |
152 |
68 |
4 |
11 |
9 |
1 |
| Figless Fig Tree Withered |
21:18-19 |
11:12-14 |
|
|
15 |
9 |
3 |
|
|
|
| Jesus turns tables Monday |
|
11:15-18 |
|
|
14 |
12 |
2 |
|
|
|
| Mountain sea forgive in heart |
21:20-22 |
11:19-27 |
|
|
18 |
14 |
2 |
|
|
|
| Parables in temple |
21:23-22:14 |
11:27-12:12 |
20:1-18 |
|
81 |
24 |
3 |
|
|
|
| Caesar's and God's things |
22:15-22 |
12:13-17 |
20:19-26 |
|
52 |
28 |
2 |
|
|
|
| Sadducees 7 brothers |
22:23-33 |
12:18-34 |
20:27-44 |
|
120 |
36 |
3 |
|
|
|
| Pharisees Q&A |
22:34-46 |
|
|
|
28 |
18 |
2 |
|
|
|
| Showy Scribes Widow's might |
|
12:35-44 |
20:45-21:4 |
|
57 |
30 |
3 |
|
|
|
| Water into Wine |
|
|
|
2:1-11 |
36 |
21 |
3 |
|
|
|
| Walks on water 25-30 stadia |
|
|
|
6:16-21 |
14 |
8 |
2 |
1 |
1 |
0 |
| A Christ from Galilee? |
|
|
|
7:37-8:1 |
39 |
24 |
3 |
|
|
|
| He without sin cast first stone |
|
|
|
8:2-11 |
22 |
16 |
2 |
|
|
|
| |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
SYMBOLIC ACCOUNTS
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Oh Bethlehem
|
2:6
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
5
|
5
|
1
|
|
John’s Trees Wheat and Fire
|
3:8-12
|
|
3:8-9
3:16-17
|
|
|
|
|
34
|
16
|
2
|
|
Foxes Dens Birds Roosts
|
8:20
|
|
9:58
|
|
|
|
|
8
|
4
|
2
|
|
Bridegroom, Patch, Wine
|
9:15-17
|
2:19-22
|
5:34-39
|
|
|
|
|
51
|
12
|
3
|
|
Harvest big workers few
|
9:37
|
|
10:2
|
|
|
|
|
4
|
2
|
2
|
|
Disciple Teacher Slave Lord
|
10:24-25
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
8
|
4
|
2
|
|
Sparrow Assarion
|
10:29
|
|
12:6
|
|
|
|
|
6
|
4
|
2
|
|
Little Children Marketplace
|
11:16-17
|
|
7:32
|
|
|
|
|
4
|
2
|
2
|
|
Kingdom Divided
|
12:25-26
|
3:24-36
|
11:17-18
|
|
|
|
|
14
|
4
|
2
|
|
House of strong one
|
12:29
|
3:27
|
|
|
|
|
|
6
|
2
|
2
|
|
Sower
|
13:3-8
|
4:3-8
|
8:5-8
|
|
|
|
|
30
|
12
|
3
|
|
Wheat and Weeds
|
13:24-30 13:40-43
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
30
|
18
|
3
|
|
Treasure Hidden in Field Pearl high value, Dragnet
|
13:44-50
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
14
|
12
|
2
|
|
New and Old Treasure
|
13:52
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
3
|
3
|
3
|
|
Fig Tree 3 years Manure
|
|
|
13:6-9 |
|
|
|
|
12
|
8
|
2
|
|
Mustard Grain and Leaven
|
13:31-33
|
4:30-32
|
13:18-21
|
|
|
|
|
28
|
14
|
2
|
|
Who pays Tax to Kings?
|
17:25-26
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
4
|
4
|
1
|
|
Lost Sheep (1)
|
18:12-14
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
3
|
3
|
3
|
|
10,000 Talents forgiven
|
18:23-34
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
24
|
12
|
3
|
|
500 and 50 Denarii Debts
|
|
|
7:41-43
|
|
|
|
|
3
|
3
|
1
|
|
Worker worthy of food
|
10:10
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
2
|
2
|
1
|
|
Worker worthy of wages
|
|
|
10:7
|
|
|
|
|
2
|
2
|
1
|
|
Good Samaritan
|
|
|
10:30-35
|
|
|
|
|
18
|
18
|
3
|
|
3 Loaves at midnight
|
|
|
11:5-8
|
|
|
|
|
8
|
8
|
1
|
|
Lost sheep (2), Drachma, Son
|
|
|
15:4-33
|
|
|
|
|
69
|
36
|
3
|
| Camel Needle |
18:24 |
10:25 |
18:25 |
|
|
|
|
6 |
3 |
1 |
| Vineyard worker calls |
20:1-16 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
27 |
15 |
3 |
| Minas |
|
|
19:12-27 |
|
|
|
|
33 |
15 |
3 |
| 2 Children & Vineyard cultivators |
21:28-41 |
12:1-9 |
20:9-16 |
|
|
|
|
70 |
20 |
2 |
| Stone Head Corner Psalm118 |
21:42-44 |
12:10-11 |
20:17-18 |
P118:22 |
|
|
|
10 |
2 |
2 |
| Marriage feast and garment |
22:2-14 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
36 |
24 |
3 |
116 literal counts of 181 literal accounts. 31 symbolic counts of 53 symbolic
accounts.
Third
witness. If the literal account has a symbolic sub-account then the SCNC and the
SINC of the entire literal account match the number of threads either in the
literal account itself if it has symbolic words embedded in it, or in one of the
symbolic subaccounts. If there are no symbolic subacounts then SCNC and SINC can
be anything. In other words once there is a symbolic subaccount, then the SCNC
and SINC of the whole literal account must match one of its options (either the
literal account itself if it has symbolic words, or any symbolic subaccount).
Orange text is for successive
designations
Blue text is for explanations
Black text for literal countable nouns
Green text for symbolic countable nouns
Brown text is for possessive nouns (which are not
countable)
Please check the table above using the links below...
All
accounts in Matthew except chapters 5-7 and chapters 23-25
All accounts
in Mark
13
All accounts
in Luke except chapters 12 and 21
All accounts
in John except chapters 13
Wheat
and Weeds
How did God inspire Gospel writers to write in this code?
We suspect that God has a real time style preserving holy encoding
translation routine. So that the words of a Gospel writer are given a secondary
message in the holy code without changing the normal phraseology used by the
writer. In this way the words sound like the sort of thing that writer would
normally say and are said in the manner he would normally say them, but are
actually in the holy code with a greater meaning.
Rules for counting Hebrew Nouns
Orange text is for successive
designations
Blue text is for explanations
Black text for literal countable nouns
Green text for symbolic countable nouns
Brown text is for possessive nouns (which are not
countable)
Countable nouns
All nouns are countable except when they are genitives which are not being
used as nouns.
Absolute nouns following a construct noun are not countable (unless partitive)
Absolute nouns following the construct [-lk] are
not countable
Absolute nouns following the construct prepositions [-l(
-l) -d( -Nm -Nyb -t) -M( -taxt -yrx)] are countable
Absolute nouns following the inseparable prepositions [l
m k b] are countable
The expression upon the faces of/in front of [ynp -l(]
acts as an improper preposition and takes a countable noun.
Some Old
Testament Examples
Direction of Future Research...
1. Count the whole bible splitting it into its accounts.
2. Retranslate the bible in a code preserving way
3. Look at every account in the old testament that is referred to in the new
testament, since we are supposed to be being lead by the holy spirit.
_____________________________________________________________________________
Some old counts and interpretations...
The Keys of the Kingdom
13 Now when he had
come into the parts of Caesarea
Philippi, Jesus went asking his disciples:
Who are men saying the Son
of man is?
14 They said: Some say John,
the Baptist, others Elijah, still others
Jeremiah or one [ena = eiV]
of the prophets.
15 He said to them: You, though, who do
you say I am?
16 In answer Simon
Peter said: You are the
Christ, the Son of the God, of the living [one].
17 In response Jesus
said to him: Happy you are, Simon,
son-of-Jonah (bar-jonah), because flesh
and blood did not reveal [it] to you, but my Father
who is in the heavens did.
18 Also, I say to you, You are Peter
(petros), and on this rock-mass
(petra), I will build my congregation,
and the gates of Hades
will not overpower it.
19 I will give you the keys
of the kingdom of the heavens,
and whatever you may bind on earth will be the
thing bound in the heavens, and whatever you may
loose on earth will be the thing loosed in the heavens
(Matthew 16).
Matthew
16:13-28 and Mark 8:27-9:1 and Luke 9:18-27 are parallel.
The below
was a first attempt at decoding just Matthew.
Multiple Designations for Jesus: The Son of man The Son of
the living God, The Christ, Jesus, Rock mass
These 4 designations (One of which 'The Son' exists with
two descriptions) give 4 characters or items in the two word symbolic threads.
The Rock mass is always the relevant Son of man. Jesus is the faithful 1NC
saints of FDS1 who make it to FDS2, and the faithful 1NC saints of FDS3 who make
it to FDS4 (there are not many of them). The two other sons of man are Paul and
Gordon, who are submediators of the JAC and so provide angelic offspring for
Adam through the ARC.
Multiple Designations for Peter: Simon, Peter, Bar-Jonah
3 designations, and 3 different word symbolic meanings for
them (Bar-Jonah is literal in both word symbolic threads).
The First Word Symbolism
13 Now when he had
come into the parts of Caesarea Philippi, Jesus
[the faithful 1NC saints in TCC2 as a group]
went asking his disciples [movers from TCC1 to
TCC2]: Who are men saying the Son
of man [Paul] is?
14 They said: Some say John the
Baptist, others Elijah, still others Jeremiah or one of the prophets.
15 He [the
son of man - Paul] said to them: You, though, who do you say I am?
16 In answer Simon
[EHC movers from TCC1 to TCC2]
said: You are the Christ [of
FDS2].
17 In response Jesus
[the faithful 1NC saints in TCC2 as a group] said
to him: Happy you are, Simon [EHC
movers from TCC1 to TCC2], because flesh and blood did not reveal
[it] to you, but my Father [Jesus]
who is in the heavens did.
18 Also, I say to you, You are Simon
[EHC movers from TCC1 to TCC2], and
on this rock-mass (petra) [Paul]
I will build my [new] congregation [when
I get to heaven], and the gates of Hades will not overpower it.
19 I will give you [pass
to you] the keys of the kingdom of the heavens, and whatever you may
bind on earth will be the thing bound in the heavens, and whatever you may loose
on earth will be the thing loosed in the heavens (Matthew 16).
The Second Word Symbolism
13 Now when he had
come into the parts of Caesarea Philippi, Jesus
[the faithful 1NC saints in TCC4 as a small
group] went asking his disciples [movers
from TCC3 to TCC4]: Who are men saying the
Son of man [Gordon] is?
14 They said: Some say John the
Baptist, others Elijah, still others Jeremiah or one of the prophets.
15 He [the
son of man - Gordon] said to them: You, though, who do you say I am?
16 In answer Peter
[2NC movers from TCC3 to TCC4]
said: You are the Son of the living God [Firstborn
son of Jesus - greater Joseph to the greater Jacob].
17 In response Jesus
[the faithful 1NC saints in TCC4 as a small
group] said to him: Happy you are, Son
of Jonah [2NC movers from TCC3 to
TCC4, sons of a greater Jonah], because flesh and blood did not
reveal [it] to you, but my Father [Jesus]
who is in the heavens did.
18 Also, I say to you, You are Peter
[2NC movers from TCC3 to TCC4] (petros),
and on this rock-mass (petra) [Gordon]
I will build my [new] congregation [when
I get to heaven], and the gates of Hades will not overpower it.
19 I will give you [pass
to you] the keys of the kingdom of the heavens, and whatever you may
bind on earth will be the thing bound in the heavens, and whatever you may loose
on earth will be the thing loosed in the heavens (Matthew 16).
________________________________________________________________________________________________
Treasure hidden in the field
43 ...Let him that has ears listen
44The kingdom of the heavens
is like a treasure hidden in the field,
which a man found and hid; and for
the joy he has he goes and sells as
many [things] as he has and buys that field
(Matthew 13).
Literal CNC = 1, Symbolic CNC=5. Symbolic Threads=2. Field (2).
Symbolic INC Treasure, field, man, joy = 4
Pearl of high value
45 Again the kingdom of
the heavens is like a traveling-merchant
seeking fine pearls.
46 Upon finding one [ena]
much-valued pearl, away he went and
promptly sold all the [things] he had and bought it (Matthew 13).
LCNC=1. SCNC=3. SINC=Merchant, Pearl =2. Symbolic Threads=1.
The Dragnet
47 Again
the kingdom of the heavens
is like a dragnet thrown into the sea,
and gathering up [fish] out of/from every kind.
48 When it got full
they hauled it up onto the beach,
and sitting down, they collected the fine [ones] into vessels,
the rotten [ones] they threw outside.
49 This is how it
will be in the conclusion of the system
of things. The angels will go out and separate the wicked
[ones] out of the midst of the righteous [ones],
50 and will cast them into the furnace
of the fire. There is
where the weeping and
the gnashing of teeth
will be (Matthew 13).
LCNC = 3. SCNC=8. Symbolic INC=Dragnet, sea, kind, beach, vessels, furnace,
weeping, gnashing of teeth = 8. Symbolic Threads=1.
Combine all 3 due to 'again' get
SCNC = 5+3+8=16.
SINC=4+2+8=14.
_________________________________________________________________________________________
Public Instructor
51 Did you get the sense of all these things? They said
to him: Yes.
52 Then he said to them: That being the case, every public
instructor, when taught respecting the kingdom
of the heavens, is like a
man, a householder, who brings out of [ek]
his treasure new and old [things]
(Matthew 13).
LCNC=2. SCNC=3. Symbolic Threads=3
SINC=Man, Householder, Treasure = 3
_______________________________________________________________________________________
Other Gospel accounts
The Paralytic lowered through the roof
1
So boarding a
boat he proceeded across and went to his own city
2
And,
look! they were bringing him a paralytic
lying on a bed. On seeing their faith Jesus
said to the paralytic:
Take courage, child;
your sins are forgiven.
3
And, look! Certain ones of the scribes said to themselves: This [one] is
blaspheming.
4
And Jesus,
knowing their thoughts, said: Why are you thinking wicked things in your hearts?
5
For instance, which is easier, to say, Your sins are forgiven, or to say, Get up
and walk?
6
However, in order for you to know that the Son
of man
has authority on earth to forgive sins, then he said to the paralytic:
Get up, pick up your bed, and go to your home.
7
And he got up and went off to his home.
8
At the sight of this the crowds were struck with fear, and they glorified God,
who gave such authority to men (anqrwpois)
(Matthew 9).
1
However, after some days he again entered into Capernaum and he was reported to
be at home.
2
Consequently many gathered, so much so that there was no more room, not even
about the door, and he began to speak the word to them.
3
And they came bringing him a paralytic
carried under/by 4 [ones]
4
But not being able to bring [him] near to him on account of the crowd, they
removed the roof over where he was, and having dug an opening they lowered the
cot on which the paralytic
was lying.
5
And when Jesus
saw their faith he said to the paralytic:
Child,
your sins are forgiven.
6
Now there were some of the scribes there, sitting and reasoning in their hearts:
7
Why is this
[one]
talking in this manner? He is blaspheming. Who can forgive sins except one, God?
8
But Jesus,
having discerned immediately by his spirit that they were reasoning that way in
themselves, said to them: Why are you reasoning these things in your hearts?
9
Which is easier, to say to the paralytic,
'Your sins are forgiven,' or to say, 'Get up and pick up your cot and walk'?
10
But in order for you to know that the
Son of man
has authority to forgive sins upon the earth, he said to the paralytic:
11
I say to you, Get up, pick up your cot, and go to your home.
12
At that he did get up, and immediately picked up his cot and walked out in front
of them all, so that they were all simply carried away, and they glorified the
God, saying: We never saw the like of it (Mark 2).
17
In
the course of one of the days he was teaching, and Pharisees and teachers of the
law who had come out of every village of Galilee and Judea and Jerusalem were
sitting there; and [the] power of
[the] Lord
was there for him to do healing.
18
And, look! Men (andreV)
carrying on a bed a
man
who was [one] having been paralysed,
and they were seeking a way to bring him in and place him before him.
19
So, not finding a way to bring him in on account of the crowd, they climbed up
to the roof, and through the tiling they let him down with the little bed among
those in front of
Jesus.
20
And when he saw their faith he said: Man,
your sins are forgiven you.
21
Thereupon the scribes and the Pharisees started to reason, saying: Who is
this
[one]
that is speaking blasphemies? Who can forgive sins except the God alone?
22
But
Jesus,
discerning their reasonings, said in answer to them: What are you reasoning out
in your hearts?
23
Which
is easier, to say, 'Your sins are forgiven you,' or to say, 'Get up and walk'?
24
But in order for you to know that the
Son of man
has authority on the earth to forgive sins he said to the [one]
having been paralysed:
I say to you, Get up and pick up your little bed and be on your way home.
25
And instantly he rose up before them, picked up what he used to lie on and went
off to his home, glorifying God.
26
Then an ecstasy seized one and all, and they began to glorify God, and they
became filled with fear, saying: We have seen strange things today! (Luke 5).
Men
(1), Cot (4), Bed (3), Little Bed (2), Earth (3).
‘One having been paralysed’ is ‘the paralysed one’. 'Man' is grown up in
understanding (knowing the true bible code). 'Child' is still naive in
understanding. What Jesus actually says is what eventually occurs to the
paralytic. What Jesus could have said is the baptism that the paralytic has
already had in FDS1 or FDS3 (pick up your cot being the sealing in holy spirit).
What the paralytic does, is what happens immediately to him.
Jesus
5x
Son of man 3x
of [the] Lord na
3
designations, so 3 characters or items in the word symbolic meaning. These are
the 3 Sons of man, Jesus, Paul and Gordon. Incidentally 'Man' appears twice and
takes two meanings, but the phrase' Son of man' always means 'Son of Adam' in an
Edenic procreative sense. We have at least two Sons of man with differing
authority.
Paralytic
8x
Child 2x
Man 2x
3
designations, so we have 3 characters.
The word symbolic
meaning
1
So boarding a
boat he proceeded across and went to his own city
2
And,
look! they were bringing him a paralytic
[unable
to stand or walk, Disfellowshipped faithful EHC saints from TCC1] lying
on a bed (klinh)
[suspended
water baptism].
On seeing their faith Jesus
said to the paralytic:
Take courage, child
[of
Jesus, sanctified one],
your sins are forgiven.
3
And, look! Certain ones of the scribes said to themselves: This [one] is
blaspheming.
4
And Jesus,
knowing their thoughts, said: Why are you thinking wicked things in your hearts?
5
For instance, which is easier, to say, Your sins are forgiven, or to say, Get up
[be
water baptised] and
walk [be
spirit baptised]?
6
However, in order for you to know that the Son
of man
[Jesus]
has authority on earth [genitive
- in the congregation] to
forgive sins [not
necessarily in the congregation i.e. anywhere on the planet],
then he said to the paralytic:
Get up, pick up your bed (klinh)
[be
sealed in holy spirit, pick up your resurrection as an earthly priest],
and go to your home [to
the temple of FDS2].
7
And he got up and went off to his home [The
sealing in the spirit happens after further testing in FDS2, the EHC baptism
lasts 96 years not 96 months as does the 2NC].
8
At the sight of this the crowds were struck with fear, and they glorified God,
who gave such authority to men (anqrwpois)
(Matthew 9).
1
However, after some days he again entered into Capernaum and he was reported to
be at home.
2
Consequently many gathered, so much so that there was no more room, not even
about the door, and he began to speak the word to them.
3
And they came bringing him a paralytic
[Disfellowshipped
sealed 1NC saints from FDS1 and FDS3]
carried under/ by 4 [ones] [all
of whom could walk, 1NC in FDS2, EHC in FDS2, 1NC in FDS4, 2NC in FDS4].
4
But not being able to bring [him] near to him on account of the crowd, they
removed the roof over where he was, and having dug an opening they lowered the
cot (krabattoV)
on which the paralytic
was lying [suspended
spirit baptism - heavenly resurrection].
5
And when Jesus
saw their faith he said to the paralytic:
Child
[of
Jesus, sanctified one],
your sins are forgiven.
6
Now there were some of the scribes there, sitting and reasoning in their hearts:
7
Why is this
[one]
talking in this manner? He is blaspheming. Who can forgive sins except one, God?
8
But Jesus,
having discerned immediately by his spirit that they were reasoning that way in
themselves, said to them: Why are you reasoning these things in your hearts?
9
Which is easier, to say to the paralytic,
'Your sins are forgiven,' or to say, 'Get up and pick up your cot [be
sealed in spirit]
and walk'?
10
But in order for you to know that the
Son of man
[Paul
or Gordon] has
authority to forgive sins upon the earth [and
therefore in the congregations of FDS2 and FDS4],
he said to the paralytic:
11
I say to you, Get up, pick up your cot [Paul
and Gordon cannot seal in spirit, but we can seal in flesh which has the same
effect on 1NC saints],
and go to your home [Heavenly
temple - Jesus' lofty abode].
12
At that he did get up, and immediately picked up his cot and walked out in front
of them all [They
do not go home immediately, having to die first],
so that they were all simply carried away, and they glorified the God, saying:
We never saw the like of it (Mark 2).
17
In
the course of one of the days he was teaching, and Pharisees and teachers of the
law who had come out of every village of Galilee and Judea and Jerusalem were
sitting there; and [the] power of
[the] Lord
was there for him to do healing.
18
And, look! Men (andreV)
carrying on a bed (klinhV)
[suspended
water baptism - earthly hope] a
man
who was [one] having been paralysed [Disfellowshipped
sealed 2NC saints from TCC3],
and they were seeking a way to bring him in and place him before him.
19
So, not finding a way to bring him in on account of the crowd, they climbed up
to the roof, and through the tiling they let him down with the little bed (klinidion)
[suspended
water baptism] among
those in front of
Jesus.
20
And when he saw their faith he said: Man
[code
aware saint],
your sins are forgiven you.
21
Thereupon the scribes and the Pharisees started to reason, saying: Who is
this
[one]
that is speaking blasphemies? Who can forgive sins except the God alone?
22
But
Jesus,
discerning their reasonings, said in answer to them: What are you reasoning out
in your hearts?
23
Which
is easier, to say, 'Your sins are forgiven you,' or to say, 'Get up and walk'?
24
But in order for you to know that the
Son of man
[Gordon]
has
authority on the earth to forgive sins [not
necessarily in the congregation i.e. all over the planet] he
said to the [one]
having been paralysed:
I say to you, Get up and pick up your little bed (klinidion)
[be
sealed in the flesh, get a resurrection, little bed, because not dead for long] and
be on your way home [to
the temple of FDS4].
25
And instantly he rose up before them, picked up what he used to lie on [he
was sealed in the flesh, having already been sealed in the spirit] and
went off to his home, glorifying God.
26
Then an ecstasy seized one and all, and they began to glorify God, and they
became filled with fear, saying: We have seen strange things today! (Luke 5).
By the parallel account principle, all three accounts are 3
separate fulfilments which make a whole together. Matthew is the EHC in TCC1,
Mark in the 1NC in FDS1 and FDS3 and Luke is the 2NC in TCC3.
Pick
up your bed means have a resurrection on earthly, a completed water baptism.
Pick up your little bed means have a completed water baptism, with only a small
death period, if you die at all, you will not be dead for long!! Pick up your
cot means, have a completed spirit baptism to be a heavenly king. Gordon has the
same authority on earth (this planet, 3 incidences and 2 threads) as Jesus, and
Paul. We have a choice of two forgivenesses which are two baptisms. We can
forgive the sins of people who do not join the LWs. This is a granting of
entrance into the 1AC, under Melchizedek. But it is easier to say: Get up and
Walk (join the 2AC and the 3AC) to someone joining the LWs than: Your sins are
forgiven (join the 1AC), to someone staying in the world. This is the Binary
Question prophetic form. We say welcome home to all those sanctified
outside TCC4 into the 2NC.
_______________________________________________________
The blind person
cured on the road
46
And they came into Jericho.
And [epi -
at the time] of his and of his disciples
of a considerable crowd
going out from Jericho,
the
son of Timaeus, Bartimaeus, a blind beggar,
was sitting beside the way/road.
47 And having heard
that it was Jesus,
the Nazarene,
he started shouting and saying: Son
of David, Jesus,
have mercy on me!
48 And many rebuked him
in order that he should be silent. But much [more] rather he was shouting: Son
of David,
have mercy on me!
49 And having stood, Jesus
said: call him. And
they called the blind [one], saying to him: Take- courage, get up, he is calling
you.
50 But having thrown
off his outer-garment,
having leaped up, he went towards Jesus.
51 And answering him Jesus
said: What do you
want me to do for you? But the blind [one] said to him: Rabboni
[Hellenization
of the Hebrew noun. Not a proper name so not a Greek noun],
[do] in order that I might see again.
52
And Jesus said
to him: Go, your faith
has saved you. And
immediately he saw again, and he began to follow him on the way/road.
35 But it
happened that in his getting near to Jericho a
certain blind [one] was sitting beside the way/ road
begging.
36 But having heard [the sound] of a crowd
moving through he began to inquire what this might be [about].
37 They reported to him that: Jesus,
the Nazarene is passing by!
38 At that he cried out, saying: Jesus,
Son of David, have mercy on me!
39 And the [ones] leading were reprimanding him in order that he should
be silent, but much [more] rather he was shouting: Son
of David, have mercy on me.
40 But having stood still Jesus commanded
him to be led to him. But [epi - at the time] of his
having drawn near, he [Jesus] asked him:
41 What do you want me to do for you? He said: Lord,
[do] in order that I might see again.
42 And Jesus said to him: See again; your faith
has saved you.
43 And instantly he saw again, and he began to follow him, glorifying God.
Also, all the people, having seen [it], gave praise
to God.
Total CNC = 21 + 15 = 36
Tota INC = Disciples, Crowd,
Jericho, Son of Timaeus, (Bartimaeus), Beggar, Way, Jesus, Nazarene, Son of
David, Outer-Garment, Rabboni, Faith, Lord, God, People, Praise = 16
Outer garment only appears once in Mark and does not appear in Luke, so
adding the word counts for the pair still gives us only one meaning for outer
garment, namely outer garment. So the word symbolic meanings must be single
humans capable of throwing off their outer garments. JWs would do this with
their dress codes when joining the LWs, who have no dress code at all.
To count parallel accounts with differing numbers of
threads one just takes each word symbolic thread to be made out of the accounts
which have this thread. There are three parallel account of the same two blind
guys here, but Mark and Luke each focus on only one of the guys.
Multiple Designations: Jesus, Nazarene, Son of David,
Rabboni, Lord
These 5 are Jesus, Paul, Gordon, FDS4 and Jesus' wife, in
all the word symbolic threads, satisfying the Designations
Principle.
Into and out of Jericho was the old town and the new town,
and stands for the old FDS and the new FDS. Mark ditches outer garment of old
priesthood and gets up - water baptism - and jumps to feet and goes to Jesus.
This is a 10 year wait from 1994Elul to 2004Elul in the second presence
fulfilment. Bartimaeus (meaning son of Timaeus in Hebrew) is the EHC sons of
John, the sons of the 1EC (first word) and the son of Timaeus (the same thing)
is the 2NC sons of Russell, the sons of the 3EC (second word). The blind beggar
(third word) is the great crowd, without a name but with an outer garment to put
off and delaying 10 years and being told to shut up. Now the pair of accounts
must make up a non overlapping whole. So Luke is the 1NC saints in FDS1 and
FDS3. Sitting is having lost water baptism. Recovery of sight means that they
were his disciples before. The EHC and 2NC are water baptised in advance of
their entry into FDS2/4 by stealth - get up he is calling you.
The first word symbolism
46
And they are coming into Jericho. But as he [Jesus] and his disciples and a
considerable crowd were going out of Jericho, Bartimaeus
[Named - Dan, the blind EHC saints, ex
sons of John still under FDS1 - they lost their water baptism on sanctification
- they are not beggars, the can research for food]
was sitting beside the way.
47
When he heard that it was Jesus [Paul]
he started shouting and saying: Son of
David [Jesus],
have mercy on me!
48
At this many began sternly telling him to be silent; but he kept shouting that
much more: Son of David [Jesus],
have mercy on me!
49
So the Jesus
[Paul] stopped
and said: call him [into TCC2]. And
they called the blind [one], saying to him: Take courage, get up [get
re-water baptised], he is calling you.
50
Throwing off his outer garment [old
priesthood], he leaped to his feet [10
years from 67Tishri - 77Tishri] and went to the
Jesus [Paul].
51
And in answer to him the Jesus
[Paul] said:
What do you want me to do for you? The blind [one] said to him: Rabboni
[Paul the teacher of FDS2], let
me recover sight.
52
And the Jesus
[Paul] said
to him: Go, your faith has made you well. And immediately he recovered sight,
and he began to follow him on the way (Mark 10).
35 Now
as he was getting near to Jericho a certain blind [one] [a
group of faithful 1NC saints in GNS1] was sitting [Disfellowshipped]
beside the way begging [asking others for
spiritual food - not willing or able to research].
36
Because he heard a crowd moving through he began to inquire what this might
mean.
37
They reported to him: Son of David [Jesus],
is passing by!
38
At that he cried out, saying: Son of David [Jesus],
have mercy on me!
39
And those going in advance began to tell him sternly to keep quiet, but that
much more he kept shouting: Jesus [Paul],
have mercy on me.
40
Then the [not
in Vatican B] Jesus
[Paul] stood
still and commanded him to be led to him. After he got near, [he] asked him:
41
What do you want me to do for you? He said: Lord
[Paul was the head of FDS2, the Lord of
TCC2], let me recover sight.
42
So the Jesus
[Paul] said
to him: Recover your sight; your faith has made you well.
43
And instantly he recovered sight, and he began to follow him, glorifying the
God. Also, all the people, at seeing [it], gave praise to the God (Luke 18).
The second word
symbolism
46
And they are coming into Jericho. But as he and his disciples and a considerable
crowd were going out of Jericho, the son of
Timaeus [Named - Manasseh, the
blind 2NC saints, ex sons of Russell still under FDS3 - they lost their water
baptism on sanctification, 1994Elul onwards - they are not beggars, they can
research for food] was
sitting beside the way.
47
When he heard that it was the Nazarene [Gordon],
he started shouting and saying: Jesus [FDS4,
the master standing for his slave, who is his representative], have
mercy on me!
48
At this many began sternly telling him to be silent; but he kept shouting that
much more: Jesus [FDS4,
the master standing for his slave, who is his representative], have
mercy on me!
49
So [the Jesus] the
Nazarene [Gordon]
stopped and said: call him. And they called the blind [one], saying to him: Take
courage, get up, he is calling you.
50
Throwing off his outer garment [old
priesthood], he leaped to his feet [10
years 1994Elul - 2004Elul] and went to the
Jesus [accusative],
[FDS4].
51
And in answer to him [the Jesus] the
Nazarene [Gordon]
said: What do you want me to do for you? The blind [one] said to him: Rabboni
[Gordon the teacher of FDS4],
let me recover sight.
52
And [the Jesus] the
Nazarene [Gordon]
said
to him: Go, your faith has made you well. And immediately he recovered sight,
and he began to follow him on the way (Mark 10).
35 Now
as he was getting near to Jericho a certain blind [one] [a
group of faithful 1NC saints in GNS2] was sitting [Disfellowshipped
after 2001Tammuz1] beside the way begging [asking
others for spiritual food - not willing or able to research].
36
Because he heard a crowd moving through he began to inquire what this might
mean.
37
They reported to him: the Nazarene
is passing by!
38
At that he cried out, saying: Jesus,
have mercy on me!
39
And those going in advance began to tell him sternly to keep quiet, but that
much more he kept shouting: Jesus,
have mercy on me.
40
Then [the [not
in Vatican B] Jesus]
the
Nazarene [Gordon]
stood still and commanded him to be led to him. After he got near,
[he] asked him:
41
What do you want me to do for you? He said: Lord
[Gordon the head of FDS4, the Lord
of TCC4], let me recover sight.
42
So [the Jesus]
the
Nazarene [Gordon]
said to him: Recover your sight; your faith has made you well.
43
And instantly he recovered sight, and he began to follow him, glorifying the
God. Also, all the people, at seeing [it], gave praise to the God (Luke 18).
Jesus
has to be composite here as he is not composite in the first word thread and he
takes a different word symbolic meaning in each thread and were he to be just
'Gordon' then this would be a second fulfilment of the word symbolic meaning
'Paul' in the first thread, rather than a different word symbolic meaning. Then
we need 'the Nazarene' to replace 'the Jesus', in order to get Gordon into the
second thread (as Paul was in the first word thread). This account proves that
one can substitute 'The Jesus' to be 'The the Nazarene', and shorten this to
'The Nazarene'. This shortening process (throwing out repeated words) is what
happens with double designations in word symbolic threads. Jesus, Son of David,
becomes Jesus, Jesus, which becomes Jesus.
The third word
symbolism
46
And they came into Jericho. But as he and his disciples and a considerable crowd
were going out of Jericho, [a] blind beggar [The
sons of Russell who were to become sons of the 2NC(a)], was sitting
beside the way.
47
When he heard that it was Jesus [his
wife re-water baptised], the Nazarene [from
Jesus' home, heaven], he started shouting and saying: Son
of David [Gordon],
Jesus [his wife re-water baptised],
have mercy on me!
48
At this many began sternly telling him to be silent; but he kept shouting that
much more: Son of David [Gordon],
have mercy on me!
49
So the Jesus
[Jesus, the head of his wife]
stopped and said: call him. And they called the blind [one], saying to him: Take
courage, get up, he is calling you.
50
Throwing off his outer garment [old
priesthood], he leaped to his feet [10
months - 2004Elul-2005Sivan] and went to the
Jesus.
51
And in answer to him the Jesus
said: What do you want me to do for you? The blind [one] said to him: Rabboni
[Jesus, their heavenly teacher],
let me recover sight.
52
And the Jesus
said to him: Go, your faith has made you well. And immediately he recovered
sight, and he began to follow him on the way (Mark 10).
Jesus (16), 5 designations for Jesus, way (5) outer-garment (2).
____________________________________________________________
The house built on
sand
24
Therefore everyone that hears these words of mine and does them will be
likened to a discreet man (andri)
[sanctified Christian - son of the JAC],
who built the house of him [Kingdom hope]
upon the rock-mass [Jesus Christ].
25
And the rain poured down [a
new water baptism commenced] and
the rivers came [persecution from
secular and religious groups] and
the winds blew [holy spirit tested
him] and lashed against that house, but it did not cave in, for it
had been founded upon the rock-mass.
26
Furthermore, everyone hearing these words of mine and not doing them will be
likened to a foolish man (andri)
[son of the JAC], who built the
house of him [Kingdom hope] upon
the sand [idolising members of the
congregation].
27
And the rain poured down and
the rivers came and the winds
blew and struck against that house and it caved in, and its collapse [ptosiV]
was great [to the individual in Gehenna]
(Matthew 7).
47
Everyone the [one] coming to me and hearing of my words and doing them, I will
show you whom he is like:
48
He is like a human (anqrwpoV)
[son of the 2AC] building a
house [Kingdom hope], who dug
and went down deep [by thorough personal
research] and laid a foundation [his
faith] upon the rock-mass [Jesus
Christ]. Consequently, when a flood arose [persecution
began], the river [secular people]
dashed against that house, but was not strong enough to shake it, because of its
being well built.
49 But the [one] who hears and
does not do, is like a human (anqrwpoV)
[son of the 2AC] who built a house [Kingdom
hope] upon the ground [the
administration of the true church] without a foundation [faith].
Against it the river [secular people] dashed,
and immediately it collapsed, and the ruin [rhgma] of
that house became great [to the individual in
Gehenna] (Luke 6).
Countable noun count (3,5) (3,5) (1,7) (6) = 28 'hearing of my words',
'having occurred of flood', possessive nouns?
INC: man, house, rockmass, rain, (rivers), winds, sand, collapse, human,
foundation, river, ground, ruin = 12?
These appear not to be the only symbolic parts of the accounts that they are in
(Luke has simple illustrations)..
Man 2x
Human 2x
2 designations for the house builder, so there are 2 characters referred to
in the word symbolism, and we have two new word symbolic meanings also from the
2 counts. These 2 are a water baptised person and a spirit baptised person.
These are actually literal accounts, containing comparisons. There is one
word symbolic thread. Matthew applies to saints in FDS1,2,3 by the Successive
Subjects Principle and Luke applies to water baptised people in FDS4.
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