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A sermon contains a mountain of information

  • Writer: Brian Dunne
    Brian Dunne
  • Aug 13, 2018
  • 2 min read

The tax-collector Matthew establishes "LORD" as the 666th word of the Greek Testament. His 1,940 words of the sermon Rabbi Jesus preaches across three chapters also shows God to be marked with the number 666.

Previously, we explored the connections between the numeric value of the name JESUS (888) and the presence of a woman across three books, all in the eighth chapter (Acts 8:8 is 8 words).

Let us attempt to decode a message hidden in the 1,940 words of Matthew 5:3 to 7:27. We have detected seven levels of monologue and by this ingenious device we can mine a wealth of information from every word. Each shift to the next level adds another number to all subsequent words. Every word has a book number between one and 18,318. In the 1,940-word monologue, #talk1 words have one other number, #talk2 words have two other numbers, and so on. Ultimately, there are six levels with words numbered 666.

Rabbi Jesus mouthed the god word six times ("And he opened his mouth..." 5:2). In Matthew's masterpiece, he shifts the monologue to a new level six times and the sixth of six occurrences of "the God" is numbered 666 and 1388 (see chart at #talk2 and #talk1). Let us now

demonstrate the relationship of Rabbi Jesus and Mary Magdalene that is encoded by a method of marking words with numbers on multiple levels.

Seven cardinals (3,4,5,6,7,8,9) are used to identify each of the seven levels of the sermon monologue. Just as the number in Revelation 13:18 is calculated as 6 plus 6x10 plus 60x10 (equals 666), we shall do a slight variation (60/66/666) to accommodate the proximity of nouns and verbs to make sensible units (generally, the first two numbered words would be in the same verse). By a process of winnowing rows to collect words in columns we will do horizontal sweeps of each series (30/33/333, 40/44/444, and so on), collating sequentially, including repetitions. The result is a rudimentary "message" that betrays unique characteristics to each level of the monologue. Not surprisingly, the series that generates the god word as 666 also has the noun "thieves" once and the verb "they thieve" three times! Only the 40/44/444 series has "thieves" twice; all other #talks remain blank.

By including the #book words in the sweeping process of collating words marked by the numbers 80/88/888, we find "wife" twice, and "husband" once. [Although not illustrated by the table above, #talk1 is 30/33/333, #talk7 is 90/99/999, etc.] The pairing of husband/wife appears in #talk6, that is, 80/88/888. One other "wife" occurs in the second level (#talk2 or 40/44/444); all other #talks remain blank.

First, consider the affinity of these numbers in the pairing (80/88/888) and the extra "wife" (40/44/444), then add the controversy about divorce in the synoptic gospels and finally, juxtapose the John 8:1-11 accusation of adultery. What does all this add up to? Perhaps this most famous sermon is hiding a confession of a personal relationship between the Rabbi and the Magdalene.

Matthew 5:2 [and having opened the mouth of him he taught them saying | καὶ ἀνοίξας τὸ στόμα αὐτοῦ ἐδίδασκεν αὐτοὺς λέγων,]. Indeed!

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