Gregg Braden surveys 40+ Bible translations and the question of whether current geopolitical events map onto a pre-written prophetic timeline. He distinguishes the Torah/Bible codes from biblical prophecy proper and argues that AI-era preservation of these traditions matters precisely because they shape how a majority of humans hold meaning.
Transcript
When I talk about the Bible, people ask me about the Bible, what I'll say is which Bible? Because there are over 40 different versions of the Bible out there that have been translated over the years. It is the the timeline or are the events of the timeline that we are are living? Is it mapped out as a script? There's one big war between good and evil that is the theme throughout the biblical text, but there are many battles. We're also living a time that's being called the time of the great reset. When the Christian Bible was created, it incorporated the Torah into what we call the Old Testament in the Christian traditions. And that thousand years of peace ultimately is followed by the great great war, the final battle between good and evil, light and dark. All right, there is a timeline. So, let's take a look at this timeline. The Torah codes, the Bible codes do not make predictions. However, and they're not prophecy. However, biblical traditions do make prophecy and there are prophetic timelines and there is a prophetic sequence of events that we very probably are experiencing right now. And I'll show you why I say that here in in just a moment. Are we advancing in this timeline? And I want you to see what this the potential of the Psalm 83 war is all about. So, when it comes to the question as to whether or not we're following some kind of a script, an ancient script, the question is who would have known about those scripts and how would they have shared that information with us? Is this what the ancient prophets were actually talking about? Well, as I mentioned earlier, we're going to zero in on biblical prophecy from a historical timeline perspective. And when we do that, what we find is there were a number of prophets throughout the the Bible, through both the Old and and the New Testament, approximately 23 biblical prophets. In their tradition, from their perspective, we are living what is called the end of days or the end of times. It doesn't mean the end of the world, certainly, because the earth is still here and some people are still here, depending on on where you are in your perspective. But it is the end of a cycle. It is the end of one kind of time, the beginning of another kind of time. So, when we talk about the end times or the end of days, there are a series of wars that the prophets said would unfold leading up to a thousand years of peace, leading up to a number of spiritual and religious events that would unfold. And the prophets that talked about those primarily were the prophet David, Daniel, Ezequiel, Isaiah, and John the elder. So, this is John that was writing the book of Revelation, for example. There are other prophets that talk about these things. They refer to them in one way or another, but these are the primary prophets. All right, there is a timeline. So, let's take a look at this timeline. None of the wars that are prophesied are possible or would have been possible until the nation of Israel was established. So, up until 1948, there was all kinds of questions about where we are in the timeline, where we are in the in the history of these prophecies. And those conversations solidified in 1948 when the United Nations delineated the boundaries for the nation of Israel as well as for the Palestinian people. There were two sets of there were multiple spaces on the land, but there were two nations that were established under the UN or identified under the UN in 1948. So, when Israel became established in the 20th century, reestablished in the 20th century. And again, I'm hesitating because there's so much history here and I don't want to get bogged down the history because we're going somewhere and a many of you know much more about this and are much more informed than I am. I I want to get to a point on this. So, when Israel is established 1948, that set into motion the possibilities of this timeline. There was a war that broke out the day that the nation was established. Israel and the Arab Arab neighbors went to war in 1948. There was another war in 1967. There was another war in 1973. And there was another war in 1987 as well as conflicts that have happened since that time. 1967, you're probably familiar with this, it's called the Six-Day War. I actually remember when this happened. We had black and white televisions during that time. Sounds crazy. And I remember watching tanks, armored tanks, rolling through the streets of Jerusalem when when this war broke out in 1967. I remember the 1973 war as well, the Yom Kippur War. 1987, of course, we all probably remember this. It was the the first Intifada with the This was a Palestinian Palestinians against the Israelis based on a number of events that had created a tension and there was a spark that ignited what was called the first Intifada in 1987. We've had a number of Intifadas since that time. All right, so those wars happened. Now, from the biblical perspective, all of this is leading to a a war, a great war between what is called Gog and Magog. Magog is a place, Gog is an individual. And I'll talk about these more in another video, but the point is that this great war, all of these events have to precede the Gog-Magog war. The Gog-Magog war then is followed by seven years of really, really difficult times on the planet called the tribulation, seven years of the tribulation. That end in another, even greater war called the War of Armageddon. And those of you that have been with us on our trips into the Holy Lands, we've actually been to this location. It is a valley. You There's a high point where you overlook the valley where this great battle is prophesied to unfold because it is followed by a thousand years of peace. And that thousand years of peace ultimately is followed by the great great war, the final battle between good and evil, light and dark. Uh and all the implications are around that. And I'm choosing my words carefully because I know in this day and age, a lot of words are triggering for people and I want I want to convey an idea without getting lost in the baggage of what a lot of these things mean to different people. So, what you're looking at is a prophecy of wars following a timeline and the wars are sequential. Before the Gog-Magog war can happen, there is another war that must happen and it's the war that we're talking about right now, the Psalm 83 war. In the book of Psalms, so if you look at Psalms 83, we will look at a portion of this. The question that's being asked right now is are the events that were began with October 7th and the events that have followed, the military events that have followed from that time, not just in Israel, but in Lebanon, in Syria, in Yemen, relationships with Iran, Egypt, and Jordan, are they all part of the Psalm 83 war? Are we living this biblical timeline right now? Well, we don't know. I don't know the answer to this. What I do know is there are benchmarks that you and I can watch for and I think if these benchmarks are going to appear, they're going to appear pretty quickly based on on the events that are happening in the Middle East right now. There's another piece of this that I want to talk about. In Christian traditions, the Psalm 83 war, if that is happening, another reason that so many are are examining what's happening in the Middle East in Israel Israel right now with with a magnifying glass, is because there is a prophesied event called the rapture, the rapture event. And the rapture event is linked with what many now are calling ascension. And there's a whole series of conversations about ascension. It means different things to different people. And we will talk about that in a different program as well. I want to stay focused on this, but I want to honor that the rapture event is where people of belief will be saved from the the hard times that come through the the Gog-Magog war and the tribulation, the seven seven years. I'm also going to acknowledge there's controversy about when that rapture happens. There is a school of thought that says Gog-Magog happens first, then the rapture so that those people don't have to go through the seven years of tribulation. There's another school of thought that says the rapture happens to save them from the horrors of the Gog-Magog war. So, I just wanted to identify that Psalm 83, the Psalm 83 war that may we may be seeing uh the early stages of right now is directly linked and is being watched very closely because of its relationship to to the rapture. All right, so what is Psalms 83? We're going to come back to this timeline in just a moment, by the way. What does Psalms 83 say? Well, when I talk about the Bible, people ask me about the Bible, what I'll say is which Bible? Because there are over 40 different versions of the Bible out there that have been translated over the years, different interpretations uh from different languages, and the the version I'm going to refer to now is the King James Version, KJV or KJV, sorry KJV. Um it was translated from the Greek and the Greek is some of the closest to the original texts uh linking it to the Dead Sea Scrolls and the Qumran and the Essenes and and all of those things. So, Psalm 83, and I'm not going to go through the whole thing, it's lengthy. I'm going to to go through the part that talks about the war. So, there's a context where Psalms 83 is talking about the nation of Israel. All right, and that's happening preceding to this. Then uh this is a direct quote. It says, "Come, let us cut them off." Them is Israel, those are my uh perimeters because of the context I'm not including here that came before this, the lengthy context before this. It says, "Come, let us cut them off from being a nation that the name of Israel may no more may be no more in remembrance." Now, those are you know, frightening frightening words, but you hear things like this in other traditions. Here's where the specifics come in. This prophecy gives the names of the nations that will converge upon Israel to destroy this nation. It gives the names in the ancient idiom, the names that were common during that period of time. So, I'm going to go through these, then we're going to look at a map and we're going to look at the modern names of those nations. And I think if you haven't seen this, I think you might be surprised at what you're going to see. The tabernacles of Edom and the Ishmaelites. All right, tabernacles are in biblical traditions are called tents or places of congregation. So, now we would call these essentially nations. So, the nations of Edom and the Ishmaelites, again, we're going to define who these are in modern terms in just a mo- a moment. Uh of Moab and the Hagarites, of Gebal, Ammon, Amalek, the Philistines with the inhabitants of Tyre, Asshur is also joined with them. All right, so here in this prophecy it's so specific. Uh and again, this is not part of the Bible codes possibilities, this is a prophetic uh vision and in this case from um from the Book of Psalms, and David uh that was primarily responsible for for these is identifying specific nations and locations that will converge upon Israel. So, what are these in modern times? Well, the the ancient name of Edom is now part of southwestern Jordan. So, the political boundaries, the borders that delineate these places in modern times were different in the past. Some were similar, some were very very different. So, Edom is now uh what we know as southwest Jordan. The Ishmaelites are Saudis, this is Saudi Arabia. Moab is southern Jordan. The Hagarites are Syria. Gebal is northern Lebanon and northern Jordan. There's a place where those two were much closely related uh before the the borders of the modern nations were put there. Ammon is northern Jordan. Amalek is Egypt and specifically it's the Sinai uh that shares a border with Israel. And this is interesting because Israel actually captured the Sinai during the the war in the '70s and then returned it to Egypt uh for a number of reasons, they gave it back. But th --- he the biblical timelines are very specific. Those are the nations involved, they're the nations that are involved in what we're seeing right now. The question I asked John is do we as conscious beings, as spiritual beings, have the right to self-determination of our future? Can we awaken to the point where we can have the thousand years of peace without the Gog-Magog, without the tribulation, without the Armageddon war? I don't know the answer to that. The prophecies are very clear and say these things must happen based upon the prevalence of good and evil and the ratios of good and evil in the world that they saw in the prophecies. Because ultimately every one of these battles is a battle that comes down, yes, greed is involved, yes, power is involved, yes, money and control and centralization, all those are involved, but those are all expressions of evil. And good and evil, the relationship between those. So if we are living this the final battles between good and evil, maybe these things must unfold so that we can become the people of peace that we know we are in our hearts and create the world of peace that we know is possible in in our lives. Maybe they are possible. If we side-stepped these wars, if we broke the prophecies, what would be the implications of that? Do we have the power to do that? Is this something that we would want to do? These are the kinds of questions that John and I talk about all the time. And now I'm sharing this with you because so many people had so many questions. We had a lot of questions based on the the previous video that we did, so I wanted to be a little bit more a little bit more specific here. Are we following an ancient script? I'd like to know what you think. Is the the timeline or are the events of the timeline that we are are living, is it mapped out as a script? And if it is mapped out, do we succumb to that script or do we by virtue of consciousness and our free will, is it part of our destiny to transcend, not necessarily even fight, but to become more than where that script apparently leads? One of the ways that I've gone about looking at this is looking at biblical history. Back in 1990s, I became a member of a an organization that was called BAR, Biblical Archaeology Review. It was it was fascinating, John, because it was moving away from the religiosity of the Bible, rather looking at the Bible as as a historical document of events that actually occurred. Now, when I was a kid, you know, a lot of things in the Bible, I was growing up in the '50s, '60s, a lot of people thought, you know, those were make-believe things. And what biblical archaeology review and some other organizations did is they began to to take the Bible as a literal document of history regardless of of the religion. And so they'd say, well, you know, according to Bible, these things happened here, what if we dig here? And we had sites like Ashkelon, just north of of Gaza. And the I've had the opportunity to be there personally, to visit the archaeological sites in Ashkelon and Jericho and the the tunnels under Solomon's Temple and and things like that. So what the Bible has shown historically is that it is based on information that is factual. When we think about a scripted timeline, the question is how deep do those facts run? And where this gets really interesting is because the events that we're seeing in the Middle East right now are playing out uh eerily similar to a time to actually two timelines that we see in in parts of the Old Testament. So I'll I'll be specific and this is all in the Old Testament. There are two there's one big war between good and evil that is the theme throughout the biblical text, but there are many battles. And there are two big battles that are identified. One of those is a mysterious battle, Psalms 83. Uh and another one is the the big one that people hear about in Ezekiel, Ezekiel was it 38 and 39. Uh at the end of time in the valley of Armageddon near Megiddo, and I've been to those places as well. So, the reason I'm I'm thinking about this now is because the Psalm 83 battle identifies nations in biblical times that will converge, that will turn and converge upon Israel. Uh and when we look at the modern names of those nations, it's exactly what's playing out right now. With a couple of exceptions that have to change, and if we see those exceptions change, we're following this map that was laid out over 3,000 years ago. One of those exceptions is right now Israel is on reasonably good terms. It's called a a cold treaty uh with Jordan and with with Egypt. 1979 the Camp David Accords with with Egypt. Egypt now for the first time since 1979 is threatening to walk away from those accords, and if that happens, um it is actually fulfilling what some people call the prophecy of of Psalm 83 uh leading to the the next great war. There are inner nations and outer nations. Psalm 83 is about the inner nations of uh of Lebanon and Syria and Jordan and Egypt and uh and what we now call Gaza. The Ezekiel is about the outer nations where they say the great nations from the north, uh Iran and Russia uh converge with other nations. Uh Turkey is part of that. Um they call it Persia, which is now now Iran. Tyre, which is now Lebanon. So, the question as I'm looking at this, first it's it's eerie how similar the events are that are playing out now that are described in those texts. So, number one, how did that happen? Is it a case of ancient remote viewers? Is that what we call those those prophets? And number two, are we bound to those timelines or through the free will of our consciousness that's also described can we can we transcend those those timelines? And I'm uh just wondering if you thought much about that, John. This is like a a bigger bigger picture. Well, what you what I think about when you say that is that we're back in simulation world again. Yeah. That uh we're that this is a some kind of a deterministic environment that certainly you have latitude within the game space, if you will. Uh within the design of the rules of the operating space, but you never though you can't get outside you you know, outside of your lane. Uh but you can run across and and try any number of other kind of things. That's a kind of a simplistic it's clearly more complex and sophisticated than that. Yeah. Uh but the there is something I mean, this goes back to the kind of the cyclical nature of of reality. This is goes almost directly to the underlying principles and the concepts underneath Martin Armstrong's computer, Socrates. And um uh which says that everything in this reality uh is based upon some kind of a cyclical uh oscillatory kind of process. And so, no matter whether you take the weather or politics or education or family relationships or you know, anything around, Armstrong's got 75 of them that he's isolated and got figured out. He says, you know, it just keeps coming together and they keep doing it and sometimes they're additive, sometimes they're subtractive and so on. But that's again like saying it's a big machine that you're inside of and that there are and it is therefore predictable, which of course is what the Marty Armstrong uses the whole thing for. And so, you've just raised it to another kind of level. One of the interesting things about the last maybe decade is this uh the kind of the emergence of this idea, for me at least is the emergence of this idea of this living in a simulation. And uh uh as you know, I've had a number of experiences with where I've been kind of shown that it's a simulation of one sort or another, and that then makes raises all kinds of deep kind of questions about what this is all about and is there a god and what's heaven and all these kind of things that I at least grew up with that were kind of the core components of the operating space that we were constrained with. And so, uh now I think it's really quite interesting. Well, so when I think about this from the mathematic perspective, you know, when I've done seminars based on this people it's for I'm just going to first acknowledge it's a very different way of thinking for a lot of people. You and I toss around these terms and ideas, and if this is new for some people, when when you think of a simulation, it is based on an iterative formula. Uh and the when I I spent a lot of time studying fractals when I was in the defense industry uh in terms of software development. And fractals are fascinating and they're so simple, John. And the whole idea of a fractal is that you you have a the fractal image that we're used to seeing is the picture representation of of a mathematic formula. Of course. And when you shift that formula, so the formula is represented by the letter R, for example and you shift the formula R + 1, the + 1 could be a change in the environment. It could be a change in society. It could be a change in our belief systems. R + 1 that then becomes the input for the next iteration Right. of that of that calculation. Well, where this gets interesting is that the best science of modern world has shown us, they have reduced our natural world into some combination of only about four fractal patterns. Wow. That are they are are combined and they are iterative. That is what a simulation is. That's what keeps a simulation running. It's every time something changes then that change is fed back into the the the equation. So, so from that perspective my question, what I think about is within that formula, I see no reason that we do not have the latitude and the freedom to to break out of those fractal patterns, to create new fractal patterns. I don't think it would break the simulation. I've had people say to me, well, you're you're going to break break the simulation. I don't think it would do that. Well, how then is it predictive in the terms that you're kind of suggesting? I think this is the essence of what our lives and our time are all about. That we've also heard that this is a an experiment. That we're living this great experiment where we have some degree of free will. So, if we follow and succumb to the script we're not using I guess we're using our free will to follow what we believe is predetermined. But and if if we are to take the the freedoms that have been described, whether it's the biblical text or whether it's in biological text or whatever it is of choice, free will and consciousness, and we choose not to follow that timeline, we choose not to have those wars. Right. I I see nothing that prevents us from doing that, but everyone that I talk to and all of the sources I'm looking at feel that it is predetermined, so it must come to pass. And and I I don't know that that's true. Well, I don't know that it's true either, but if it if it turns out to be the truth, then you're into you know, what is you you are humans and what is this purpose of this human experience? And yeah, I mean, you're into these deep kind of existential kind of questions that uh I you know, I'm not particularly interested in Well, I think I I think the there are layers to this, John. And I I think the the simulation, I think the evidence strongly supports some kind of a simulation. It may not be what we think of as a computer program on a disk. The universe is as a simulation. I think what we're seeing is that at least there are portions of our simulation that may have been hijacked. Or or or there's an intervention that maybe was not accounted for initially that's driving us toward these very dark outcomes. When you look at the biblical text, the purpose of the wars is to erase the darkness and to enter into a thousand years of peace or a thousand years of uh you know, with with without the evil. And I'm wondering are the wars the only way to get there? Can we create that peace? If we're in a simulation, can we create that peace without having the wars? Psalm 83, now this is you know, 2,000-year-old language, 3,000-year-old language. It it actually says, "Let us destroy them as a nat --- the clues left in the biblical text to the places in the world where things are said to have happened and they excavate to see if these things actually happened. Uh and many, many times they have. And this is biblical archaeology bearing out the traditions that many people thought were make-believe in the Bible. And you can go into the holy lands and and walk in the the places that are referenced in in in this this text. The when we say the Bible, the Bible means different things to different people. So, the Hebrew Bible is based upon a book that's called the Torah. And the Torah are the biblical books Genesis, Exodus Leviticus Numbers and Deuteronomy. Those first five books uh are a complete Torah. When the Christian Bible was created, it incorporated the Torah into what we call the Old Testament in the Christian traditions. So, you go to the King James version of a Bible. Yeah, you're going to see Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Leviticus, Numbers, Deuteronomy. You're seeing the Torah that was incorporated into the Old Testament and then additional books, additional documents, and then into the New Testament. A lot of people think that the Bible doesn't have anything to do with with Islam. Well, the the historical figures and the historical events uh in the Middle East that are referenced in the Bible are also shared and referenced in Islam. And Islam references the the biblical traditions not from the same principle and not from the in the New Testament and not the role of Jesus in the same way. But the bottom line is to rewrite the Bible would impact not only the Christian traditions, not only the Jewish traditions, but also Islam. And those traditions combined, I just have some numbers here, make up about 56% of the world's religion. Uh billions of people are following traditions that are based in the biblical text, derived from those texts through either Islam or Christianity or the the Jewish tradition, the Hebrew traditions. So, to rewrite this book would have a tremendous implications outwardly. And intuitively to me, it just doesn't make sense. That's why I said I think it's a really bad idea. What I'd like to do is share with you technically scientifically deeper reasons why it's such a bad idea because there is something so unique about the Torah that exists in no other biblical book. Uh it is a mystery that kind of cannot be rip replicated in in any other religious tradition. And to rewrite the Bible would mean to rewrite this aspect of the Torah. So, when we talk about Yuval Harari, one of the first questions that that comes up is who is he? And we could probably do a a whole program to answer that question. And I will speak about him in another video where we're talking about the relationship between the World Economic Forum, United Nations, and a lot of governmental policies. He was born in 1976. He is called a historian and a social philosopher. So, this gives you some idea of where his thinking is. And I want to be really clear. When when I have these conversations with you, you know my premise. How can we solve the problems if we're not honest about the problems? This isn't about making someone wrong or even making them out to be bad. What we're looking at are technocrats. And Yuval Harari is is an advocate of technology, for sure, and the introduction of technology into our world and even into our bodies. So, we're talking about people who are really focused on technology and what is possible with technology. However, my experience as a scientist in scientific community is often the scientist and the technologist are so myopic. They're so zeroed in on accomplishing a technological goal, which which can be done. And then you ask them, "Well, what are the implications of that goal? What does it mean to society? What does it mean to a family? What does it mean to, you know, to a civilization?" And they'll say, "You know, but that's that's above my pay grade. I'm I'm not thinking about that." I mean, they'll literally say things like that. So, they'll say, "Well, you know, let someone else figure that out. We're just looking at at the technology and what's possible." So, when we have this conversation and we're listening to Yuval Harari, number one, either he has not thought this through or he has thought it through and is simply discounted the the disastrous implications that can come from this. I don't know him. I've never met him, and I don't know which camp he is in. I want you to be aware of what it is that he's saying because this is one piece of a bigger puzzle, and you're going to be hearing more about this. So, the image that you see on your screen right now, this is Yuval Harari. And uh let's listen to to this clip. And again, the clip is coming from a It's kind of like a TED It wasn't TED, but it was like a TED Talk communities societies as nations, and as a planet. And those social bonds are systematically being broken, and I've described that in other other videos. Uh the social bond of religion is one of the last bonds that remains intact. So, I'm not surprised that the thinking would be to somehow remake religions as we move toward this this centralized way of of thinking and living between now and the year 2030. I'm I just want to say the the change required to meet that criteria is a level of psychological and emotional and mental change unlike anything in a time frame that is so compressed. Humans aren't set up to accomplish what it is that's being proposed here. So, AI Bible. Why is this a really bad idea? As I've mentioned, the Bible, when they say the Bible, they're talking about the Bibles that we know today uh that are either based in or or are or include the Torah, is that those first five books. There's a mystery about the Torah that scientists are grappling with right now because it is so outrageous. What What the Torah implies is so outrageous. And this mystery came to the scientific forefront in 1994. Now, there've always been rabbis for hundreds of years in the past that have always said that underlying the words in the Torah that we read as the letters on the page, there are coded There's a a a deeper tradition, a deeper message that can only be known to initiates that understand the codes. And as you'll see, the Torah itself says that its codes will be locked until the end of time when computers, and the word computer is actually coded into the Torah, when computers can open that code, when computers can unlock the code. So, rabbis for hundreds of years have been trying to unlock this code by hand. It's said some of them went insane by candlelight, you know, spending days with pieces of parchment and and quill pens trying to unlock these mysterious codes. Well, it was in the mid-1990s when computers became more accessible to universities. You know, we take them for granted today. It was in the the mid-80s I was working in the the defense industry when computers were shifting from machines that took up entire rooms to something on the desktop uh that could be used by an individual. Well, and it was during that time, no surprise, that scientists began using computers uh in innovative ways. And in this case, Israeli scientists were using the computers to unlock the codes in the Torah. 1994, there was a paper published in a peer-reviewed journal called Statistical Science. Uh I'll read to you the title and then we'll talk about what that means. The title is equidistant letter sequences in the Book of Genesis. And the the bottom line is that there is a way to read the biblical text that when we read the text using what are called skip codes or equidistant letter sequences, and again, I'm going to describe these in just a moment, the uh that deeper meanings are are revealed. So, in 1994, that paper was produced, very controversial, so controversial that in 1997, a very famous experiment was run to either prove for once and for all or disprove for once and for all that there's something going on with the Torah. The idea was to take the names of 34 famous rabbis uh in Jewish history and uh if they existed as we believe, then they should be noted in this secret code in the Torah. Now, I I just want to to note here that what the rabbis have always said about the Torah is that it is essentially a quantum map of time. All that has ever happened in the world, all that has ever been, all that is, all that will be is already encoded into this document that appeared on Earth 3,000 years ago. It's a quantum map of all possibilities. So, this is what the the scientists were struggling with. So, they said, "Okay, if we put in these 34 famous rabbis, uh let's see if their names are in there." Well, not only were their names in there, but the Torah identified the place of their birth, the place of their death, the years of their birth. What makes this especially credible is the experiment was conducted by a man named Harold Gans. He was the former senior cryptologic mathematician for the US NSA, the National Security Agency, the the top secret security agency, the cryptologic agency that uh is is dealing with so much of the the AI and things like that that we're seeing today. So, the Torah for this experiment, it exceeded the expectations. It didn't just reveal the names. It revealed the locations, the dates of the birth, dates of the death, cities where they lived, and all of these things. Uh and now the scientists were left with the question, how could the book 3,000 years ago, the Torah, have known about this information? Number one. Number two, this is where it gets really interesting, what else is encoded in that Torah? So, that began uh a series of experiments that continue to this day. So, let me talk to you a little bit about how information is encoded into the Torah, and then let's look at some of the codes that have been revealed, and I think you begin to see why it would be a really bad idea to use AI to rewrite the Bible when the first five books of the Bible include this mysterious document that we call the Torah. So, I'm going to begin uh every alphabet that has ever existed in the history of the world, without exception, has always been linked to to two levels of information. One is the information revealed through the words and the letters as we read them uh with the naked eye. All right? Secondly, every letter has always been linked to a mysterious number. No one knows for sure where the numbers came from, the numbers never change, they are constant. And it is through the mathematics sequences of the written words that the computer is able to to reveal deeper information in the Torah. So, what you're seeing on the screen right now, there's the Hebrew letters and then there are the values of those letters. Now, some people call this numerology, and I want to be clear, it is not. It is actually an ancient science called Gematria that was defined by 32 rabbinical rules in the 2nd century. So, in the 2nd century, there's a rabbi that identified 32 rules. If you're going to work in Gematria or sometimes called Gematria, you must follow these rules. Numerology is a later subset of the Gematria and is a looser subset. Uh numerology does not always follow all of the the rabbinical rules, those 32 rules. So, it takes a little bit more liberties. So, uh so, this is what we're looking at, and every every alphabet, uh English, cuneiform Sanskrit um uh Chinese, Arabic, I mean, every every language that has ever been created has these numbers. Some are acknowledged more than others. So, what happens with the Torah code? And this is going to go back to the original interpretation of the Torah and how it was received. If you watch Charlton Heston movies back in the in the '60s and '70s, ingrained in our minds, those of us old enough to have seen those, we see Charlton Heston coming down from Mount Sinai after he had an encounter with God. And in each arm, he's got a huge tablet of stone engraved with the Ten Commandments. Uh but also, it was said during that time the Torah wa --- oded into the Torah. I'm just going to tell you right now, everything that is queried is encoded in the Torah. The names of all the great wars of the world, what countries entered, the year they entered, the years the wars ended, who the leaders of the country were, the birth dates of the leaders, when the leaders died. It's not just bad things, good things have happened as well. The election of presidents, you'll see Obama is encoded in here. Uh Clinton was encoded in here. Trump is encoded for his first election was in the the Torah codes. Now, I I want to say something here. I'm going to be really clear about this. The Torah code does not predict what will happen. So you can't say what's going to happen in a certain year. You have to enter the keywords and the Torah will show you those words and how they're related to other events because they are all possible. And this is why this is so important. It appears to be a quantum map of all possibilities, not what must happen, but what may happen if nothing changes the events. So for example, when, after the fact, when the word atomic holocaust was entered into the Torah code. Now, I put this in here intentionally because I want you to see this. A lot of people are afraid that we're going to have an atomic war in Eastern Europe, in Ukraine, between Russia and America and in Ukraine. I'm not saying it's impossible for it to happen. What I'll say is that the Torah only identifies two places in history where the word atomic holocaust comes up. One of them is right here, the Jewish year 5705 or the Julian year 1945. 1945 is are the squares and the circle atomic holocaust. Look at they they intersect right there. What country? Japan. And you see that in the diamonds in the statistically significant distance from when this happened. So that did happen and we know that. This was Hiroshima. This was Nagasaki three three days later. The other place for the atomic holocaust was during the Cold War in the 1980s. And there were events that changed that outcome. And we don't see anywhere in the Torah codes, in the Bible codes, the word atomic holocaust again. Now, it doesn't mean that we couldn't have a nuclear limited exchange as they're talking about. One side you know, lobs what's called a a tactical nuke or something like that. But the holocaust where you see many mushroom clouds on the horizon wiping out entire civilizations does not come up again in the in the Torah codes. And I to me, I think that's good news. I wanted to share that with you. Kennedy's assassination was in here 3,000 years before it happened. When they entered the name President Kennedy, and you see it in the circle, it links into the words to die. And then right next to that in the diagonal is the city Dallas where it happened. How did the Torah know to link that information together? Then they went deeper. And here it is. Oswald was the name of the assassin. Now, there may be others involved, but Oswald is the one that was identified. He was a marksman and you see that in the the triangles. And and he was name of assassin who will assassinate. Very similar to Yitzhak Rabin. The the same thing here and you see that in in the square. Again, 3,000 years before it happened, 9/11. There was all kinds of Torah codes about September 11th. How it happened. Here you see in the circles Twin Towers. Right next to that in the in the diamonds are the word towers. It knocked down twice and then you see airplane off onto the side. Here's a a more detailed color-coded Torah sample where you can see the words murder, twin tower attack, thousands, the word Bin Laden comes up there as well. Also, on the right-hand side of the screen in the color is translated what you see on the left-hand side of the screen in color. And the right-hand side it's in English and left-hand side it's in Hebrew. So, you can see how all of this worked. Obama's election, here it is right here. Barack Obama, his name, you see it in the blue. Uh president, you see that in the pink. And the USA in the red, you see in the bottom. Uh your father, which is very interesting because he wrote a book about his father. Uh Islamic is intersex horizontally right above the name Barack Obama. Uh so, you see this revealed in the the Torah code. The origin of humans, I mean, this it goes on and on. We could spend all night on this. The origin of humans, where did we come from? Well, you can see when that was entered was DNA spiral in Adam was the model, the template from a code. And you see where these things inter- intersect. Suggesting that we're not the product of random evolutionary processes as I have said for 40 years. The evidence doesn't support that. The DNA evidence doesn't support that. One of the things that I'm just going to show you this this last one. What we see in the biblical text is that we are barreling down the road towards some kind of outcome. And you feel the events are accelerating. Feels like what people say, a rubber band is being stretched so tight, something's got to give. From the biblical perspective, that give is a a last great battle that will happen on the plains of what is called Armageddon near Megiddo in the Holy Lands. When you query this in the Bible, this is really interesting. Armageddon, Megiddo, Mount Megiddo. And by the way, if you're with us on any of our trips to the Holy Lands, we go to these places so we can stand and and have our experiential processes at these places. But what it says is Assad Holocaust. Assad, of course, is the president of of Syria. There's a lot of tension that is happening. There's a a war that's happening in Syria. Essentially, a proxy war between the US and Russia um in Syria right now. Uh it said Assad Holocaust, shooting from the military post. This is interesting because the Israelis have the high point looking down into Syria from what is called the Golan Heights. Uh and it says this is where the Battle of Armageddon will occur. The reason I want you to see this, look at what this says. Look at what I showed you in red uh up here. Well, first of all, it says it was supposed to happen, it could have happened in the year 2000. It says it was delayed. So, we did not have this Armageddon battle in the year 2000, but look at this. Look at this. In the year 1996, there were you see the squares right there highlighted in red are words that you will see come up in many of the Bible codes. And I think this is the reason I'm for this whole conversation. And those words say they're talking about a holocaust, a holocaust of Israel, you delayed it. And what they say is will you change it? There's a message encoded with some of the great the most horrible tragedies you could ever imagine that are identified when when you put the words in, they come up and they say, "Yeah, they're a possibility." But then the code comes up and look at what it says, "Will you change it?" This implies that this code is not predicting what will happen, it is a map of possibilities, a map of potential, and that we always have choice. We always have free will. And I wanted you to see that here. Will you change it invites us to shift that timeline, to to make choices so that the timeline leading to a holocaust doesn't happen. The same thing happens with the atomic holocaust of the world, the great battles of the world, all of the horrible things you can imagine. Will you change it? It's up to us. We have a choice. So, I wanted you to see this. I want you to see this because your name, as I mentioned, your name is in the Torah codes. Every name of every human I've ever entered is in the Torah codes. We're all in there because we're all in this together. Now, I wanted stay focused on the reason I'm sharing this with you. There was proposal for AI to rewrite the Bible. That would mean that AI rewrites the first five books of the Bible. That would mean that AI is rewriting the Torah. The Torah is a mysterious book of supernatural origin. It has to be because not even the best scientists today can create the dynamic hyper dimensional computer matrix that accommodates all of the choices and rearranges the matrix for individuals and collectively all at the same time. Hundreds and hundreds and hundreds of million times a day this is happening. What intelligence created this? I don't know the answer to that, but it wasn't humans. So, we already have a document from non-human or superhuman intelligence. We're only beginning to understand what it means. To rewrite the Bible would mean to rewrite that text or possibly to discount that text altogether. That is a really bad idea for all of the reasons I've just shared. Another thing that I want to say here, and I mentioned this in I don't want to be too redundant, but this was in the a previous video about artificial intelligence itself. AI operates on the algorithms created by humans. Those algorithms reflect the bias of the person creating the algorithms, what they believe to be true, what their fears are. And then the AI goes out into the World Wide Web, and it collects information. That information is the product of all the censorship and all the bias that we have had since at least since the year 2020. So, the AI that is proposed to rewrite the Bible, it's already skewed, it's already biased. That's not the AI you want to write the spiritual traditions for half or all of the world's religious traditions. So, this is where I wanted to go with this, you know. I mentioned earlier, and this is so powerful, in the book of Daniel, it actually says that the Torah is a code and that the code is sealed until the end of time. Here it is right here in the the blocks horizontal on the x-axis, "To shut up the words and seal the book until the end of time." The word time is cut off on the right-hand side. But look at what is in the circles, computer. The computer is what unlocks these codes. We now have the technology and we have the knowledge to unlock the codes that were left to us over 3,000 years ago. They were given to the people in the Middle East to preserve to the Jewish people. Not for them to hoard, but to preserve for all of humankind until the end of time when we could open those codes and reveal them to the world. And this is why in the the Hebrew traditions, every Torah that was created by hand, if one letter was miswritten, it said it could change the world forever. If one letter changed, and people said, "Well, that's crazy. How could that be?" You can see now how that could be because one letter would change the information that's contained in the Torah. In my humble opinion, there's some things that we don't want to mess with. And the Bible is one of those things. The world's religions, the last bastion of social coherency that brings us together, I think is worth preserving. You know, Albert Einstein said very famously that time does not flow only in one direction, and that the future exists simultaneously with the past. The Torah tells us that this is true, not as a religious document, but as a highly advanced, technologically sophisticated matrix of quantum possibilities that appeared on this planet 3,000 years ago and can serve us today. We have the knowledge and we have the technology. The question is, do we have the wisdom? The deeper question that we ask so many times, do we love ourselves enough to allow for the possibilities revealed through the Torah in our lives? Do we love ourselves enough to embrace the deep truth of what is revealed without judging who has preserved it or where it comes from? We're not going to have to wait long to find out how we answer that question because the heat is on, the pressure's on to know what is revealed in the Torah and to preserve it in the presence of AI rather than allow the AI to rewrite some of the most ancient and cherished traditions that right now are the basis of 56% of the world's population and the religions they believe in. So, once again, some things we don't want to mess with. The Bible's one of them. For