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some questions
For all the information packed into this work, it is very short, very direct. It is a starting point for further study. Some questions: why does the author tie his findings to the Gregorian Calendar? Is this calendar without error? How would his figures fit into the Hebrew Calendar? Why is it significant that the distance between Jerusalem and Babylon equal the years before Christ? Are there other mile/time connections of intrigue? What would a circle of X number of miles around Jerusalem encompass?
I found the chapter, "A third of time", most interesting; it hints at a cosmic (as opposed to the Gregorian) calendar of which we know almost nothing. It hearkens back to Genesis chapter one where Elohim sets the stars and moon in place to measure times and seasons. I would like to ask the author these questions.
[Monday, October 27, 2008]
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The Temple at the Center of Time
I found the book interesting, informative, and easy to read, even though I don't have a genius type mind.
[Friday, October 24, 2008]
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Hidden knowledge easily testable.
I can't say that I accept all the connections and propositions put forward. However many are easily checked. All you need is Google Earth / calculator / Wikipedia to verify the claims. They will shake you no matter what your belief system is.
The connections between the bible, prophesy and universal dimensions cannot be coincidental. It is fair to say that the book reveals knowledge encoded in the bible that was surely un-knowable at the time that it was written.
[Tuesday, October 21, 2008]
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