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Sto caricando le informazioni... The Chamberlain Key: Unlocking the God Code to Reveal Divine Messages Hidden in the Bibledi Timothy P. Smith
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Iscriviti per consentire a LibraryThing di scoprire se ti piacerà questo libro. Attualmente non vi sono conversazioni su questo libro. The subtitle to this book, “Unlocking the God code…,” might have put me off, as I’m seriously uninspired by Gregg Braden’s the God Code. But the author seemed similarly unconvinced about the earlier book—calling it “misleading and silly”—so I decided to give the Chamberlain Key a try. Reading like a cross between a memoir, spiritual journal, and persuasive argument, the Chamberlain Key starts from the author’s curious dreams and visions, follows with an intriguingly dangerous trip to camp with wife, children and friends in a frozen nowhere in search of… an unknown something; then continues into analysis of letters in the original Hebrew Bible. A forward by Eugene Ulrich confirms that the author used a viable source, but says nothing about his conclusions. Through hidden, untold tools the author purports to reveal hidden, untold truths in the Bible, starting with his own first name—ten characters long in Hebrew (if you call him Timotheus). By curious coincidence this is decoded from the same passage in Genesis that mentions Jacob’s six sons and one daughter by Leah… and the author, fourth of six sons and one daughter, has six sons and one daughter—proof perhaps that coincidences happen, or that the Bible has a code prepared especially for him. The code continues, with various changes of location, separation, translation (including Japanese) and illustration. Soon the images on the page look like a child’s wordsearch puzzle, and the nearness of so many words (suitably reinterpreted) is like that “Oh, that’s almost a word too” moment. The author blends Judeo-Christian faith with Native American methods of recording story to conclude that every letter position matters in the Hebrew Bible, and a secret message has been waiting for him to find it. Frequent mentions of “the only” name/date etc “encrypted by equidistance” in a particular style and situation might inspire “a research scientist in the pharmaceutical industry” but they lack mathematical/statistical substance. Mention of Nazis and 911 bear that all-too-common imprint of present day exceptionalism and end-times dreaming. The author clearly believes what he tells, but it reads like a tale of gradual separation from reality, exciting for those who accept the author’s conclusions, but frustrating, I would think to those same readers who disagreed with the Bible Code. Disclosure: Blogging for Books provided this book to me for free in exchange for an honest review. nessuna recensione | aggiungi una recensione
"Timothy P. Smith, heir to a renowned family business responsible for construction or renovation of some of America's most cherished landmarks, struggled to understand the significance of his recurring dream...until he had another dream -- one that identified a specific location where it seemed he might find answers to his questions. So Timothy drove to a remote spot in British Columbia. There the adventure -- which later led to a startling discovery in the oldest Hebrew text of the Bible--began. It took the convergence of the sacred text, one man's life, and modern computer technology to reveal messages that may explain dramatic world events, as well as influence every person alive today. Welcome to The Chamberlain Key." -- Amazon.com. Non sono state trovate descrizioni di biblioteche |
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Google Books — Sto caricando le informazioni... GeneriSistema Decimale Melvil (DDC)220.68Religions Bible Bible Interpretation and criticism (Exegesis) Mythological, Numerological, etc. InterpretationsClassificazione LCVotoMedia:
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I received a free copy from Blogging for Books in exchange for an honest review. ( )