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Moses and the Ten Code Systems

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There is a reason Moses had to create code systems when he wrote the surface story of the Torah. Moses tells us in Exodus 32:16 that “the tablets were the work of God, and the writing was the writing of God” That means he was stuck with a sequence of 304,805 symbols (letters) that he could not change, add or subtract. Therefore, in order for Moses to tell the whole story he had to create these ten code systems. Two of these code systems you cannot discover unless you come in through the sciences. This book for the first time covers the ten code systems. I can state without equivocation that you cannot figure out the Torah unless you come in through the science side of it. Most Students in secular universities, as well as religious seminaries are not taught about code systems within ancient writings. Instructors teach the surface history from textbooks that usually do not deviate from the “acceptable theories” of history or archeology. Sometimes a scholar will give one of his or her prize student some clues or hints that there is some code system within a particular work, but this is very rare. Moses is telling us that he did not create the design of the original letters or the sequence of letters on the two tablets. That means he had a very hard time creating a logical surface story. What he did was create ten code systems in order to tell a complete story. The code systems have to be known in order to uncover the short hidden stories Moses encoded in the Torah, and some of the codes have not been known for over 2,600 years. The code systems reveal the who Joseph was in Egypt; who purchased him for a slave; what he did in Egypt as prime minister; who was married to him; the location of the real Mount Sinai; the number of years between polar (geomagnetic) reversals, and much more. The author, Douglas Vogt, is the first person in 2,600-years to discover the real Mount Sinai and all the altars Moses describes in Exodus. He is also the only one since the First Temple period to discover the model that created the twenty-two letters of the Hebrew alphabet.

112 pages, Kindle Edition

Published April 17, 2016

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