The meanings of all 80 names from Adam to Jesus read sequentially reveals a bible code like no other. A secret message unravels; a prophecy with an awesome prediction.
The meaning of a name was very important in bible days. Sometimes the bible itself informs the reader what a name means. Famous biblical persons such as Adam, Cain, Seth, Noah, Abraham, Isaac, Jacob and his 12 sons, all have the meaning of their name explicitly given in the bible. Their names tell the story of why or how they were born.
Some have wondered if these names (with their meanings) were intended by God to be strung together in succession to tell some larger story. Already there have been attempts to string together the first 10 names in the bible from Adam to Noah. In general, this is what the first 10 names of the bible read when the meaning of each name is rendered in the order given in the bible.
"The God-man is appointed, a mortal man of sorrow is born! The Glory of God shall come down and teach that His death shall bring the grieving comfort and rest."
As we shall see, this astounding bible code continues to read in the very same way, using all 80 names in the genealogy of Jesus!
I believe that the "Names Code" is God's response to the erroneous "Da Vinci Code"; both "codes" being released to the public about the same time, both claiming to be a revelation into the lineage of Christ, the son of Mary.
"The book of the generation of Jesus Christ, the son of David, the son of Abraham," (Mat.1:1).
...the son of Adam, the son of God," (Luke 3:23,38).
For more bible codes see www.bible-codes.org.
Method of Decoding Names Code
1. Sometimes a word in Hebrew has a double meaning that is lost in the English. On a few occasions both meanings are used to bring out the full sense. This is especially true if the bible itself applies the meaning of a name in more than one way, therefore the same liberty has been taken in the code, (example, Perez). Our purpose is to decipher the names-code. It is not to burden it with a modern methodology that is foreign to both the bible and to ancient near-eastern culture. To do so would be a huge mistake. Our interpretation must remain within the boundary that the bible itself gives to names.
2. On a few occasions, (as with Uzziah/Azariah and Eliakim/Jehoiakim), the person had two or more (often similar) names. Their meanings have been rendered as a compilation of both.
3. Sometimes in the bible, one name has two meanings: the literal meaning and a meaning based upon another word that only sounds like the literal word. In other words, a pun. An example of this is the naming of Zebulun in Gen. 30:19-20. Also see the long list of puns on names in Jeremiah 48:1-9 and elsewhere, There likewise appears to be a few (not many) instances of this in the names-code, as with Kenan, Methuselah, Lamech, Arphaxad (both literal and as a pun), and perhaps Boaz. Also see note for Abraham.
4. On several occasions, a noun has been used as a verb, such as Serug, (meaning, "a branch"). Since it is in parallel with the verb before it, "to sprout", the meaning of Serug likely carries this same sense also. Moreover, there is also a reference in the bible to the branch of the Lord "branching forth", (Isa.11:1; Zech. 3:8; 6:12).
5. "And", "but", "of", "the", "is/are", "in", "to" etc., are included in the meaning as simple connector words, necessary in a code of this type, and not uncommon in normal Hebrew too.
6. Sometimes the names appear out of order to the English reader, but not in the Hebrew since the adjective usually follows the noun in Hebrew, and there are other such differences between Hebrew and English.
7. The context determines tense because tense can be blurred in Hebrew when dealing with prophecy, with the exception of Jeconiah. He had three names basically the same, two of which were exactly the same except for one being future and the other being past tense. Therefore, since the names themselves make this distinction, it is thus reflected in the code.
8. Wherever the code reads, "the Lord", it actually reads, "Jehovah" (or "Jah" as shortened), or as more correctly pronounced, "Yahweh". Jehovah is the personal name of God given to Israel by covenant at the time of the Exodus.
Again, see www.bible-codes.org for more information.
knossis1 4 months ago
@knossis1 Please see website in regards to your questions. Strongs is not the only, nor necessarily the best, source out there. A good researcher takes the time to use multiple sources. I have used about 15, plus I know Hebrew fairly well. See bible-codes. o r g. Moreover, as I state on my site, sometimes a name (just as it does today) has more than one possible meaning. Often the code utilizes all possible meanings. We need to enlarge our faith in a great God!
777Shekel777 4 months ago
hmmm i dont know, i mean i saw this on another you tube vid and that guy on the other one had these names and meanings as well but some of the meanings were different, as in a mortal man of is different, the glory of god is different,instructing that is different, i mean...hmmm
crazyknight2008 1 year ago
@crazyknight2008 The meanings you say are different, are in fact no more different than one bible translation is to another, even less so. The meanings are essentially the same. For example, the word for "the Glory of God", also can mean, "the praise of God". But the meaning is essentially the same. I choose the word "glory" over "praise" because it seemed to me to capture the intent of the meaning better. One is just the synonym of the other. The names, after all, are in Hebrew, not English!
777Shekel777 1 year ago 2