The Large Wheels
The entire bible prophecy code is found at an ELS of +1. This is the lowest ELS possible. (The bible code is in Hebrew, but the actual text of Daniel is in "Aramaic.) That is, the text reads letter by letter (spaces removed), rather than skipping over letters. The main code, which forms the hand, is at +1 ELS for this very reason: The "tekel" written on the wall by the hand of God was likewise worth but one shekel (of money).
That this is why the ELS is at +1 is borne out by the fact that from the tip of the index finger to the far corner bottom left are exactly 60 letters of text. Thus, the length of the hand is 60 letters wide---corner to corner. Now, the "mene" was worth 60 shekels in Babylon! But "mene" was written two times on the wall: Whereas the length of the hand is 60 letters wide, the width is also 60 letters high (on the 15-ELS matrix) from the thumb to the bottom. Hence we have a 'mina and a mina.' It is the dividing ('uparsin') of this mina that contains the most remarkable riddle of the code. For hidden within this hand is another complex bible code that uses an ELS of multiples of 5, for a total of 60, spanning precisely the said length of the hand. We already saw that the five corners of the hand says, "They will be Who they will be, which is the Lord." "Jesus is Lord!" Starting from the bottom left corner, and ending at the top right letter on the index finger, it reads: "What I am, I will not be." Here we have a most amazing riddle. The bible code answers its own riddle with a question: "Will (he be changed) into a man?" But the way it asks and answers this riddle is most amazing! As said, the mina was worth 60 shekels and the 60 letters of the hand in width and length represents the 60 shekels of the mina/mina. But what about the 'peres' (i.e., uparsin)---the dividing of the mina? The prophet Ezekiel has the answer. He divides the mina (mina) into 3 parts:
Note how the code uses Ezekiel's very same dividing ('peres') of the mina: I.e., 20 + 25 + 15 shekels/letters = 60 shekels! Starting bottom left we have But how can such a statement apply to the immutable God? The only logical answer to this riddle appears when the very same letters are read in reverse, this time at 15 letter skips: Therefore, the hand that wrote mene-mene-tekel-peres on the wall is itself constructed according to the meaning of each of these same four coins!
See also the mene-tekel bible code
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