FACT 2003 - Cosmic Codes - Part 3 - Chuck Missler

Video Statistics and Information

Video
Captions Word Cloud
Reddit Comments
Captions
[Music] [Music] well i promised some wild things let's just jump into this third session and we're going to talk about microcodes and meta codes and we'll touch on extraterrestrial sources and they'll we'll finish with the ultimate code so uh there is an area of crypto cryptology that we haven't talked about i won't go into it likely just to make you aware of it and that's it's sort of a field of cryptology and that's where you're trying to find the language of a lost culture and the rosetta stone being a classic example which tied together hieroglyphics demotic and greek and uh the uh trying to decipher hieroglyphics is this kind of pursuit and uh also the uh cliff of bahisten is another example it's sort of a rosetta stone kind of thing on the on the famous uh cliff of the history which also tied together a number of ancient languages and so these are exciting things if you're interested in this i encourage you to get the literature some great adventures with great minds unravel this in the past but the one the area that intrigues me particularly i think many of us is this whole area of extraterrestrial communication it may surprise you to discover that that is a field of science a field of inquiry and the whole idea now product osmo is one of these attempts to to search for outer space other civilizations out there the one that intrigued me the most is seti communication for extraterrestrial intelligence there was a conference in 1971 but with the national academy of sciences they met 81 of the top scientists in bukharitan in russia and what was interesting about this very closed group where they explored the communication of extraterrestrial intelligence uh and you know we're doing they're they're still doing uh other ones with seti and so if you probably heard about it but they used the green bank formula uh what they did was that this was the sort of the the format for the conference and in trying to estimate the number of civilizations in our galaxy that might exist they took the rate of star formation which is one field of science the fraction of those that might have planetary systems is another area of inquiry and of those which planets might have a life capable ecology and that is a whole nother set of scientific speculations then the fraction of those on which life actually occurs and the fraction of those in which intelligence beings might develop to achieve a communication phase and then the and then of course the mean lifetime of these things well anyway by formatting the confidence way they had experts from all fields of science and while they were focusing on trying to estimate the possibility of life in outer space they inadvertently were evaluating this whole hypothesis of evolution and what's interesting about the conference the proceedings are available in the technical in the technical journals published by the mit people what's the translations it's interesting that they come up very pessimistically because they finally acknowledge that the conditions are so rare so unique it's constant makes the very advent of life virtually a miracle but it was strange to hear these scientists inadvertently come to that conclusion in it so to speak through the back door and uh but rather provocative but this whole area of extraterrestrial languages is an interesting there have been a number of and i will go through these academically we've got more important things to talk about but there are a number of studies that have tried to figure out what are the requirements to create a language if you did encounter some kind of extraterrestrial intelligence and the uh and of course these have also not only they're serious scientific inquiry but they also generate uh uh novels and other things that we've run into but um you may recall on uh phoenix 10 they had a plaque which they was a designed hopefully to communicate whoever might find it out there uh that there's life they had the silhouettes they had the binary equivalent of various decimal figures they had a model of the solar system and uh things that would cause anyone finding this to infer that it came from people who knew something about the solar system well who knows that was but this whole area of a language how would you recognize a language that was designed for extraterrestrial communication it's an interesting problem and they're serious people have been playing around with this would would this be what would be the characteristics of such language would it be phonetic hardly because we don't know if they even have audible communication pictorial is a possibility or would it be conceptual some way how would it be self-parsing if you have a stream of these this language how would you indicate the ends of words or sentences and things and how would you use redundancy versus bandwidth you try to compress as much information as you can in the bandwidth available on the one hand at same time you need some redundancy to allow for errors and things so there's a trade-off there well what uh let me explain a little bit about redundancy these letters that i put up here i'm going to use them two ways these letters if i add on the screen a few other letters a blessed friend brought breath and ease again that makes sense i can take the same basic letters and just change a few i'll say in the same root letters and i could say a cursed fiend wrought death disease and pain in other words only a few letters in that sentence carry the real meaning the rest of those letters on the screen are really redundant see english for example is about 75 redundant now i'm speaking in terms of the unnecessary letters i'm not talking about being laid off i understand the word redundant here in britain has a little different uh connotation redundancy in language improves the signal and noise ratio if you have adverse jamming on the one hand on the other hand it uh it uses up bandwidth cryptanalysis of course requires it depends on redundancy one of the ways you can compress languages is to drop the vowels you'll discover that in in manual cryptography you generally drop the vowels and communicate just the consonants and that's adequate and it makes the code much harder to break vowels are generally also redundant there's a few exceptions and so with that little sort of perspective we're going to explore a language that's dear to us for some other reasons and discover that it has characteristics that are absolutely unique uh on the planet earth and that's hebrew it's interesting that in genesis chapter 11 verse 1 it says the whole earth was of one language and one speech so all languages on the earth derived in genesis 11 from a single language and there are many scholars that suspect i wouldn't say they can prove it but suspect that that original language was in fact hebrew but let's move on remind you that this rabbinical proverb that we really won't understand the scriptures until the messiah comes and when he comes he will not only interpret the passages the words the very letters and even the spaces between the letters so we're going to start looking at what i call microcodes the the the the small part i mentioned before that matthew 15 17 18 enforces this where jesus himself says think not that i've come to destroy the torah or the prophets i come not to destroy but to fulfill for verily i say unto you till heaven and earth pass one heart or one tittle shall in no wise pass from the law till all be fulfilled well the hebrew language it's interesting that there are languages that have pictorial ideograms uh seminames as well as phonies most of us think of sound most alphabets are phonetic and they can deal with phonemes but it's amazing to discover that the hebrew language isn't just phonetic the letters themselves intrinsically carry meaning let me give you some examples the first letter in the hebrew alphabet is the aleph the university of arizona has pointed out to me that if they can teach the kids how hebrew was written before the babylonian captivity which was written in a different style a more more pictorial style if you learn hebrew the way it was written before the babylon captivity and can translate that to how it's written today you can do this probably in an hour then you can read about 80 of hebrew and that's a shock let me give an example what they're talking about the aleph the first letter of the hebrew alphabet that's where we get alphabet by the way it's a hebrew word incidentally but the aleph was originally written as you see it on the left on the screen sort of like a longhorn stare it represented an ox so the aleph represented is the first letter so it also opens first but because it's the ox it also suggests strength or the leader is what the the the the the it's the conceptual that the uh the conception that the uh letter conveys the second letter in the hebrew alphabet is they bet and uh that it is written on the right you see the way it's written today that's since babylon but in the early days it was just written like like a little line with a teepee on it or a tent it was it's a house that that bet turns through the centuries you become rb if you will but the beth means house or family that's where we get bethlehem the house of bread or bethel the house of god if you will and so that that now what's interesting uh uh if you take the aleph and the bet together you get the leader of the house remember of course it goes from right to left backwards from our point of view see an elephant of beth is the leader of the house who's the leader of the house father this is the word for father abba father abba's daddy but uh father it's interesting what i'm trying to get across is the letters not only are phonetic the letters themselves carry meaning and that's that's distinctive that's unique and uh let me give you another example there's another letter called a hey it's just a breath and uh it uh originally may have represented like a hands lifted up or an open window it's all speculation but it's a hey it's a breath and it means either behold or revealed or also means wind or spirit when you put a hey in the middle of a word it typically represents the essence of whatever that word meant otherwise and so if you take the aleph and the bet and put a hey in the middle of it the alphabet was the father the hey means the essence of the father and that of course is the word for love ahab and it's it's in other words the essence of our father is love you begin to see how the letters themselves start to unfold the meaning not just the pronunciation of the word now you may recall in genesis 17 that abraham and sarai had their names changed and all that's changed is a hey is placed in them which of course is the breath of the holy spirit and uh so abra abraham becomes abraham and sarah has a as the a child now the other thing about hebrew that's provocative from a scientific point of view there are five letters in their 22 letter alphabet there's five additional letters that are different if they are the last letter of the word they're written differently which realize the ancient language they call it scripture continue they didn't have spaces between the words if you read the ancient languages they're typically a stream of letters and one of your problems is how do you parse it you do it just by imprints in most cases but in the hebrew itself parsing so if if some imaginary foreigner received hebrew but had adequate computer skills they would find the language would ultimately be self-parsing now so the hebrew language is ideograms and phoenix together it's self-parsing the vowels are inferred the hebrews the vowels are infer the modern hebrew has little marks above and below the letters which are clues as to how it's pronounced but originally that wasn't that way but they were just inferred hebrew language maximizes the available bandwidth one of the things you'll just notice if you pick up an interlinear whereas hebrew with a translation you'll see just a few hebrew letters and whole words or phrases in the english it's much much more compressed and it maximizes the old bandwidth so interestingly enough if uh if i look at the languages available on planet earth the one that lends itself most suitably to the kind of uh inter-terrestrial kind of things we're talking about hebrew would be the choice but then one of the other things that comes up as you start talking about these things is the bible inerrant you know we're taught that we know that from from being properly taught and yet uh many people have a real problem with that i can remember when i was in high school i had a a friend who's who was the son of a unitarian minister so he knew his bible but they didn't take it seriously like us fundamentals did he used to kid me all the time said chuck you believe the bible's inerrant don't you yeah that's what i taught and says well what about first kings 7 23 and of course in first king 723 we have an interesting description of an object this is where solomon is preparing his temple and in the temple there is this what the king james calls the molten sea molten means it's cast and the sea it's a labor it's a huge wash bowl that the priests would do their ceremonial uh bathing in and it is said to be ten cubits in diameter and five cubits deep the cubit will assume here for convenience purposes about 18 inch dimension from the elbow to the fingertip and so uh the problem is is that it's described as 10 cubits in diameter and 30 cubits in circumference and everyone knows that every school kid knows that the circumference of a circle is not three times the diameter it's there's a strange number called pie which most of us in school probably approximated with the fraction 22 sevenths or three and a seventh but um in the engineering department they probably say 3.14159 or more and that's been calculated into hundreds and hundreds of decimal places for various reasons but the value of pi this peculiar odd number it's one of the constants of the universe and here apparently is an error because this thing is described in terms that are mathematically unsound and i remember being confronted with this and i didn't have an answer in high school i just took it on faith if i could put it that way freaking the day would come when somehow that would unravel well and some people by the way do try to make a argument that's uh that there's a handbrake thickness of the thing and and if you take the you use the hand breath and you take one measure from the inside the other from the outside you can sort of get around this but it really never was convincing to me but i had a rabbi explain something to me here is the passage as it's translated in the english and he made a molten sea ten cubits from one brim to the other and it was round all about his height was five cubits and a line of 30 cubits did compass at round about in the hebrew as you see below this remember it goes from right to left when you get to the word for circumference it turns out to be misspelled now the masoretes when they found something like that they didn't correct it they marked it and uh put what is the correct version in the margin the error apparent error was called a cathedra and the marginal correction was called a kiri and there is one of these on this passage in 1st kings 7 23. well it turns out of course as you probably know there's two languages on the planet earth that have a strange characteristic the letters also have numerical values hebrew is that way and also greek is that way and we're gonna exploit both of those before we're through the session but the every letter in the hebrew has a numerical value the aleph is one the beth is two and so forth and the larger ones have larger values the final uh forms of the last uh there's actually 22 letters plus five formal forms a total of 27 altogether but the point is the if you look at the cathedra it is misspelled you see the proper way to spell this word for circumference is a cop finn ave but in the text here it happens to have a hey at the end a breath not a big deal but strange well the cuff has a value of 100 the valve a six and the hay of five the the the carry has a value thus up to the 100 plus six or 106 but the way it's spelled in the text is a hundred and has a value of 111. well when you apply that to the thing it turns out that you take this 46-foot circumference and it's specified to an accuracy with an error less than 15 thousandths of an inch if you understand the hebrew structure here and that was startling to me i thought that was rather fascinating and so there in the in the original text it has a an amendment here that's relevant and you find more and more of those there i didn't put it in the slides because it gets too complicated but i'll just throw out verbally here the there is a formula for the new moon that was kept secret among the rabbis until relatively recent years but applying that encrypted algorithm for the new see the problem with the new moons it's what in computers they call a three-body problem because it affects the earth the sun and the moon to calculate it's very complicated but the precision of the hebrew uh it rivals our satellite data today by the way they do that so it's amazing some of these are tucked away but i was uh david reserve highlighted something to me that i thought i'd throw in here if you take genesis 1 1 and you take the number of letters times the product of the letters and divide that by the number of words the product of words you get the value of pi to four decimal places well that's kind of curious but if you take if you go to john 1 1 and do the same thing you take the number of letters times the product letters the number of words times the product of the words you get a different number that is that is the euler the e that comes up in advanced mathematics the e and the and the pi are the two basic constants of the universe and it's startling to find those apparently uh embodied in the first verse of genesis 1 and the first verse of the gospel of john both of which talk about the creation of the world so that's kind of fun but isn't the bible fun more stuff it's inexhaustible which is what you'd expected if it's the word of god let's shift to another thing i'd like to deal with some of these translational problems most of you are familiar with zechariah 12 10. it's an old testament allusion to the second coming of jesus christ it says i will pour upon the house of david upon the inhabitants of jerusalem the spirit of grace and of supplications and they shall look upon me whom they have pierced and they shall and it goes on this this phrase they should look upon me whom they appear is one of the several reasons we feel that jesus christ when he does appear will still be bearing his with the scars the only man-made things in heaven will be scars um but there's something about the translation here that is worth mentioning i find interesting if you look at this in the hebrew you'll discover that if you say in a linear every word is got you know a part of the english translation except there's two letters that are not translated and an aleph and a towel now the aleph and the tower often used as a grammatical device to indicate a direct object but it has some other uses also when it's when it's used as a grammatical device it has a mcaf a little hook to the other to the word that's directly here though it says they should look upon me and then there's an elephant a towel untranslated whom they have pierced well um as i said it used the elephant tau can be a grammatical element and but then it's usually has a mcaf it's has it can be used a pronoun to indicate the second person masculine singular and it also could be an indefinite pronoun but this may be what's called a hypocastis which is a greek term meaning putting down underneath there there are spec there are figures of speech in the bible allegories types similes metaphors how many different kinds of parts of speech do you think are in the bible make a guess over 200 and they're catalogued as an appendix in our book but hypocatasticism is one of them and this could very well be you see that's a hidden but declarative implied metaphor expressing a superlative degree of resemblance the aleph and the tau that make up this puzzling little drifter this little word the aleph is the first letter of the hebrew alphabet the tau is the last if i said this in the greek they shall look upon me the alpha and the omega whom they've pierced but it's in hebrew they shall look upon me the aleph and the tao who they pierced you get the point i'm trying to make the same thing occurs in genesis 1 1 we never see this translated the argument is well it's really there for grammatical purposes maybe maybe not in the beginning god created the heavenly earth in the beginning created god the heaven and the earth but here again we've got this little floater that is untranslated in the beginning god the alpha and the omega using the greek idiom they're more familiar with create the heavenly earth in the beginning god the aleph and the tau created jesus christ is the creator of the world that's what he's that's what john opens his gospel with the three verses that make up the genealogy of the pre-existent one and that's what paul confirms in colossians without him was not anything made that was made without him all things are held together this little floater i'll call it occurs seven times in genesis chapter one and uh so it's a point of debate among scholars but i think it's something that is interesting again the new testament is in the old testament concealed the old testament new testament revealed let's talk about another thing we talked earlier about authentication one of the uses of secret codes isn't just to convey information another use of them is to authenticate a message if you're say an undercover operative in a foreign country and you're starting to see all kinds of messages and you suspect that maybe the message you're seeing aren't from your your your boss but their uh spurious messages uh developed by your adversaries how do you tell the good messages from the bad without blowing your cover in the country what you've got to do is look for properties that only your source would know about or a clues that that he would take advantage of stuff that your adversaries don't know about well let's take a look at what's called the heptatic structure of scripture imagine you all have notepads there imagine you can do this i won't do this literally but you i want you to imagine me giving you an assignment i would like you to draft from fiction doesn't have to be a real one a genealogy how many could with a scrap of paper draft an imaginary genealogy of a family how many could do that well you could sure everybody could okay but i'm going to give you a few rules first of all i would like when you're through the number of words that you end up with to be a multiple of seven exactly what i mean by that is if you take count up the words you've used divide by seven there's no remainder so either it's seven or fourteen or twenty one twenty is over you get the idea how many can still do that you could sure fudge that couldn't you okay except i got another rule i'd like to add i like the number of letters that you end up using to also be divisible by seven exactly well now that's a little trickier you see if the results of what you're doing are random you've got six chances of losing one of winning every rule of seven like this there are six cases that won't fit there's only one that does if you've got two rules you now have seven squared you've got 48 chances of missing and one of winning you follow what i'm saying okay well if i want the number of vowels the number of consonants also to be divisible by seven but i'm not through yet i'd like the number of words that begin with a vowel to be divisible by seven exactly i like the number words that begin with a consonant to be divisible by seven i'd like the number of words that occur more than once to be divisible by seven and those that occur in more than one form divisible by 7 and occur only in one form divisible by 7. in each case of course when i say divisible by 7 means 7 with no remainder i'm still not through i want the number of nouns that shall be divisible by 7. only 7 words will not be nouns and how many and the number of names shall be divisible by seven how many are still playing i've discouraged you i think haven't i well only seven other kinds of nouns be permitted the number of male names divisible by seven number of generations and what you probably guessed is what i'm describing here are the first 11 verses of the gospel of matthew which is the genealogy of jesus christ and it's in greek not english in english you can fudge a little bit it's softer you can you can play games in greek every verb has to fit five conditions it's a very rigid type highly but probably the most precise language on the planet earth in terms of mathematical precision so playing these games is tough in greek but this is the genealogy of jesus christ and you get the idea here that this was designed this wasn't accidental now i'm showing you the discoveries of dr ivan penin he's born in russia in 1955 he got tangled up with a plot against the czar so he was exiled at an early age emigrated to germany and then to the united states he graduated from harvard in 1882 and he discovered christ now every one of us in this room that has discovered the lord jesus christ is the result of a miracle now if you're a phd from harvard and you discover christ that's a miracle indeed okay but he discovered christ and he also discovered shortly thereafter the heptatic structure of the scriptures this hepatic or seven-fold structure of the scriptures and uh he he committed the rest of his life some 50 years uh generating over 43 000 pages of discoveries written very small print and do this all manually of course and he went to the lord on october 30 42 but one of the things i want to share with you in your bible you have of course the gospel of mark if you look at the 16th chapter of mark the last chapter of mark you'll notice that there's probably a footnote that suggests the possibility that the last 12 verses really weren't there originally that they were added later that uh how many feeling how many have a footnote does to that is a rough effect okay let's see that's over half of you okay well the reason that's there is because there are a couple of texts that are from alexandria the alexandrian codices they happen to be the the oldest complete texts and uh the third fourth century kind of texts and some people regard them because they are it would seem to be the oldest that they're most authoritative that's one possibility it might be that these verses were added later or these verses may have been exported in that text and uh there are ways to get at this were these really added later or were they exported alexandria was the hotbed of the gnostics i might point out to you that these codices are fourth century and yet in these verses are quoted in the second century by irenaeus epiletus and several and this is several hundred years before the alexandrian codices so i can shred the idea that these verses were added later from history but i want to show i'm going to set that aside and show you something else that i think is interest there is a security system that has been working for you for more than a thousand years hasn't rusted won't wear out let me show you how it works the last 12 verses of mark are a subject of focus how many words are involved in the greek we're using the westcott and hort text here there are 175 words involved in the greek by the way that's a multiple of seven exactly seven times twenty-five well that's curious the number uh the vocabulary in those last 12 verses involved 98 words that's a number that's a multiple of seven exactly the letters in the last 12 verses of mark are 553 that's a multiple of seven exactly are you getting the feeling here something's going on now the number of vowels are 294 that's a multiple of seven exactly the constant's 259 it's a multiple of seven exactly let's go back to this vocabulary the vocabulary i said was 98 words 84 of those are found earlier in mark that's a multiple of seven exactly those that are used only here are a multiple of seven exactly those that are used in the lord's address which is a portion of that 12 verses is 42 that's the multiple seven exactly there are 56 that are not part of his normal vocabulary now what i've given you here is some rules now if i give you a rule one of these constraints as a mathematician would call it uh for every one of those there's six if it's random if this is a random process there are six chances of losing one of winning if i have two rules that's seven times seven so i have four one chance in 49 of getting it right the rest would be you know a loser so to speak if i have three rules that's seven cubed so there's one chance in 343 of that pro that feature being there as a result of random chance you follow what i'm saying the more unlikely it is to be a process of random chance the more it argues that it's there deliberately somehow and if i have four of these rules that's seven to the fourth so if i have four rules there's one chance in 2401 of this being by random chance well i've given you nine rules so far that and applying this logic that would imply that there's one chance in 40 million that this is this characteristic we're observing is by accident it obviously is deliberate now would you like to try this let's assume you say gee i i yeah i'd like to try this we won't we will put greek on you do it in english we'll let you work eight hours a day 40 hours a week 50 weeks a year give you two weeks off for vacation that's two two thousand man hours a year person hours a year excuse me girls and uh that in 10 minutes that's 120 000 minutes per year you've got to try apparently about seven to the ninth chances or 40 million attempts well if you can do an average of one draft of those 12 verses in once in every 10 minutes you can knock this off in about 3 362 years anyone want to try it gets worse these are the 12 last 12 verses of mark and i won't go through it in detail except to point out that the first two verses are the appearance to mary then there's a chunk of verses from 11 to 18 seven verses that are subsequent appearances and then there's two verses that wrap up the whole gospel so that's the way it's organized another way of cutting it would be the first uh five verses are simple narrative then the next um three four for the next four verses are christ's discourse and then of course the last two verses concluding it when we note with that in mind i mentioned these there's 175 words multiple seven exactly there are 56 words in the address of the lord that's mobile 7. the rest of the passage is 119 in multiple seven verses 9 to 11 which is a chunk of that is 30 is a multiple of seven and i won't go through each one each one of these natural divisions of the narrative involve a number of words that are multiple of seven precisely and uh but it goes on greek like the hebrew also has numerical values for each of the letters that means that any word has a numerical value as well as the letters and this this is called gamatria if you take the 12 verses of mark and add up the numerical value of all the letters involved that number also ends up being a multiple of seven exactly strange that's tough to simulate by the way and again if i take these verse divisions we find the geometrical value is also the first word last word so forth are are all multiples of seven exactly the uh i talked about vocabulary 98 words which is mobile seven not before in mark found later in the new testament they occur 35 times multiple seven their numerical value is also a multiple of seven and so on it goes on like this and i'll spare you the long version except just to highlight a couple of interesting ones here there is a word a word for deadly in the greek that's not found elsewhere in the new testament only here in the new testament it has a numerical value of 581 that's a multiple of seven exactly it's preceded in the vocabulary by multiple seven exactly and follows well i've given you 34 rules or characteristics or constraints and that turns out to be a very very big number very big number it's turns out that you need about five times 10 to the 28th tries if you did this by just brute force or ran you know trying it in iran in a straightforward fashion there are about three times ten to the seventh seconds in a year now to try this to to in your excuse me in your imagination you're going to try and do this yourself i will give you a computer i'm going to give you a super computer that will do 400 million tries per second every second it'll do a complete draft and test it against these rules it'll do 400 million of those per second well at four times ten to the eighth tries per second that would take about 4.3 million computer years in other words if i gave you 1 million super computers it would take you 4.3 million years to pull this off anyone want to try well let me rephrase the question does anyone think that some scribe did this by hand i don't think so and i only gave you 34 rules dr penin has identified 75 for this passage so i think that's kind of fun see this is one of the reasons we recognize there's a comprehensive design let me give you another one new testament consists of 27 books right each book has a first word and a last word if you take the terminating words of each of the books of the new testament there's 27 books times two first and last you get 54 words the total vocabulary of these words is 28 different words that's a multiple of seven exactly really i wonder how that was engineered did all the writers conspire to design their manuscripts to meet this i don't think so the gospels alone are multiple seven the total gemetrical value again is a multiple of seven exactly the value of the shortest word in the new testament is one letter has a value of 70. it's multiple of seven exactly here's the one i like best the value of the longest word in the new testament is apocalypses and it is a multiple of seven exactly in fact it's seven times six times six times six i think it's kind of fun but here's the one that's the cootie graph for me buried in pan and stuff i happen to stumble into it the vocabulary that's unique to matthew is a multiple of seven it's 42 his vocabulary occurs at 42 42 words uh multiple of seven exactly with 126 letters multiple seven exactly now the only thing that this vocabulary has as its attribute is that it's they're words that are only used in matthew nowhere else in the new testament you follow me so far question how was this organized let's assume that matthew was trying to do this on purpose how would he organize that these were this particular list of words a multiple seven exactly would not appear anywhere else in the new testament there's only two ways you could do that one is by getting prior agreement with all the other writers of the books that would be ultimately absorbed in the canon how many think that happened of course not well the other way you could use this as an argument that matthew had to have written his gospel last the theory being that he could lay out all the other books that have been written and find those words that only he uses and nudge that around so it's a multiple of seven exactly so that's i could use that as an argument that god that matthew's gospel was written last gospel matthew's written last the problem is so is the gospel of mark the gospel of mark has a vocabulary that's unique to mark that's not used anywhere else in the new testament and it's a multiple of seven exactly but so is the gospel of luke it was written last whoops so is the gospel of john written last see the point is these things couldn't be organized if they wanted to and by the way so is james peter jude and paul each one was written last they each have a vocabulary unique to them that is a multiple seven exactly and by the way these words that are unique bridge the old new testament the word hallelujahs appears 24 times the old testament four times the new that's 28 altogether multiple seven exactly the word hosanna is once in the old testament six times the new again it's mobile all these words uh jehovah sabayoth corbin there's a number of words that are used a multiple of seven exactly if you stitch the old new testament together i think that's kind of fun i promise you though that we would focus on the ultimate code in a coding sense it's the ultimate code and the ultimate code of course is guess who you do what library the books in this library are read more often than any other library in the world the answer is your dna you have a master record and it is unraveled copied and rolled up in ways that defy one's imagination that's but i won't get into much of that because that's peripheral to our main interest here the elements of language include semantics the position of things remember paul revere's ride what if by land two if by sea it also has a syntax the lantern had to be in a particular place in this case in the famous poem it had to be in the old north church see the most advanced computers could not have broken paul revere's code why because it was a code not a cipher it was just arbitrary but still had semantics and so there are very simplex alphabets we've talked about those but it may surprise you to discover there are codes that are error detecting when you send a a byte in a computer it's you have an extra bit or so that's called a parity bit which is always either odd or even so they can tell if you've dropped a bit and transmission it's a way of catching mistakes if you want to add not one bit but three bits to that byte you can make it error correcting you can make the three bits determine the position of the error and if it's binary you can obviously reverse it so there are codes that are error detecting and they're error correcting the fs u27 i remember was a strange machine you could take a card and pull it out while it was running and it would continue going because the logic and the thing was designed around error correcting coding yes you had 11 bits per byte not seven but it it when you're dealing with the ultra reliability it's worth it's worth the payoff in some cases so there are also codes that will modify themselves their adaptive coding they'll adapt to syntax and so forth why am i getting i'm not here to explore those codes except to point out one of the most advanced codes known to man is in our dna what people overlook about your dna is your dna is a three out of four error correcting self replicating code and there's probably not one engineer in a thousand that would know how to even go about designing one of those and yet of course we're taught it all happened by chance you and i are just random results of randomness you know it's amazing we found the most insulting god to adventure the ancient pagans worshiped they attributed their creation to gods of stone or iron or wood whatever we've found a more insulting god of all we attribute it all to randomness god wasn't even necessary god is offended by not being worshipped or putting our worship to these false gods but what's even more insulting is deny that one is even necessary but anyway in the dna code we have over three billion elements defining the manufacturer and the arrangement of hundreds of thousands of devices i used to be a senior executive ford motor company one of our proud um facilities in the united states was the river rouge plant it has 97 miles of railroad in it raw limestone raw ore comes in one end they make their own glass their own paint their own steel as well as cars new cars come out the other end it's the largest integrated manufacturing facility in the world so it's worth the tour if you're in the region your simplest cell is more complex than the river rouge plan it involves the simplest cell is an entire city with garbage disposal facilities manufacturing plants input output controls gates gateman it's astonishing the complexity of the simple cell but anyway the dna code consists of unique assemblies they selected from over 200 proteins each involving over 3000 atoms in three-dimensional configurations and it's all defined from an initial alphabet of 20 amino acids and those 20 amino acids are defined by in effect four codes the genetic code where it's so much in the news i'm just going to highlight a few aspects of this that you may not be sensitive to from a coding point of view in your in your cell there is your dna that is your master record your master blueprint to conduct all the things that are going on they don't endanger that they make a copy of it for the workers there's a transcription that makes the rna which you can look at like a photocopy of the master blueprint and then that rna is translated to create the proteins which are in effect functional machines and what's in the the crick dog of course was that you go from the dna through the rna you go downhill that is the shocking discovery is that there are reverse retroviruses that will actually not only create disease it'll go back and alter your master record and that's a whole other thing but i want to mention something about the dna being transcribed the dna before it's made in the rna something interesting happens that there are sections of it that are selected out and what's remained is spot spliced together that once remain the introns are pulled out the exons are spliced together point i'm making with your background from yesterday you realize these are equidistant letter sequences this is a form of encryption that we find in the bible and you find in your dna and of course it's a three out of four error correcting code the dna has a certain chemistry we have uh these have intrinsic chemical affinity towards one another so where you have one you have its mate and this this kind of coding stream allows you to split it and it will find its mates it's an intrinsically self-replicating code it'll copy itself without error and that itself is an interesting design feature it's intrinsically self-replicating what's interesting about the coding structure these three out of four codes will specify any of the 20 amino acids you need for the proteins plus leave some over for punctuation you have start control start stop controls that kind of thing so you have an alphabet designed here that is operative and your messenger rna of course needs to be translated into proteins so there are machines that that emerge out of all of this that are will transfer the rna and what it does it will read that code and decode it and as it moves along it knows from the coding what protein it's talking about and it strings those along to create a protein chain and that protein chain has characteristics that will cause it to form a three-dimensional machine and the actual chemical equations are not critical here except to notice that they they're unified in terms of the way they connect to one another and there are 20 amino acids that make up all of life these 20 amino acids half of them are non-soluble half the other half are soluble some of these are acidic some are basic but because of these characteristics being polar and nonpolar they will when put in a chain adopt a unique three-dimensional configuration to become the machine that is required and uh so this is all uh the negativity groups charged with the positive in the hydrophobic are some attack in the center some outside i don't get that here other than to say the final stable 3d shape is a is the minimum energy configuration that's dictated by the specific sequence that the dna has has specified so you go from these complex specifications into a error correcting mechanism to produce several hundred thousand different types of machines and other functions well just a review remember we talked with the beads the other day and we talked about could these beads have random and you quickly rejected the idea that 347 beads with only alphabet of two could be assembled in you know more genesis 1 1 and morse code that was obviously absurd that was a probability of simply call it three times with times 10 with 104 zeros even that instinctively you knew was impossible because 10 anything with over 50 zeros was defined as observed just by way of reviews well we were talking about a binary string of 347 we're going to talk about a hemoglobin molecule that has 574 elements selected from an alphabet of 20. and hemoglobin is a 574 amino acids long and here's the here's the composite of them there's elements of all these different amino acids in a specific sequence and if you don't have that sequence you have hemoglobin apathy it's fatal the formula for the linear arrangements is is a factorial thing is anywhere it's 10 to the 600 with 650 zeros just one of them is hemoglobin the others are hemoglobinopathy so did this happen by chance hardly this is vastly more absurd than the little bead thing i did yesterday impossible by the way it's only 18 seconds in the history of the universe see these are big numbers 10 to the 66 atoms 80 particles um 10 to the 80 particles and so forth so the specificity of hemoglobin is far beyond chance 10 to the 50 defines observed 10 to the 650th is far beyond chance it's equal by the way to give you a feeling for this it's equal to winning the lottery in the united states not two days in a row every day for 90 days in a row that's another way to get across the unlikelihood of it all there's another concept that you want to be aware of that if you you really there are three guys that in my mind have totally shredded the whole idea of evolution the evolutionary hypothesis um michael denton the the australian in 1986 his book evolution ethereum crisis he's not a christian or he's a scientist but he points out all the problems that modern science that the evolution is no longer viable for modern science but michael behe philip johnson william dempsky three different guys writing three different books in recent years have absolutely rendered evolution to an illogical uh position and you're not familiar with these books you may want to philip johnson wrote darwin on trial should be in every thinking person's library michael b he wrote darwin's black box william dempsky a little more sophisticated writer in some respects but the design inference these are three books that are uh not christian books don't misunderstand me but they clearly highlight the absolute absurdity of the evolutionary processes michael behe highlights a concept which he calls irreducible complexity and it's a very interesting concept every engineer here will pick up on it right away there there is a point of complexity that you can't get below let's take a mousetrap a mousetrap consists of five things you know a platform it has it has a hammer you might call it a spring to drive that hammer a holding bar to hold it back and a catch to hold the holding bar if you have those five elements you've got a mouse trap that'll catch mice if you have only four of the five elements you don't catch four fifths as many mice you catch zero see there's a point at which you can't simplify this and have it still function people have tried make a better mousetrap try it can't then it is it survived all these years it's an example of irreducible complexity there's certain things that you that can't evolve because it takes a certain level of complexity before they're even functional and let's take the bacteria with a flagellum you've probably seen them under microscopes in school flagella has a little tail that propels it through the fluid if you if you if you examine that there's a place where that little tail the flagellum enters the the uh the bacteria and we're going to look at just the place where it enters and we discover something very interesting there is an what's the equivalent of an electric motor with slip rings all kinds of over 40 parts any one of which is missing it doesn't work and so this is not something could have happened it's something that was very skillfully designed anybody's ever been on a design team knows that designs don't happen they have to be crafted and i won't get into more that's the basic see the real question the reason the the the evolutionists can't explain life it's not the they can't explain which came first the dna or the proteins you you can't have proteins without the dna you can have the dna without proteins it's even deeper than the chicken egg classic one it takes protein to construct the dna it takes dna to make the protein see they both had to be created at the same time in a in a consistent system architecture which came first the dvd or the dvd players they have to come together to create a function that's useful if you have dvds without dvd player or vice versa you're you're dead in the water same sort of concept every engineer would know that the whole concept of evolution is absurd and by the way thoughts in language are conceptual not physical in the first place and so uh so we've gone through some of these let me just hit one last thought that you might find provocative the technology of the resurrection we've talked about coding information sciences people often ask you know do you guys believe in the resurrection you know how how how what happens to the guy that's been eaten by a cannibal how does he get resurrected or or what about the bodies that are at sea that get totally decomposed or you know they have all these problems with how what's the technology of the resurrection see what everybody overlooks is the whole issue of resurrection is not an issue of biology it's an issue of information see all atoms are fungible material if you have a hydrocarbon chemistry you've got carbon atoms hydrogen atoms whatever we have a hydrocarbon kind of chemistry carbon atoms or hydrogen atoms are fungible building blocks getting the getting the atoms to put together molecules ain't the problem the problem is the design all that is required for you to be resurrected is information all god needs is your dna and maybe a little bit more and this is dramatized in a piece of fiction recently called jurassic park michael crichton took a took some technology and made a very entertaining novel out of it made into several movies actually but the basic idea is very simple by capturing the dna of a dinosaur from a mosquito that's been captured in amber the idea was you get the dna and from that dna you could replicate the creature and that was what led of course to the plot but with the underlying technology there's very very provocative all you needed to recreate those creatures it would seem at least in concept is the dna of the original creature and so that puts a whole different complexion on this and uh uh uh frank tippler wrote a book the physics of immortality and he was an unbeliever but he decided to try to pull together everything that he's a cosmologist and also particle physicist very sophisticated mind and he wanted to take everything we think we know about the big bang in the beginning of cosmology that is commonly rendered and everything we think we know about the ultimate heat death of the universe not only is there a mystery of how it began it's also mystery how it's going to end presumably because everybody knows it's winding down there's an ultimate time when temperatures are uniform and there's no more work can be done so there's we're in this in this parenthesis and so he wanted to try to tie all this together in a composite theory and as he pursued that project he came to some real shocking conclusions just from the laws of physics as as they're understood he came to the conclusion that god exists now you may laugh and say gee uh you know good luck to tracy i mean what's new no for to understand where he is coming from but the second conclusion he came to was rather provocative he came to conclusion that all life was destined for resurrection and he did that from the laws of physics in effect and that's very very interesting see many people don't realize that all people are destined for resurrection you see my real problem in this conference not just because the lighting is that i can't see you i can only see your temporary residences now i have a computer up here if you knew everything there is to know about this hardware every circuit every micro every uh microchip every element of the hardware could you tell me anything about its behavior not really because that hardware is simply the residence of software that's running the software can be in a discount of course now if i take that diskette a blank diskette and put it on a postal scale it weighs about seven tenths of an ounce if i spend hundreds of dollars hundreds of pounds and load that diskette with over a million bytes of software what will it weigh seven tenths of an ounce see software has no mass it uh in fact we can even uh yeah it's like a light switch it's on or off it doesn't change the weight of the switch it's just positional information same thing with the software that's on the diskette and so in fact i can send that software through the airwaves it has no mass which means if it has no mass it has no time now the real you i can't see you know some i can only see the temporary resonance you're in now some of our residences have a little too much mass that's a whole different thing but the real you i can see the real you is software not hardware call it soul spirit give it what vocabulary you like the real you is software not hardware the real you has no time dimension the real you is eternal whether you like it or not the dilemma is where are you going to spend it are you going to spend it the presence of god are you qualified to be perfect to be in his presence or will you be denied his presence you see you're in this little parenthesis that some people call a boot camp for eternity and so this time we spent exploring the coding and the information sciences i hope was well spent i hope you find that provocative
Info
Channel: Koinonia House
Views: 6,632
Rating: 4.9674797 out of 5
Keywords: jesus, christ, koinonia, house, khouse, institute
Id: Ovvx8gBO-OU
Channel Id: undefined
Length: 57min 9sec (3429 seconds)
Published: Sun Sep 12 2021
Related Videos
Note
Please note that this website is currently a work in progress! Lots of interesting data and statistics to come.