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Mathematics: The Language of the Creator w/ Marty Leeds - Connecting Minds Podcast Ep09 image

Mathematics: The Language of the Creator w/ Marty Leeds - Connecting Minds Podcast Ep09

Connecting Minds
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Watch this episode on YouTube: https://youtu.be/YHfO7sSxymo
Episode shownotes: https://christianyordanov.com/09-marty-leeds

Today on Connecting Minds we have Marty Leeds - author, musician, and content creator. His work covers  symbolism, mythology, numerology, gematria and sacred geometry. We talk about seeing the fingerprints of the Creator in the mathematics of the world around us, the human body, and even in various sacred texts like the Bible. Fascinating stuff!

Links to Marty's website and YouTube channel:

Marty's website: https://martyleeds33.com/
YouTube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCjcYXazpAS5g9uUEeQMAC4Q

Topics discussed on this episode: 

  • Marty’s background and work.
  • The mathematics in the world around us.
  • The fingerprint of the Creator found in the human body, for example on the hands.
  • The hidden numerology in the Bible and other sacred texts.
  • What is gematria?
  • The number 666.
  • The significance of Pi.
  • The shift in the English language that allowed encoding of certain numbers into various words and phrases.
  • Chess and the various things it encodes.
Recommended
Transcript

Introduction to Connecting Minds Podcast

00:00:10
Speaker
Connecting Minds is a space dedicated to honoring the amazing authors, researchers, clinicians, artists, and entrepreneurs who are contributing to our collective evolution or simply making the world a better place. These thought-provoking conversations are intended to expand our horizons, so come with an open mind and let us grow together. Here is your host, Christian Yordanov.
00:00:41
Speaker
Hello and welcome to the Connecting Minds podcast. My name is Christian Jordonov and thank you so much for joining me today.

Featuring Marty Leeds: Symbolism and Numerology

00:00:48
Speaker
On the podcast today on Episode 9, I have for you a conversation I had with Marty Leeds. He is
00:00:57
Speaker
an author, musician, content creator. He has a website and a channel on YouTube that is quite popular where he covers a lot of different topics, quite esoteric in nature. So he covers symbolism, mythology, numerology, gematria, sacred geometry, and other things. And so pretty fascinating stuff, which if you're at all interested in this kind of stuff, I'd highly recommend checking out his YouTube channel or his website.
00:01:25
Speaker
He has tons of videos covering all sorts of things from the hidden numerology in the Bible and other sacred texts to even the numerology in various events that happen around the world. I consider him a polymath because he just covers so many different topics that it's really difficult to pin him down to what is his niche in terms of the content he creates.
00:01:52
Speaker
I love his content. I wish I had more time to watch all of it. He is quite prolific lately, especially with what he produces. As I said to him during our conversation, one day when I take a slightly longer break from all the stuff I do, I'll definitely be digging hard into his reading list that he recommends on his website and just more into his content.

Sacred Geometry and Mathematics in Nature

00:02:16
Speaker
So today we just discussed the basics of his background, his work, how he got into all this stuff. And then he kind of goes into a little bit, he basically gives you a taste of how you can see the mathematics in the world around us. How you can see the fingerprint of the creator that can be found in the human body.
00:02:39
Speaker
the number of bones in our hands, in the spine, in the skull. It's actually fascinating once you kind of really get into that and how it reflects the moon cycles and so on. That's just a very simple example. And then we also talk about what gematria is, this way of encoding numbers into words and letters, the hidden numerology in the Bible and other sacred texts.
00:03:06
Speaker
Then we discuss certain numbers. For example, 666 is considered kind of an evil number or associated with Satanism. But is it really, is the question I pose to him?
00:03:19
Speaker
So I'd recommend if you enjoy this conversation to check out his work because we only scratch the surface of the surface really in an hour. It's fascinating stuff but you do need to spend a little bit of time digging into it for it to start making more sense. So I hope at the very least I peek some of you's interest into this kind of stuff because for many things in the world we have the exoteric or what the the eye plainly sees but there's a lot of
00:03:48
Speaker
hidden meanings and so-called esoteric meanings to many seemingly run-of-the-mill events and things and names and so on.

Life's Mysteries and Metaphysical Mathematics

00:03:59
Speaker
So there's a lot of mysteries out there that once you start digging around, it's really fascinating. But anyway, without further ado, here is our conversation with Marty Leeds. Thank you once again for joining me. Really appreciate you being here. Enjoy.
00:04:16
Speaker
Today on the Connecting Minds podcast, I have the honor to present Mr. Marty Leeds. Marty, thank you so much for spending some time with us today. Thank you. Thanks for having me. To start with, can you give folks a little bit of a background? What kind of stuff are you into and how did you get into it?
00:04:38
Speaker
I'm into everything. I'm basically into the mysteries, the mysteries of all being. That's, you know, I mean, I basically got started into being an author and orator or whatever lecture or that, you know, that sort of thing. Got into it with basically asking the big questions about life, why we're here, where, you know, where are we going? What happens when we die?
00:05:01
Speaker
What the heck was going on in the past all that sort of stuff and you know and then just a genuine pursuit of those answers. And so that led to essentially the core of what I do is a study of mathematics like a mystical metaphysical study of mathematics and understanding that mathematics and I mean number geometry that that whole cannon.
00:05:19
Speaker
is essentially a metaphysical language. And so I started there and that led directly into religion, mythology, I mean, archaeoastronomy, you know, whatever.
00:05:32
Speaker
looking at ancient buildings, cathedrals, tabernacles, pyramids, that sort of stuff. And that got into language, et cetera, et cetera. So I basically pursued the mysteries of life and through sort of a mathematical bias or through sort of a mathematical lens. And that led to what I'm doing now. And that includes, I mean, a total of seven books written and I don't know how many, eight documentaries and a couple hundred podcasts. And so a lot of work on the subjects.
00:05:59
Speaker
A lot of work, yeah. So where do we start with the mathematical stuff, the number stuff?

Mathematical Design in Anatomy

00:06:11
Speaker
I'd like to, on this particular episode, maybe discuss, and you can start this in any way you want, in any order that you feel is most appropriate to introduce the listener to it.
00:06:24
Speaker
Where where did your research land you so? Through all the I've seen your kind of some of your reading list on your website There's a lot of amazing books there that one day I hope to read as many of those but what? What's up with it? What's up with the numbers the mathematics of God? Well, can where can we can we see proof of those? I
00:06:48
Speaker
Okay, the first thing I think we have to do is and what I ended up doing through my own study was understanding what numbers are and that is that numbers and math being numbers and geometry itself is a metaphysical language and it actually perfectly defines
00:07:06
Speaker
That's not like some woo woo like new age kind of talk like a numbers and metaphysical mankind think it's like no the actual terminology metaphysical like the physical world we have the physical world that we can touch and measure and you know we can pick up and move and it's malleable and we can build and destroy and blah blah blah right we have the physical world.
00:07:25
Speaker
But then we have a world that's metaphysical, and that's meta literally means beyond. And that's what numbers and geometry actually are there. It's a language that has its stasis or has its foundation beyond the physical. And we can actually prove this to be so it's been known by all of the really the great thinkers and polymaths over the years, but that the
00:07:50
Speaker
The numbers geometry are a language. It's essentially the language of the creator. So we can see them, their qualities, their principles, their effects. We can see them in the physical world. And not only can we see them in the physical world, but we can prove that they exist in a metaphysical world. And we can prove that by the fact that numbers geometry have a universality to it.
00:08:14
Speaker
Okay, it is, it has a ubiquitousness to it. It has, it's always going to be what it is. And you can explain it simply this way. It doesn't matter where you're from, where you came from, what language you speak. If you're white, black, brown, yellow, red, it doesn't matter, you know, when you were born on this earth.
00:08:33
Speaker
Numbers and geometry will always be the same. If you say three, four, and that's a right triangle, we know that hypotenuse is gonna be five. Because that is a principle that is just, it's considered a theorem. And so theorems are universal. Math has that quality to it in and of itself.
00:08:53
Speaker
So therefore we can establish math as literally the math or the language of the creator and the creation itself. And so that's, you know, that's kind of what it's all about. So that's the first thing you have to do when we start talking about math because people can be like, oh, you can make math fit anything you want or they don't understand, you know, but we have to really step back and be like, well, no.
00:09:13
Speaker
what is this thing that we're dealing with here? Because not only do you have numbers, and those numbers have associating geometry to them, which means you have this abstract sort of notion that has like a literal building block to it in geometry. And then those numbers have qualities to each and every single one of them. Are they odd? Are they even? Are they prime? Are they non-prime?
00:09:36
Speaker
Is it a Fibonacci number, right? Blah, blah, blah, blah, blah. Those numbers have those qualities, a certain number of divisors, the geometry, all that stuff, and those numbers go into infinity.
00:09:48
Speaker
So you can go to the number eight and look at the qualities of the number eight and be like, hey, its divisors are one, two, four and eight, blah, blah, blah. And then you can go to the number one gazillion, eight hundred and eighty eight billion, four hundred and blah, blah, blah. And that number has an associating geometry and qualities and essences to it too. So the question becomes where the hell does all that come from?
00:10:09
Speaker
Well, we have to establish what it actually is. It has a metaphysical quality to it.

Numerology in Language and Religious Texts

00:10:15
Speaker
So that's where the study led me anyway.
00:10:19
Speaker
Right, right. Okay, so I like it when you, I think a good place to kind of start introducing folks is, I like when you talk about the human body and you start comparing the bones in the hand and how many days are in a moon cycle. Can you give that kind of, I really love when you talk about that stuff, can you show us
00:10:48
Speaker
how we can see that there's a design to the human body that we can talk about.
00:10:58
Speaker
That's really what the study of math will lead you to. So as I just explained, it has that universality to it, right? So as we said, like, hey, if I, you know, three, four and five, if I get that, you're going to get the same thing. If I have two eggs, somebody gives me another two eggs. How many eggs do I have? I have four eggs, right? It's, you know, this isn't, we're not yet in Orwellian speak where, you know, two plus one equals five yet. So not yet. We're almost there.
00:11:23
Speaker
You know, that is universality to it, right? Everyone can agree to that, right? So then you understand that that universality is not just between people, not just between cultures and different, you know, geography, different time and place, all that sort of thing. It's also as above and so below.
00:11:39
Speaker
which means that we can look up into and how we actually map and track the heavens and look below even onto the human temple and find the exact same mathematical patterns, but not just arbitrary patterns like, you know, prime, what am I saying, mathematical constants and things like that that are used within
00:11:59
Speaker
you know, every study of math, whether that's trigonometry or engineering or building or blah, blah, blah, blah, blah. So we can see those mathematical principles, universal constants, as above, so below, on the human body as above, right? So, and I'll just give you one example that a lot of people well know. Like if you look at the Fibonacci sequence, the Fibonacci sequence is a sequence of numbers that adds up and it's basically a natural growth, right? This will lead you to what's known as the golden mean and the golden section.
00:12:29
Speaker
And a lot of people know this. It's the classic swirl and things like that. And what that is, is it's basically a fingerprint of God's, you know, design or whatever. It's a design element of creation and it's called phi. Okay.
00:12:44
Speaker
Well, your body's built on phi, your hands built on phi, the cochlea of your ears built on phi. I mean, there's five proportions all throughout your body, but not just your body. You can find it on a dog, on a bee, you can find it on plants, you can find it on, I mean, animate and inanimate objects, everything from a shell to you. So you find all of that, it's like, okay, wow, that's everywhere in my creation. Then you can look up and find that pattern in the heavens as well.
00:13:14
Speaker
You know, we have 365 days of our sun, and that's a yearly cycle of the sun, and we have 225 days of Venus, and that's a yearly cycle of Venus. Well, 365 divided by 225 is 1.62. It's 99.98% correct to 1.618, which is what we just, you know, golden mean, golden section right there.
00:13:38
Speaker
So just something like that, the patterns and order between two heavenly bodies that will give you by simple division, one of these key numbers that you find all around in your creation. So the ancients just basically understood that.
00:13:55
Speaker
Any sophisticated culture that's been in our past that we can see with their building, whatever, their architecture, their language, blah, blah, blah, their religious books, you can see that they understood this very clearly and were trying to pass this wisdom on. And they could pass it on because they were passing on through the medium moon, which you could pass it on, which would be the universality of mathematics. So what about the hand?
00:14:24
Speaker
What about the bones of the hand? What can you tell us about that? Well, there's a lot there. I mean, there's a lot there. There's simple things to that, like
00:14:36
Speaker
Number one, there's just the power of your hands, especially in the Christian canon. You have the kingdom of heaven is at hand, which is a very petty poetic statement right there. A lot of people will gloss over these statements in the Bible and don't realize it's like, actually, that's very zen and very deep when you think about it. The kingdom of heaven is at hand because look at the symbolism of your hands.
00:14:58
Speaker
Your hands do everything you know they bring into. They bring your world into manifestation who you bring into your world you let your world who you love who you hate you know what I mean what you do with your hands do you spend all day on. You know watching porn and playing video games or do you go build houses for and do charity work or what whatever it is you know what I mean.
00:15:19
Speaker
your hands bring a lot of times your thoughts into manifestation, right? You do everything with your hands. Like I just said, you make love, you walk a dog, you plant your garden, you fix your house, you drive your car, everything with your hands. You read your holy books with your hands, you know? So that alone tells you that there's these just your hands itself are these powerful tools. Well, then if you just look down and you understand, once again, that there's intelligence within this creation, right?
00:15:47
Speaker
OK, and there's there's always this philosophical conundrum to people that believe that are like atheistic or agnostic, because it's like if you if you're intelligent and you're looking at the creation from which you were born and saying that's unintelligent, how did you get your intelligence? It's like you're using your own intelligence to look from the way to look at the nature from which you were born and say it's unintelligent. It doesn't make any sense, right? So we understand that nature is intelligent and we were born from it. OK, we're a manifestation of it.
00:16:18
Speaker
Even if we go so far as to say that nature comes from a great creator of God, right? Then we look at our hands, okay? And we look at all the things we do with it, building and all that sort of stuff. They're naturally segmented.
00:16:30
Speaker
Okay, you can see them, right? So there's simple mathematical, like basic mathematical, like numerological things, people that would be, you know, a lot of people consider numerology like recreational math or stupid math, but actually it's right on your hands. So if you look at your hands right here, you have, you know, one, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight, nine, 10, 11, 12, 13 and 14 phalanges on each hand, right? So three on each finger, two on each thumb, okay?
00:16:59
Speaker
Well, that's one thumb and four fingers. And that's 14 phalanges. So, one, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight, nine, 10, 11, 12, 13 and 14. And one and four and 14 is one thumb and four fingers, right?
00:17:18
Speaker
numerology. Okay, so then if you have 14, and you have 14, that's 28. Well, that's two thumbs and eight fingers. That's 28. So that's considered. And then of course, if you look at what what's one plus four, one plus four is five, and that's five. So 14 reduces down to five. So that's numerology, that's pretty much dismissed in all, like,
00:17:40
Speaker
You know, any university level mathematician, you're like, well, numerology is just nonsense. That's essentially what you'll hear. But it's actually right in your hands. And then you can say, well, that's nice or whatever. But then you even go further, and there's actually a multiplication table of nine right on your hands as well. Once again, the creator has left for us right on our hands. So when you go one times nine, I'll just show this real quick. One times nine is what? It's nine. You have nine fingers here. So four here and five.
00:18:08
Speaker
Two times nine is what? It's 18 and you have one finger here and eight fingers here. So one, two, two times nine is 18. Three times nine is what? Two, seven, 27. So once again, that's a multiplication table and that goes the whole way. And it also shows the mirroring aspect of math as well, which is something I don't like into now, but that's all left for you on your hands.
00:18:38
Speaker
You know, and so those are all those are all high. I mean, I mean sound mathematical ideas completely sound 100% provable verifiable universal mathematical ideas that are left simply right on your hands.
00:18:51
Speaker
The thing that we've lost is that, and there's school, I don't mean to keep ranting here, but there's school kids in India that they do complex mathematics on their hands. A guy will just be rattling off like 153, 121, 119, 147, and then they'll get the answer because they're literally like a calculator. And so we've lost all this knowledge.
00:19:14
Speaker
But when you get back to the idea that, hey, the creation is intelligent because there's a creator behind it, then we can go into the creation itself and learn from it. And so that's left right here for us.
00:19:28
Speaker
That reminds me of a picture I saw once, this dog with the hairs on it, and there's a bunch of fleas, and one of the fleas is talking to the other fleas, and it's like, what evidence is there even that there is a dog? It's like, what evidence is there that there is a God? You just look around, you're like, shit. Everything.
00:19:56
Speaker
Yeah, everything pretty much, you know? Yeah. So tell me, tell us how did you, I know you talk a lot about the kind of the hidden numerology in the Bible. How did you kind of get into that stuff? How did you start deciphering that? Well, I mean, it was, once again, pursuing an answer, like actually wanting an answer.
00:20:26
Speaker
And then spending a lot of my young adult life, and then to even like now, like listening to people that, you know, pardon my language, are full of shit, right? So you find out later, then it's like, oh, they were totally off, and then, you know, you embrace that, or you had ideas that were completely wrong. And so I was like, how do you bypass that? How do you actually find something that's true? That I would like, there's no question whatsoever that if I get to this right now, and that is truth 100%, no one, you know, that sort of thing.
00:20:54
Speaker
That's where it led to math, because like I just said, it's like, once again, you know, if you, what is the 17 triangular number? It's 153. It will always be that, right? It's that kind of thing.
00:21:04
Speaker
So then it got into, well, what is the religious impulse? Why is it that nearly in every culture across the world, there is some sort of pursuit or a mythology or a religious book or a practice or something that honors and venerates gods or a creator? And then you start actually getting into that. So number one, what is that impulse? What drives people to that?
00:21:30
Speaker
And then not only that, but it's like, why is it that, especially when you get into comparative mythology, comparative religious study, you'll find that there's a lot of similar elements and themes that keep popping up.
00:21:43
Speaker
When you get into the numeric study of that, what you'll see is that there's tons of examples of this, where it's like, oh my Lord, there's the number seven again. Why is the number seven holy everywhere? Why is the number three holy everywhere, right? I mean, you go, you know, that got me into the work on the Trinity, looking at why the number three is so important, you know. And so eventually that led to a strong focus on the Bible for a myriad of reasons,
00:22:12
Speaker
I mean, one of which, notwithstanding whatever, is that like, I mean, my extended family was all like Catholic and Christian. So that was sort of, you know, residue from that or whatever. But, you know, you go into the Bible and you'll find these themes. If you look at it through mathematical eyes, which most people don't, right? If you look at it through geometric eyes, which most nearly everybody doesn't, they pop out like crazy. I mean, and there's an entire chapter in the original Torah translated into English anyway, that's called Numbers.
00:22:42
Speaker
So it's like, okay, well, here's this universal language that seems to be at the underpinning of this book. And it, you know, why is it, why was the creation done in seven days? And why 40 days and 40 nights? And, you know, why was Jesus about 32 or 33 years old when he died? And, you know, all of these questions, why 144,000, right? Why 153 fish? Like all of those things, that's very specific numbers are given. And you're just like, what?
00:23:11
Speaker
Right. So that led into being like, okay, well, there's got to be something more there. There has to be, you know. Okay. Well, what is the, why did God create in the Bible in Genesis? Why did God create the earth or the world in seven days?
00:23:26
Speaker
Well, I mean, this is the, you know, this is the thing I'm not a literal, I mean, I'm a literalist in that I understand that that book is literature, but that's, that's obviously a story, obviously a mythology, obviously a story to encase universal truths, right. So one of the first universal truths is once again, when you get back to the ubiquitousness and like the, you know, just how
00:23:51
Speaker
Once again, how universal numbers are. When you get to the number seven, it's like, okay, well, this is one of those numbers. This is why all of these cultures venerated this number because there's something magical there, okay? Why? What's so magical about the number seven? Well, one plus two plus three plus four plus five plus six plus seven equals 28. That's your hands, right?
00:24:11
Speaker
So that's 14 phalanges here and 14 phalanges here. So just adding one through seven, the triangulation of the number seven leads to the tools that you use to pick up the Bible and read it itself. It's leading you to this architecture. It's leading you to this metaphysical architecture, this language in which you can learn and come to understand. So that's... I mean, that's why...
00:24:40
Speaker
What other things have you found encased in the Bible? For example, you have some lectures on the significance of the number 42. That's one, for example. What is the significance of that?
00:24:55
Speaker
Well, this is the thing is like those, all of those numbers are basically like, I call them like Karen's on the path or they're like pillars or like lighthouses or something like that to get you into this study. And so there are key numbers that will do that. 13 is one of them, 42 is another.
00:25:14
Speaker
666 is one, 333 is one, right? And what are they? 144 is obviously yet another one of these, right? Nine is a big one for people, you know, it's like their numbers that it's like, what is going on with that number? Why is that number not? Why is 42 important as opposed to 41? You know, what's up with the number 33? You know, why is 666 this number of the devil or whatever?
00:25:39
Speaker
It's like those things basically present you the mystery through the number itself. And that's actually what it did for me, because I was like, okay, well, what do these numbers mean, right? And why is it so important that they encoded them in the Bible?
00:25:56
Speaker
And then not only just in the Bible, but in like other religious texts and ideas, you know, everything from, as far as we can tell, the Old Testament or the, I mean, the original Torah, absolutely, you know, the Quran is more than likely, yeah, encoded. And then the original Greek New Testament is more than likely encoded. And I'm saying the English version, authorized King James is encoded. So,
00:26:23
Speaker
but that's what they are. I mean, then it basically, in leading you to this, it's trying to get you to understand the architecture, which is basically just to understand God more.
00:26:35
Speaker
And most people don't know that that's what these holy books are actually there. I mean, even though that's what religion is there to do, literally supposed to bring you closer to God, that's actually what is encoded in the religious texts, but most of the exoteric people that practice and preach these religions have zero understanding of that, no clue of that. Yet, if you actually do the homework and actually burn the calories and go into the religious literature,
00:27:04
Speaker
It's pretty clear that that's what they were, you know, that they were holding on to this knowledge, you know, even I don't want to, I don't want to keep going, but you can go into, you know, you can go into church fathers of orthodoxy that will tell you that heaven is a circle and earth is a square. You know, common knowledge back in the day that we have completely lost now.
00:27:27
Speaker
Yeah, so my understanding, at least from kind of listening to some of your lectures, is the Bible is not meant to be taken literally as a story, as a historical account, yet probably some 99.9% of people either look at it that way or are taught it that way and accept it that way. And I think that's where a lot of people, they're like, well, this is bullshit, this cannot
00:27:55
Speaker
possibly be true, therefore it's bullshit, right? But where you coming from is that there's, at least in the authorized King James Version, there are deeper lessons in there that are hidden for those that want to discover them. Is that right? Yeah, like, so when I went to the Bible, you know, because I tried to read it when I was like 20, 21 years old, and I was like, what is this, right? And then to revisit it.
00:28:25
Speaker
Right?
00:28:30
Speaker
I looked at it, I didn't look at it, I was like, I didn't try to go into it and be like, this is what this means. I went into the Bible and I was like, okay, I'm gonna try to learn from it, right? So the same thing that you would do picking up James Joyce's Ulysses or Dante's Inferno or anything, you pick up the book and you're like, okay, well, what is this? The first thing, is it poetry? Is it a history book? Is this a book of mythology? Is this guy telling a story? Is this a personal account? That's the first thing.
00:28:57
Speaker
So I looked at it like that, which was very almost like completely, I just abandoned any preconceived notions and I took a very scholarly approach. And then understanding how classic works of literature, at least in some respects, some classic works of literature, there's all sorts of things that authors would use back in the day, mainly called literary devices that would clue you into what you're reading.
00:29:20
Speaker
like atomatopoeia, anthropomorphism, you know, synectady, frickin, allegory, parable, metaphor, all of those sorts of things, right, that are used classically in works of literature. Okay, so I picked up the Bible, I'm like, what is this? Well, you'll find all of those literary devices that were used in mythology, storytelling, all the, just laden over the whole thing, right?
00:29:45
Speaker
Then you look at it, once again, just a scholarly approach, and you say, okay, people are basically saying that this is a history book. Well, there's not a single date in the whole thing. It doesn't tell you when it started, when the Old Testament ends, when the New Testament ends. You have the birth of the Savior, you have things that people said going to meet Him, but they never gave you a specific date. When He died, when He was born, none of that.
00:30:11
Speaker
So I looked at that, I'm like, how is anybody coming to this and saying that this is a history book? It doesn't even read like a history book. There's issues with linear continuity. There's issues with all of these sorts of things, right? Which is basically, I was like, oh, no, no, no.
00:30:26
Speaker
this is presenting you a grand mystery in every single story, in every single letter, in every single character. Why is there an Old Testament? Why is there a New Testament? That's a mystery, etc., etc., etc. So I went in and approached it like that.

Misunderstood Numbers: 666 and Beyond

00:30:41
Speaker
In other words, I approach it literally in the sense that it is a piece of literature, but is it a historical book? No.
00:30:52
Speaker
There's nothing historical about it. And there's, and when you actually release yourself from that, you actually get to see like the mystery start opening up, in other words, right? Because you're like, Oh, no, this is astrotheological. It's there's, there's anatomy here. There's, you know what I mean? There's, there's Gamatria, there's, I mean, mathematical constants, there's music, there's music, you know, so it's just,
00:31:17
Speaker
Can you tell the listeners what is Gematria or Gematria? What is that and how do you use it? Well, this study has had like a bunch of different names depending on who gives it.
00:31:32
Speaker
what culture uses it or whatever, right? So like in English, it would be gamatria, right? But Greek would be like isospathy or whatever. Sometimes it's known as Kabbalah. And so that word, right, that, I mean, right there immediately turns people off. They're just like, oh, this is obviously Satanism, things like that. But when you actually get into what the study is, all it is is actually trying to understand the qualities and essences of numbers and how they actually interplay and work in the world.
00:31:57
Speaker
This leads right to the building and the architecture of all those great temples, all those great churches, cathedrals. So when you look back to whoever it was that were building those things and that sort of thing, they were all using what? The universal language of math. And so, I mean, anyway, I'm gonna keep rambling here.
00:32:19
Speaker
No, no, it's good. Please continue. In fact, I was just going to go back a second. Is 666 an evil number? What's up with 666?
00:32:35
Speaker
Well, I mean, there's really no, like, evil numbers or good numbers, you know what I mean? It's just really how a number is used. People will say the same thing with, like, 33. It's actually one of the reasons that I originally used 33. It was, I mean, a babby of reasons. But one of them was that I knew there was this paranoia or superstition around that number.
00:32:53
Speaker
And it was like, when I studied math, it was like, oh, no, it actually connects you to squaring the circle. And then it leads you right to 864. Jesus actually allegedly died after 33 years. There's all these actually really great things about 33. But most people have their, it's like, oh, no, that's Satanism and the Illuminati and blah, blah, blah, blah, blah. So I just sort of broke all those barriers. And I'm just like, I'm going to go learn myself. 666 is no different.
00:33:20
Speaker
It isn't to say that 666 can't be used as evil or there aren't evil people in the world that use it. That's actually not the point. My point is actually I would say it's a little bit more of a sophisticated point I'm making, but I might be patting myself on the back incorrectly. But like, if you are if the devil is using the number 666 in the sense of Satan or evil people, whatever you want to say, right, whatever terminology was drawn on that.
00:33:42
Speaker
All they're doing is taking something that actually has a meaning, a divine meaning, something that's sacred or something that actually will help you understand the connectivity of everything and twisting it, perverting it, throwing it on its head, right? In the sense of the...
00:33:59
Speaker
the story in the Bible of, you know, whatever, Satan using 666 or whatever, right? Well, in that sense, that would just be like, okay, 666 is a number of actually Christ, but Satan is using it. So that way, every time you think of that number, you don't think of the connectivity, you don't think of the Creator, you don't think of Christ, you think of Satan. It's a misdirect, it's a mis- and it's a classic move by mafia people and criminals and, you know, it's like, no, don't look here, look here.
00:34:28
Speaker
So a number can be used for good or evil. 666 is actually a number that is right on your phone, using simple numerology. It's one of the base ways in which, and I go over that on my site, you can just, if you look on your phone, your phone is separated in one, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight, nine, right? That's your keypad. There's a zero at the bottom. One, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight, nine. You add a cross, one, two, three is six.
00:34:56
Speaker
four, five, six is 15, one plus five is six, and seven, eight, nine is 24, and two plus four is six. So just numerologically adding across your phone is six, six, six, right on your phone, right?
00:35:08
Speaker
The base way in which we measure time can be reduced the same way. And this is the measurement of time that's been recorded by anybody that was using an astrolabe or a sex tent or, you know, the Babylonians' sex-adjustable system. 60 seconds in a minute, 60 minutes in an hour, 24 hours in a day. 60, 60, 24. Six plus zero is six. Six plus zero is six. Two plus four is six. Six, six, six.
00:35:36
Speaker
So right there, you know, and then there's a bunch of other explanations or examples I could give you right now to show once again, architecture, connectivity, right? Once, but all it is is flipped on its side or its end to be like, nope, it's actually this other thing, you know? Yeah. So give us more examples. I actually love hearing more examples. What about like the number 43, 432 and the sun, for example, I know you've talked about that.
00:36:05
Speaker
I'll give you another example of 666, which is really interesting too. So when you look at, once again, the holy number seven, right? We have it on our hands. It's actually on our feet as well. You have the same number of phalanges on your feet as you do on your hands. Adding one through seven is 28. That's up here and down there. Seven days of creation, et cetera, et cetera. I could go on seven for days, whatever. But
00:36:29
Speaker
Then you look at the first seven primes, which is 2, 3, 5, 7, 11, and 13, right? Sorry, 2, 3, 5, 7, 11, 13, and 17. Those are the first seven primes. So that's a significant thing because not only are they prime, which means first, it's the first seven, that holy sacred number. You square all of those 2, 3, 5, 7, 11, 13, and 17. 2 squared is 4, 3 squared is 9, 5 squared is 25, 7 squared is 49, 11 squared is
00:36:58
Speaker
121, 13 squared is 169, 17 squared is 289. If you add all of that up, it's 666. So once again, 666 in just the basic number line of one through nine. 666 in how you actually measure out time. 666 found in the square of the first seven primes. You know, it's stuff like that that's like, no, this is pointing to architecture.
00:37:25
Speaker
It's saying, hey, this is how time is delineated. This is how time is segmented and we record it. This is how primes are structured. This is the base 10 system zero through nine on your phone, basically broken up into a Trinity. It's that kind of stuff.
00:37:42
Speaker
So some evil people take what is holy and they make it tainted. That's the classic. Yeah, inversion, perversion, you know, basically, you know, throwing something on a tad. And I always, I mean, I don't want to get that. But you know, it's like you just look at.
00:38:03
Speaker
It's the classic move of taking something pure virgin holy and distorting it, perverting it. It's no different than pedophilia. It's no different than taking an esoteric doctrine and promoting it completely as exoteric, throwing away the mysteries.

Mathematical Constants in Language

00:38:18
Speaker
It's no different. It's taking something great and destroying it.
00:38:26
Speaker
So what about Jesus Christ? I know you talk about there's some stuff encoded in his name, not just in English, but also in Greek. Could you discuss that a little bit?
00:38:39
Speaker
Okay, so this is the important thing that when people hear this is that there are different numbering systems for every different language, right? And this has been well recorded. This is not like woo woo conspiracy stuff. This is well recorded within, you know, just university professors, things like that, right? You can see a practice now in certain colleges, especially like Hebrew colleges, clearly.
00:39:02
Speaker
The Hebrew, the original Hebrew, had a cypher, had a particular system. The abject letter system in the Qur'an is no different, right? The Greek had a lettering system, right? And what I'm saying is that we have one for English, and that's a septenary. It's one based on the holy number seven, again, based on your hands and all that sort of stuff, right? So when you look at these people, these characters, like Jesus Christ, we have his name in English,
00:39:28
Speaker
We have his name in Old English. We have his name in the original Greek, right? Then we can find, then we can go into other, other languages like Hebrew and we can find the names of God in Hebrew, right? Elohim, Shaddai, whatever, right? What people don't need to understand is like, okay, you have different lettering systems and different numbers and different languages and things like that. But you know what you will find? The exact same mathematical constants in all of those different languages. So once again,
00:39:59
Speaker
Different languages, different numbering systems, different people, different religions, in a lot of cases, right? Then you get to the foundation of all their languages, though. And what do you find? Once again, not just like the same numbers, extremely important, once again, not arbitrary numbers, constants, mathematical constants. You'll find pi.
00:40:19
Speaker
you'll find the same numbering systems within Greek and English and Hebrew, which shows once again a universality to a lot of the, well, number one, the religious impulse, but a lot of these religions that at the underlying core of it is actually this knowledge system. And once again, what I'm saying and what I've been asking people to do for the last 10 years is you can't just say that. You have to present information that would be provable. Well, I'm saying you can, you can prove that.
00:40:48
Speaker
And the way it would be provable would be using the scientific method, which means that you would be verifiability, repeatability, demonstrability. If I make a claim that the word seven encodes pi, everybody has to be able to prove that. Well, they can. And it's that simple. How does seven encode pi? And if you could actually also talk about what is the significance of pi, that I was going to ask you that.
00:41:13
Speaker
Okay, so when you get into the study of mathematics, once again, you know, when I mentioned we started this conversation off talking about the universality of math, right? Math and geometry, a circle is a circle. Square is a square, right? That kind of thing.
00:41:26
Speaker
You have certain mathematical constants within this language and they're really important and they're heralded by, I mean, you can go to Mathologer online, you can go to Numberphile.line, you can call any university. They can't argue with me because it's just such well-known information, right? Certain mathematical constants that are well-known and utilized in different areas of mathematical study, right?
00:41:48
Speaker
So, E is one of them, 2.718, clearly, square root of 2 is one of them, square root of 3 is one of them, pi is one of them, tau is one of them, 1.618, B and phi is one of them, right? And then, of course, there's lots of theorems and formulas that are used, things like that, like everything from, you can go from, well, the Pythagorean theorem, we can go to the fractal mathematics, what is it?
00:42:12
Speaker
I forget what it is, but you know what I mean? It's like there are certain formulas that they're just universal, right? So what was your original question? You wanted to know What's the significance of pi and how does 7, for example Yes, okay, I'm sorry.
00:42:30
Speaker
Pi is one of these extremely significant ones, right? I mean, very well could be considered one of the most important mathematical constants out there. I don't think that's even arguable really. And so pi is obviously one of these, it's a universal constant. So we have an entire cipher for the English alphabet that's based on the number seven. It literally goes one, two, three, four, five, six, seven, six, five, four, three, two, one, and it does that twice.
00:42:57
Speaker
and that's all based on, once again, the number seven. Then you look at the- A is one, B is two, C is three, G is seven, that and so on. Yeah, et cetera. So you basically split the alphabet in half, and by walking up to seven and walking back down to one, what you actually did there was square a number, which is yet another mathematical constant. Squaring a number is no different than cubing a number, but you could actually do it just by walking up the number line. So seven squared is 49,
00:43:28
Speaker
And if you want to get 49, you just go 1 plus 2 plus 3 plus 4 plus 5 plus 6 plus 7 plus 6 plus 5 plus 4 plus 3 plus 2 plus 1. 49. That's 7 squared. Right? So that's right there. Just in the formulation of the cipher itself, you were given a mathematical constant.
00:43:47
Speaker
See what I'm saying? So it's all focused on the number seven. Then you actually do the word seven in English, S-E-V-E-N, and that's six, five, five, five, one, that equals 22. So now you're given two numbers, 22 and seven. Well, once again, math is a language, right?
00:44:05
Speaker
And when you start to learn that language, you can start to see these things very clearly, right? If you're given two numbers as a mathematician, 22 and 7, you say, hey, find me a constant there. 22 to 5 by 7 is 3.1428571.
00:44:19
Speaker
It is an approximation and abbreviation of pi that's been used throughout the world and is used throughout world in common practice and just everyday work and things like that. But not only that, it's just an approximation used throughout the world. So 3.142, 3.1415, it's pi.
00:44:39
Speaker
And of course, pi is an infinite transcendental number, so you have to approximate it, you have to abbreviate it, and every mathematician knows that because at some point you have to truncate pi. In any practical application, you have to cut it off at some point, whether that's 3.14, 3.141, 3.142, so boom, right there, so the word seven. Using the number seven gives you, using a mathematical constant gives you another mathematical constant.
00:45:07
Speaker
Then that's done twice in our alphabet. So not only do you get the squaring of the number seven, you get the mathematical constant of pi. When you do that twice in the alphabet, you actually get two pi. And that other pi lands on the T in the alphabet. Well, that's the letter T, which is the letter tau. And tau in mathematics is literally two pi.
00:45:32
Speaker
It's literally, and when you look at the Greek symbol, it's, it's almost a, I mean, it looks like half a pie. It's like they took half the symbol of pie or whatever and just made the tau. So you have the number seven resting on the T, which is the symbol for tau. And that's the second pie that you get in the alphabet. Tau in mathematics is two pi. So that's three mathematical constants and you haven't even put any really numbers to letters of any words yet. Save for the number seven. It's amazing how
00:46:02
Speaker
Okay, first of all, numbers and the mathematics and all that stuff. Obviously, that's God's creation. And it's amazing. Like some of the stuff is amazing. You know, like if you walk a number up and down... You said that. I'm sorry, can I stop you? Yeah. You said that God's creation right at the 42 minute mark.
00:46:24
Speaker
I swear to you, as soon as you said that, I looked up and was like, oh, it's a 42. Anyway, go on. Yeah, that's crazy. It's weird, but I keep seeing 144 on plates, on cars.
00:46:41
Speaker
here. It's so weird. Everywhere I look, it's 144, 42, this kind of stuff. I don't get it. Mathematics, obviously God created that, the creator, the universe, whatever, the higher power. But
00:46:58
Speaker
the English language, the alphabet, man, humans created that, right? And the language has been evolving over the millennia or the last few hundred years. So how do you, please feel free to speculate, how do you think
00:47:21
Speaker
It's evolved where all of this is so well encoded in the Bible. This version of the Bible we're talking about, King James' version, it was written in the 16th century, I believe. How is it so well done? So well encoded, all this stuff.
00:47:40
Speaker
So the original King James, right? And it's called the Authorized King James Version, which doesn't necessarily, I mean, the number one, the history of a lot of this stuff for me is, as soon as you start reaching back 400 years, it's like very questionable, right? They say it's the Authorized King James Version. To me, that just means that he just authorized it. He probably had nothing to do with it, really, you know what I mean? But he was just some crazy king, who knows? But the original 1611 version is written in Old English.
00:48:07
Speaker
So if you look at Jesus' name, it's like, it's I-E, I think it's I-E, S-U-S, whatever, anyway. And then the authorized King James Version that's in modern English today, there are contemporary English with 26 letters, right? That was done, I think, in like mid-1800s at Cambridge, okay? So...
00:48:26
Speaker
the 26 letters that we use today for our English alphabet, right? That's not even, as far as we know, not even that old, right? And the Bible, the version of the Bible that authorized King James Version in modern English is not that old, right? So that's the number one thing, okay? So look at that. You obviously had some sort of shift in the language at some point where they actually added the, I think it's J and W and something else, it was another letter.
00:48:54
Speaker
that they actually added those. And that, of course, changed the Bible, right? So you have that transition right there, right? And then you have…
00:49:05
Speaker
So when you look at languages and like when you said, oh, languages have evolved over time and things like that, I don't know. I don't know if that's true, meaning that, yes, languages evolve. But I think there are specific things that are done to the language at some point to actually craft and create it. And those changes.
00:49:25
Speaker
meaning the structure of the alphabet itself is actually there and coded in the religious text of the time. And that's exactly what I see happening in the authorized King James Version, meaning whatever shift in the language we did have whenever it did occur a couple hundred years ago, that shift was intentional.
00:49:44
Speaker
and there were things added and things omitted and things recorded in the religious texts of the time. Then you also have to look at, and this is well known by linguists and scholars of language and all that sort of thing, how much our language is completely encoded within biblical ideas and terms and things like that. Just even though you can talk to any atheist or agnostic and then be like, oh, Jesus Christ.
00:50:09
Speaker
They'll say things like that. Our language in everyday conversation and speech is completely intertwined with so much of the language of the Bible, even in modern English, you know. So that's all things like that.
00:50:24
Speaker
So one other thing about that is that when you look at the language, you say, well, yes, human beings did craft it like somebody did come along a human being and created Hebrew and created, you know, whatever the abjad letter system and created the Greek letters and thing in English, right?
00:50:40
Speaker
But if you look at English, what's interesting is when you look at the letters, especially the modern English letters, they seem to be built on geometric ideas, right? Like an A-frame, a C-hook, a D is no more than a dome. You know what I mean? An L bracket, a right angle, that sort of thing. You know, even like the J is a hook, things like that. So you're saying the Freemasons did it.
00:51:06
Speaker
Well, it's whoever constructed it understood the universality of architecture, masonry, math, geometry, for sure. So what I'm saying is when you look at
00:51:24
Speaker
When you look at the fact that squaring the number seven, pi and tau are simply encoded in the language, that screams not only design, but very specified structure.
00:51:38
Speaker
So in other words, language isn't something that just evolved, something that's haphazard, the things were added, because that's what most people believe. I don't know if that's true. I don't think that's true anymore. And so that gives a different spin on what language is and all of that sort of thing.
00:51:55
Speaker
But what we can prove is that languages of the past that are used today absolutely do have that structure, and it has been recorded, it has been studied, it has been passed on, and it's well known. So what's to say English doesn't have that as well?
00:52:14
Speaker
I guess I misspoke when I said evolve. I probably should have said something like develop or change because it definitely seems like it's intentional. The reason I say that is if you look at a Latin language, if you look at let's say Bulgarian in my case, it's like what you see is what you get type of language. And in English, if you look at, for example, the word, the name John, there's an H there.
00:52:44
Speaker
Now that's got no, and there's a million examples of this where there's letters in there that to a foreigner learning the language as a second language, like that completely makes no sense to be there. And there's no rhyme or reason, apparently, until maybe you look deeper into what's the numerology of that word, you know, like Jesus Christ, why is the H there, for example,
00:53:12
Speaker
when we don't need the age to pronounce it that way. That's just one example. I'm so glad you brought that up because that's exactly what I mean. Like when you start actually examining language, and because this is the conclusion I came to when I was like young too, it's like just a haphazard mess. It's just a cobble together, like just throwing shit here. Like why is night spelled with a K and knife spelled with a K-N-I-F-E? Can knife
00:53:40
Speaker
It's like none of that makes sense, right? And that would lead, and that did lead me to the conclusion that is probably, you know, but then as you're saying, and you say, well, maybe those are clues left in the language specifically to point to something else, right? And that's the conclusion I've come to now, especially knowing that like you can decode chess and it's like, no, without the K in front of night, it would screw up the entire encoding of chess.
00:54:08
Speaker
So it's like the K in night has to be there, in other words. So you see all sorts of things like that within the language, which is fascinating because it's like, no, there was intention there. Whoever put this stuff there was like, no, we're not only spelling it this way, we're putting it in religious texts and we're defining it in dictionaries. So this to me shows, once again, structure, design, a lot of foresight, extremely intelligent people, that sort of thing.
00:54:37
Speaker
Another clue to this is that there's, and this will hopefully get the people thinking about this as well. It's very kind of philosophical, but like another clue to me that there was something more going on with language was that when, like if I needed to tell you like, hey, I'm going to hand you $3.
00:54:55
Speaker
Right. Well, do I need the word T H R E E to do that? No, I could just, if I was going to write you that I'm going to give you $3, I can just use a numeral and just go, that would be the most expedient economical way to get to transmit that bit of information to you. Three, one letter.
00:55:12
Speaker
Okay, so why in the world would you need to be cumbersome and be like T-H-R-E-E? Or I have 3,800, so I'm gonna spell out T-H-I-R-T-Y dash A-E-I-G-A-T. No, I'm just gonna write, you know. Then you realize, oh no, they spelled words out specifically and spelled them the way they did, like four, F-O-U-R, is spelled that way because it's encoding what? More math.
00:55:42
Speaker
So there's a reason that they, they, they wrote out letter or words like one to fanatically with letters in order to encode higher wisdom. And we, and I'm saying you can prove that for sure. For sure. You know?

Chess as a Mathematical Tool

00:55:57
Speaker
Fascinating. Just talk to us a little bit about chess. Cause I, I've always loved chess since I was, I don't know, four years old. I was playing, they taught me, my, my folks, uh, how is chess encoded?
00:56:11
Speaker
Chass encodes, and anybody can do this once again, like whenever I say this stuff, it's like, you know, I've written a book on it, and not a whole book, but a chapter in one of the books, I should do a whole little pamphlet on it, honestly, but, and I've got some videos on my site that you can check out, but, like whenever I say this stuff, it's like you, once again, you'd have to be able to verify it yourself, and what I'm saying is you absolutely can, the whole thing. So, Chass encodes two lunar, a solar, and a processional calendar, as well as multiple ways of encoding pi.
00:56:41
Speaker
You know, there's a ton of stuff, a ton of stuff in chess. There's a bunch of stuff I found.
00:56:47
Speaker
even after I wrote the chapter of the book and stuff. So yeah, you can get two lunar, a solar, and a processional calendar from the pieces of chess. And that's literally looking at the English terms, like king, queen, knight, bishop, rook, pawn, putting the associated numbers to them, and then basically just looking at how the structure of the actual pieces are laid out. And you can form, like I said, calendars.
00:57:17
Speaker
What it's doing, once again, is passing on these, excuse me, passing on these mathematical constants again, right? Like I just said, you can go to Hebrew and find pi. You can go to the English name of Greek, or the, excuse me, the Greek name of Jesus Christ and find pi. You can go to the English name of Jesus Christ and find pi. You can go to the number seven and find pi. You can go to the letter T and find pi, right? Then you go to chess. Okay, well, what's the most prevalent player on the board? It's the pawn.
00:57:46
Speaker
There's eight over here and eight over here. So 16 pawns on the board. Pawn in English Gematria, pawn is 3141. So P-A-W-N is 3141. So in other words, the first time I did the encoding of that, I was just like,
00:58:05
Speaker
because that's a tell, right? Like you're a symbologist or a sinologist or somebody like a code breaker or whatever, right? And you just like are interested in this shit. That's a mark. That's like, hey, look, what is that? If you know math at all, just like if you're a mathematician and you're handed two numbers, 22 and seven. Well, 22 and seven is pi, right? If you're handed 3141, what does that tell you as a mathematician? Oh, they're referencing pi there.
00:58:31
Speaker
Except they're not only just referencing pi once, they're referencing pi as much as they possibly could on the board. Do you know what I'm saying? So that's just one of the one of the encodings in chess. And chess has been, as you said, you've been fascinated with chess. I was always fascinated with chess, too. But it's long been known as a, you know, a king's game, a nobleman's game.
00:58:50
Speaker
It's like the game of life and the board is the earth and the pieces are on that whole thing. Anyway. Yeah, that's why it's square. That makes sense if the square represents the earth and the circle represents the heavens. That's why the board is square. That makes sense.
00:59:11
Speaker
The entire board references squaring the circle because squaring the in fact, then that's a whole other thing. But it's basically looking at getting a square in circle with equal areas or its circumference and perimeter of the square to be equal. There's kind of two different ways to square the circle. One of the main ways is with the square of 8, which is exactly what the chessboard is.
00:59:32
Speaker
It's eight squared at 64 squares, and a circle of nine unit nine will be roughly equal in area. And so just by the 64 squares on the board, same thing with like the each thing, it's all referencing square in the circle. Just the number of squares on the board is a reference to square in the circle. Then the perimeter of that square, by the way, the perimeter of that square is 28 squares, which is what reference to your hands again.
00:59:58
Speaker
Yeah, the chess has always been, I look at it, I'm like, the folks that came up with this game, they knew some shit. They weren't just some ignorant ancients.
01:00:11
Speaker
That's what I'm saying, if you release yourself from, especially with the Bible, and there's all sorts of things in our world like this, if you release yourself from the baggage of what you think it is, and you just look at things like chess, like you're saying, there's a weight to it. There's something else there. You're like, this isn't just a game.
01:00:30
Speaker
There's something going on here. I said the same thing with Humpty Dumpty. You know, like you just think about that and like, what the fuck is up? What is this riddle? What? There's something else there. You know what I mean? I say the same thing with like a deck of cards.
01:00:44
Speaker
I feel the same way with the Bible. It's like, for the longest time, I'm like, what is this? There's something else going on here. And then you realize that all of these things, everything from chess to a deck of cards to a dartboard to game of billiards to the Bible to a torodak to whatever, a pair of dice, all of these things, there's something else going on there. They're actually sort of like esoteric tools to pass on the mysteries.
01:01:12
Speaker
Now, I mean that very literally because all of them are encoded mathematically, all of them, you know. Yeah. Okay. This, this just, sorry, I have to crowbar this in. Talk to us about the pair of dice and paradise. And what's the, what's some fun facts about the dice?
01:01:33
Speaker
Well, this is where actually when you get into the study of Kabbalah, what Kabbalah actually means. So when people are like, Kabbalah is like Jewish mysticism, right? And it's like, well, no, Kabbalah actually means cube, and Allah is an Islam. It's like a Muslim god, right? So even the term itself sort of leans heavily towards the Quran and that sort of thing, right?
01:01:55
Speaker
What it is is basically, Kabbalah is basically cube God. That's literally what it means, like that somehow God is connected to a cube. Then you have to go into the study of geometry and symbolism to actually extract what the meaning of the cube is, right?
01:02:12
Speaker
you look at, what's the symbolism of the cube? Well, it's six pieces around one. That's the first thing, okay? This is a reference to, and you'll find this too in like, probabilistic literature and mystical literature as well, that this is a reference to the six directions of space that you exist in. So forward, reverse, left, right, up, down, right? All resting on the center point of view. This is the basis of every three-dimensional mathematics that you'll ever see.
01:02:38
Speaker
Anytime there's CGI done in Hollywood that uses 3D, you know, any of that sort of stuff, it's all based on Six Around One.
01:02:46
Speaker
This is why God did his work at six days rest on the seventh. That's a parable, that's an allegory, a direct reference to you. In other words, the genesis of all creation is reflected in the genesis of you, right? So that's one of the things that the cube represents, six around one. Then you actually look at the cube and the pair of dice, right? As it's, you roll it and it's like, okay, well, one side, if one comes up, the other side will be six.
01:03:14
Speaker
That's seven. If two comes up, the other side will be five. That's seven. If three comes up, the other side will be four. That's seven. So even how the numbers are separated on the die is constantly like seven, seven, seven, right? Okay, so that's telling you about the importance of the number seven. Not only is the geometry, but how the numbers are there. Then you actually go and look at the die itself. It's giving you, once again, a bevy of mathematical constants. No different than what our language is doing. No different than what our language is doing.
01:03:45
Speaker
You can get the square root of 2 on the die. If you look at the face, this diagonal there is the square root of 2. It's the Pythagorean theorem, actually. 1, 1 square root of 2. So you're given the square root of 2, mathematical constant, Pythagorean theorem, mathematical constant. The angle between the cube is the square root of 3.
01:04:06
Speaker
So if you go from one side inside one corner to the next corner, it's the square root of three. So now you're given the Pythagorean theorem, square root of two, square root of three, and the six directions of space, as well as the number seven, the importance of the number seven. Then you add the square root of two plus the square root of three, and that's 3.146, which is an approximation of pi down to 99.99, whatever, 4% or some shit, right? So there, square root of two, square root of three, pi.
01:04:36
Speaker
Six directions of space. Now you're inside the cube, look into the corner. It's three 90-degree angles coming together in one. What's that? Well, if you take that geometry into human gestation or the process of creation, birth cycle, that's roughly the period of the trimesters. Three months each. Three months, 90 days. Three months, 90 days. Three months, 90 days. 90 plus 90 plus 90 is 270. And that's the corner of the cube.
01:05:04
Speaker
So that's the structure of, so in other words, after that time period, bird's a human being that has six around one. See what I'm saying?

Dice and Divine Language

01:05:14
Speaker
So once again, I showed you how there's a mathematical, there's, I'm sorry, losing my train of thought here, that there's a multiplication table on your hands, right? And those are all universal constants. Then you go from here to a cube,
01:05:29
Speaker
And what do you find? Once again, the same sort of thing. So when we look at the language of like the pair of dice, the paradise, the pair of dice, right? These are all fanatic, once again, literary devices, fanatic tricks that have been used all throughout literature all the time, right? To get you to like, oh, wait, is that what they mean? So pair of dice is the paradise. And in the pair of dice is encoded all of those, well, once again, mathematical constants of God's language, you know?
01:06:00
Speaker
And there's so much more. There's like the, you know, the seven vertebrae of the neck, the 33 of the spine. And it just could be how many, how many ball bones is in the skull? Seven again, isn't there? There's like seven. Besides the mandible. Yeah. You have 22 up here.
01:06:18
Speaker
And so, and then seven neck bones back here, I think there's a neck, there's one bone here, but you're right. So it's like 22 and seven, you have, well, I mean, 22 openings or whatever, or ways to like, you know, take interview the world, two eyes, two nostrils a mouth, two ears, right? That's seven right there. So, you know what I mean? Just to experience the world. And then basically, once again, save for the mandible, you have 22. Is that, you know, is that pie in your hand? Openings? Yeah. Yeah.
01:06:44
Speaker
Yeah, another interesting one is that you have like 13 bones in your palm and then 14 phalanges. So 13 here and 14. So it's like 14 and 13. If you read that this way, it's 3141.
01:06:57
Speaker
Just like your thumb, once again, these are all these like little tricks or whatever, right? Now, you could throw all those little tricks out the window, if you will, right? Like that's all just, he's playing with things. Okay, sure, you can throw all that out if you want. But you can't negate the fact that there's a multiplication table right on your hands. You can't negate the fact that the square root of two and the square root of three is encoded in the cube.
01:07:16
Speaker
You can't get the fact that the square root of 2 plus square root of 3 is pi down to, you know, etc. There's all of these things that if you approached any reasonable mathematician, rational mathematician, because rational comes from the term ratio, by the way, rational mathematician, they would have nothing to say. They could not they could not refute these things because they're just so true that they're so true that children can understand it really, you know.
01:07:39
Speaker
So that's what's so interesting. So one other thing, like 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13 and 14 on the thumb. 3, 1, 4, 1 backward right there. 13 and 14. That's exactly where 42 is in code. I mean, you could just go on and on and on. Because all of these things, once again, lead to these pillars. It's like, oh, there's pi again. Oh, there's the square root of 2 again. Oh, there's the number 7 again.
01:08:08
Speaker
I think just before, you know, we will close up with, you know, you'll tell folks where they can find you, but I just want to touch on another little topic for a little bit, if you could indulge us. It gets a little bit darker here, but I know that a lot of stuff, kind of bad stuff that happens, a lot of
01:08:37
Speaker
How do I say terrorist attacks and things like that? There's a lot of stuff encoded in them. Can you give us a taster of some examples where there's stuff like this encoded into names or dates or things like that?
01:08:57
Speaker
Well, I mean, I think any sort of like major terrorist attack, alleged terrorist attack, false flag, like specific scripted events, right. And I don't know which ones I can name, which ones I can't, but I cover many of them on my own site. But whatever, you know, the everyday news and things like that, I'm not that interested in. But whenever you have like a bigger event, like a Las Vegas shooting or a 9-11, things like that, there's events like that that you can see that
01:09:24
Speaker
to me are very well scripted. There's a conclusion that they're getting from that. There's an agenda there. And not only that, there's specific propaganda that's pushed out. And all of that specific propaganda, as we're seeing with this COVID thing, it's language that's pushed out in ideas, right? In the Las Vegas shooting, there was 72 minutes of terror.
01:09:46
Speaker
72 minutes of terror. And he was at, you know, on the 32nd floor in room 135. And the guy that was outside of his room that stopped him, allegedly that was Jesus Campos, you know, all these, there's lots of things there that are put out and repeated in the media, you know, same thing with this, with COVID, what we're dealing with now, social distancing,
01:10:10
Speaker
masks, these are all like trigger terms that they keep using, and it's the same thing, and they keep repeating it. And when you see that, you see it's clear it's propaganda, because they have to keep repeating something to push that into your head. And so therefore, you're like, oh, that's the new thing. So every time I see a major event, I'll just say this. And I guess I can just lead people to, because there's tons of specifics I could give. But anytime you see a major event,
01:10:39
Speaker
what's going on now, what happened in 9-11, Las Vegas shooting, Sandy Hook, they are specifically, and I mean this very, very, to the heart, they are specifically encoded with things that would be anti-Christ, for lack of a better term, or probably the most appropriate term, obviously, but like anti-creator, anti-human, anti-God,
01:11:07
Speaker
anti-logos, anti-order for things that would be specifically encoded. In other words, taking all of those things that we talked about before, that numbers that would be divine, numbers that actually tell you about the connectivity of everything, numbers that show you how you're designed, how you are made in the image of a great creator, that there's an intelligence behind this thing, that intelligence is running right through you all the way to the tip and top of your fingers, taking all of those things
01:11:36
Speaker
using them in the context that they do and distorting them specifically, like specifically. Okay. Very intentional. Yeah. And so when you go into those things, what things I started finding was that those, that's exactly what they were doing. It wasn't just like some event that they concocted. This would be in every sense of the word, like a satanic ritual.
01:12:01
Speaker
for every sense of the word. Some people don't like the term satanic, evil, nefarious, very wicked agenda that's at its heart anti-human, anti-God.
01:12:15
Speaker
All right. Well, yeah, it could get

Marty Leeds' Online Content and Music

01:12:19
Speaker
very dark. I know that. I'm not sure the listeners are ready for that. However, if anybody is interested in learning more, Marty, can you tell us about where to find you on the web, social media, and tell us, tell folks about your books and about your music and everything you produce for others to read or listen to?
01:12:47
Speaker
Um, yeah, well, my site is martyleeds33.com. I'm pretty much not on any social media because I, I mean, for the most part, I just kind of run sort of a mystery school. I just sort of let people try to find me. And then, and it's really cheap to sign up as a member. I had to put everything behind the paywall to not only protect it from our site from, because we've gotten attacked and, you know, they were downloading tons of stuff. So we have to protect from that, but also because of censorship. So we have to put everything behind the paywall. But
01:13:17
Speaker
A lot of the stuff I cover there, and it's only five bucks a month, but I also, there's also books, there's documentaries, there's a heap load of podcasts, there's like, I don't know, 10, eight, 10 records you can download of music. There's like, we're putting PDF books on there and stuff like that. So there's a, we just keep building that. So my own books you can read for if you're a member. So basically you're getting like this library of information for about five bucks a month at martyleads33.com. But I'm not on any social media because I just don't,
01:13:45
Speaker
they'll kick me off. And it's just a waste of time for me and stuff. You know, it's so yeah, that's that but
01:13:54
Speaker
Yeah, and then I'm on Marty Leeds Live on YouTube. I'm still on YouTube and I'm still on Dlive, which I live stream every week. And so I've got a bunch of right now I'm doing sort of the interview portion of my show. So I'm interviewing a bunch of doctors about the COVID-19 thing, just a whole bunch of guests coming up. And then I lecture, like I said, I'm doing one on the rites of passage. I'm doing one on COVID-19. I'm doing one just a whole bunch of lectures coming up, de-occulting the preamble of the constitution.
01:14:23
Speaker
A whole bunch of interesting things coming up. Dropping truth bombs left, right and center for those that can handle. That's right. I'm trying. Not everybody can handle it.
01:14:36
Speaker
Well, it's you know, it's good to it's like the site I keep it cheap. So if you want to just support what I do, if you see the value in it, then you can just support for really cheap. And then you also get for it, you know, if you it's a membership, but if you want to quit at the end of the month, you get literally my life's work for about five bucks. So it's it's just such a great way. It's you know, if you want to dive into this stuff, but yeah, it takes patience and it takes
01:14:59
Speaker
you know, concentration, you know, you have to sit and actually want to learn a lot of the stuff. And I do have a whole section that's like short videos. It's like, you know, 510 15 minute videos called start here on the site that you can watch for absolutely free. And that can get you a taste of all the stuff. So we go into a lot of the mysteries like the 153 and the Jesus fish, how
01:15:21
Speaker
You know, Genesis is written poetically and, you know, everything from the mask mandates that are going on right now to what Kamatriya is. And so there's lots of stuff. I mean, you can literally dig into that for hours. Yeah. Oh yeah. Days, weeks. Yeah. I plan to, you know, one day when I have a chance to take a sabbatical, I'll definitely be plowing into that for sure, Marty.
01:15:46
Speaker
Yeah, I'll have the links in the show notes to all your stuff. By the way, folks, Marty also, he mentioned it briefly, but he does music. His music is actually pretty good. I'm not personally a fan of rock stuff, but what I've heard from your stuff, I've loved it. I'm more of an electronic guy, techno guy.
01:16:06
Speaker
But I definitely think, you know, you're a good musician and a damn good singer. So folks should check that out as well. And we'll have some links there, of course. So Marty, thank you so much for spending some time talking about these very fascinating stuff.
01:16:25
Speaker
all together. It is like you say, it's not the kind of thing you can just dip into. You need to, which is why I encourage folks to watch a few videos, read a little bit more into it if their interest is big. But thank you so much for tantalizing us a little bit with this stuff, Marty, and all the best with your future endeavors with the project. All right. Well, thanks, man. Thanks for having me on. I appreciate it. Thanks, brother.
01:17:02
Speaker
Thank you for listening to Connecting Minds. We hope you enjoyed this conversation and found it interesting, illuminating, or inspiring. For episode show notes, links, and further information on our guests, please visit christianjordanov.com. If you found this episode valuable, please share it with someone who might also enjoy it. Thank you for being here.