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Cipher Of Genesis: Using The Qabalistic Code To Interpret The First Book of the Bible and the Teachings of Jesus Paperback – August 20, 2005
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The Cipher of Genesis unlocks the key to the lost traditions of the Book of Genesis, offering profound implications for faiths rooted in the Hebrew Testament Christianity, Judaism, and Islam. Jesus knew this secret wisdom and attempted to teach it, but that message remained with only a few. For the most part, the first book of the Bible has been dismissed as simplistic and archaic, a literal retelling of the creation of the world in seven days, the story of Adam and Eve, and generational listings. Suares's essential argument is that the words in Genesis cannot simply be translated/ one must understand the code, or the true meaning behind the words remains hidden. Each letter of the Hebrew alphabet represents a specific number, which signifies the living archetypal forces moving within the universe. Reading Genesis with knowledge of the code can project these forces into our very being and bring about the experience of Revelation. Among Suares's key points are the evident ramifications of the hidden teachings on parts of the New Testament. It is from this perspective that he interprets the Gospels of Matthew and John in a new and thoughtprovoking way. Suares unlocks the secrets of the Bible to reveal the ultimate aim of higher consciousness through the coded process of Revelation.
- Print length232 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherWeiser Books
- Publication dateAugust 20, 2005
- Grade level3 - 4
- Dimensions6 x 1 x 9 inches
- ISBN-101578633354
- ISBN-13978-1578633357
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About the Author
Gregg Braden has been a featured guest for international conferences and media specials, exploring the role of ancient wisdom and spirituality in technology. He is the New York Times bestselling author of The God Code and other books.
Product details
- Publisher : Weiser Books (August 20, 2005)
- Language : English
- Paperback : 232 pages
- ISBN-10 : 1578633354
- ISBN-13 : 978-1578633357
- Grade level : 3 - 4
- Item Weight : 12 ounces
- Dimensions : 6 x 1 x 9 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #1,121,079 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #840 in Kabbalah & Mysticism
- #2,064 in Ancient & Controversial Knowledge
- #14,375 in Christian Bible Study (Books)
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I understand that this book deals with such kinds of questions, ones which we may never be able to answer. We certainly cannot answer them with the everyday mind and everyday language because these questions are to large to be captured by mere words and concepts. After all, words are a means to convey a concept, and a concept is a mental model or simplification of reality, and a level removed from reality. You may think your HD TV is just great, but an image of a person, no matter how lifelike it appears, is not the same as the living, breathing, flesh and blood reality of one in your presence. Neither is an image of a meal a meal itself.
This book is based on Qabbalistic interpretation of Hebrew words as the meaning derives from the letters and the number the letters mean. This is an unusual way to regard words because the word's meaning is not derived phonetically but by numerology.
There are many surprises in the book, and intriguing ones to me. According to this book, the usual way these stories are understood is wrong, or incomplete, or misleading.
I was especially interested in Adam and Eve and Cain and Able. It seems that this book will upset everything you might have understood about these stories. The book even touches on Jesus and Judas and their true relationship a bit at the end. The interpretation of Judas is not new to me, but it might be an eye-opener to you. As to the serpent and the Garden of Eden, I never saw it coming.
I am impressed that this book gives women such a powerful role in cosmology. I always have thought of Judaism as patriarchal to the nth degree. It is nice to see a view of the power and mystery of the sacred feminine from a Qabbalistic point of view.
I find some of the ideas in the book very useful in my everyday meditations and my everyday world view. I appreciate the idea that some of us are like Adam, of the Earth and Heaven, but interested mostly in continuity and comfort. I affectionately call this type the "lizard on the rock". You know, a lizard finds a nice rock in the warm sun and wants to stay like that forever. I also see Bilbo Baggins like this: enjoying his three breakfasts and the comforts of his home.
In contrast is the need to grow spiritually, and for that one needs disruption and discontinuity. That is what Eve represents, and what Bilbo's mother's side of the family, the Tooks, represent. When Bilbo is comfortable at home, that is his Baggins' side. When he accepts the adventure and leaves home, that is his Tookish side. It is interesting that Gandalf the Wizard play the instigator role, but it is Bilbo who must either accept or reject the opportunity to grow. Bilbo accepts. Had he not, Tolkien would have had no book.
I wish that the book had some explanations for some of its concepts. I would like to understand more about 'resistance" and "resistance to life", more than I just intuited and made up for myself. Along the same lines, I would like to hear more about the container, or the husk, around the "germ" of life.
This is a good book, and unsettling book, and in that sense it can represent a more forward for those who read it and profit by what it says.
The scholarship in Kabbalah was at it’s infancy during his life so he knows nothing about the Zohar or Bahir but he’s equally idiotic about Judaism and has no foundation of Torah.
Balaam donkey was wiser. How sad the machinations of a madman are printed and digested instead of the treasure of the Word which abounds.
The most absurd part of the book is the last chapter that deals with circumcised men. I think Carlo has a phallic hang up of some sort. According to Carlo, the Jew being circumcised in 8 days is superior in intelligence. The Muslim, who is circumcises at 13 is not really capable of intellectual pursuits( who does he think gave us so much science, architecture, and so on before some parts of the religion became so radicalized? And, of course, the uncircumcised, are a sub species. It should be noted that carlo is of Jewish heritage and that's okay as many of us have some Jewish heritage.
In conclusion, I couldn't get past the half way mark and decided to give it up. Good luck to anyone else.
Don Barnaby
Marion, Ill
1) its a tad difficult to read
due to the authors train of thought…..
He begins in one arena and then goes on and on and on (with what I find to be
somewhat boring) just to end with what he could've said up front.
Some may like that, but I like to get to the point.
Purchased this because I read Glynda-Lee Hoffmann and the way in which she
portrayed this work, I was fascinated…..
I am NOT saying the book is not good……..
The book itself is very deep. Not your ordinary secular interpretations on religious monotheism.
Here in this book, it goes down deep to the building blocks of language with numbers as well, religious beliefs, and of life itself. Consider it the subatomic analysis of the metaphysics of Christianity.


