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Pyramidology

 

A19th-century scientific theory popularized by figures like Charles Piazzi Smyth (astronomer royal of Scotland) and later Adam Rutherford with his thick four volume mathematical study (which I am proud to own a 1973 signed copy of in my personal library)—shows the Great Pyramid of Giza—built by Enoch the great-grandfather of Noah in 2441 BC was not a tomb but a divinely inspired “Bible in stone,” encoding a prophetic timeline of human history. 

 

Each pyramid inch—derived by the sacred cubit the same that built Noah’s Ark and Solomon‘s Temple (a unit slightly longer than the British imperial inch, roughly 1.00106 inches) represents one solar year in the timeline of mankind, starting from the biblical creation of Adam and extending to the end times, including the establishment of God’s Kingdom.

 

Sir Issac Newton used pyramid data to reconstruct biblical measurements. This interpretation focuses on the pyramid’s internal passageways and chambers. The timeline begins around 4000 BC and projects forward to around 2030 AD for apocalyptic events. In unpublished manuscripts like A Dissertation upon the Sacred Cubit of the Jews (c. 1687–1710s), He linked the pyramid’s empty granite sarcophagus (coffer) in the King’s Chamber to the Ark of the Covenant: These ideas weren’t published in Newton’s lifetime—his theological works were deemed heretical—but survived in ~10 million words of private papers, auctioned in fragments (e.g., scorched notes from a 1690s fire caused by his dog, sold for £378,000 in 2020). Sir Issac Newton was so overwhelmed by what he found in the Great Pyramid that at the age of 27 he left his scientific pursuits to dedicate the rest of his life pondering God.

 

One of the greatest injustices in world history was committed by Colonel Richard William Howard Vyse. Desperate for funding to continue his excavations at the Great Pyramid, he hired an Egyptian hotel owner to paint the cartouche of Pharaoh Khufu in one of the relieving chambers above the King’s Chamber. With that single act of forgery, the pyramid was forever branded—by those we now call “educated experts”—as Khufu’s Pyramid but infact there are NO inscriptiona found anywhere in the Great Pyramid.

 

Napoleon Bonaparte spent a night alone in the King’s Chamber. He emerged at dawn pale and shaken. Years later, exiled on Saint Helena, he began to recount the experience—only to stop abruptly, muttering, “You would never believe me.”

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