Fringe Flashback! Bible Codes - Peeranormal with Dr. Michael Heiser

Published: Feb. 1, 2024, 11:05 a.m.

ORIGINAL AIR DATE: NOV 29, 2017

Back in mid-nineties a peer-reviewed article was published that sought to legitimize the idea that the Hebrew text of Genesis encrypted meaningful information about modern persons and events. Their method for detecting the presumed encrypted knowledge was known as equidistant letter sequencing (ELS).This article (Witztum, Rips, and Rosenberg) became a reference point for journalist Michael Drosnin, who wrote the bestselling book, The Bible Code, shortly thereafter. Subsequent to the success of Drosnin\u2019s book, Bible-code research expanded to the full Torah and beyond, to the rest of the Hebrew Bible. In this episode we ask whether there is such a thing as ELS Bible codes. Have other statisticians and biblical scholars agreed with Witztum, Rips, and Rosenberg, or are there serious problems with the method and its assumptions?

Articles:

Witztum, Doron, Eliyahu Rips, and Yoav Rosenberg, \u201cEquidistant letter sequences in the Book of Genesis,\u201d Statistical Science 9.3 (1994): 429-438

McKay, Brendan, Dror Bar-Natan, Maya Bar-Hillel, and Gil Kalai, \u201cSolving the Bible Code puzzle,\u201d Statistical Science (1999): 150-173

Richard A. Taylor, \u201cThe Bible Code: \u2018Teaching them [wrong] things\u2019,\u201d Journal of the Evangelical Theological Society 43, no. 4 (2000): 619-636

Paul J. Tanner. \u201cDecoding the Bible Code,\u201d Bibliotheca Sacra 157 (2000): 141-159