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The Hub
Apologetics
Physics
Numbers
Bible Study
Biblical Names
Miscellaneous

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The Hub
Abarim Publications' celebrated array of articles pertaining to
- Apologetics and Bible study -
•Physics, Math and Apologetics
Quantum Mechanics for Beginners; an Introduction.
| Quantum Mechanics studies the peculiar world of the "ones"; those things in nature that can not be divided. Since God is a One, and the Body of Christ as well, a fun-filled crash course in quantum mechanics should be mandatory at every seminary. |
Chaos Theory for Beginners; an Introduction.
| Chaos Theory looks at patterns and their reoccurrence in nature. Since Moses built the tabernacle - which would turn into the temple, and later still in the Body of Christ - after patterns he saw in heaven, Chaos Theory is a must for every serious student of Scriptures. |
Scripture Theory for Beginners; an Introduction.
| What Chaos Theory does with nature, Scripture Theory does with Scriptures: the identification of reoccurring patterns and their meanings. Especially interesting are those Biblical patterns that are identical to those found in high-energy physics. |
The number Pi in the Bible
| Here at Abarim Publications we rarely get nervous, but the pi-challenge presented in 1 Kings 7 is formidable, and required more volume of coffee per volume of Twila Paris than any other challenge we were tempted to meet so far. |
Who Framed the Number Sequence? Jessica Rabbit Explains.
| Ever since Pythagoras started his number sect, people have believed that numbers are a very big deal. So big even that they may someday describe the whole truth about everything. A dire mistake. |
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•Bible Study; surveys of Hebrew and Greek texts
Bible Commentary
| Read our often daring articles on certain challenging Bible verses, including in depth surveys of Hebrew and Greek roots. |
Common misunderstandings about the Bible
| People believe the weirdest things, especially about the Bible. The Bible is very complex but that's no excuse to misunderstand it. Have a look at some of the most persistent misunderstandings about the Bible, enthusiastically compiled by the Abarim Publications Editorial Team. |
The Meaning of the Hebrew Alphabet
| The Hebrew alphabet is not simply a collection of abstract linguistic elements, like the English alphabet is. All Hebrew letters have names and identities, and in post-Biblical times were even rendered numerical value. |
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•Biblical Names
Biblical Name Vault
| Where we have our Toms, Dicks and Harry's, the Bible speaks of King Beloved (David), the prophet Salvation (Hosea) and a savior named Yah Will Save (Jesus). Names in the Bible have a profound and often underestimated function. Browse the Abarim Publications Name Vault, which contains articles on almost 400 Biblical names. |
The Names of God
| A Name-Vault special: A series of articles on some of the names of God - YHWH, Elohim, Elyon, Dabar, Logos; Hebrew and Greek roots, translations and interpretations. |
On Names in the Bible and the Strange Genealogies of Christ
| Where in our modern world names are rarely more than an abstract label, names in the Bible are much more than that. They have to be, because there's something deeply fishy about the Biblical usage of names. And there's really nothing wrong with either of the two genealogies of Christ (Matthew 1 & Luke 3), except for the bizarre detail that they are not the same! |
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•Miscellaneous
Book Reviews
| Here at Abarim Publications we love reading almost as much as writing. Check out our ever growing series of articles on remarkable books. |
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On the incredible significance of hair in the Bible
| In the Bible there seems to be a certain symbolic meaning to hair, something that is completely lost in modern languages and translations.
We can see this by the few usages of the Hebrew word for hair that seem at odds with the regular meaning of hair or hairy. But most notably, in 1 Cor 11:14-15 Paul seems to refer to a common understanding about hair, something that everybody in those days was aware of but which in our time goes unnoticed. Paul does not refer to fashion or law but to nature. He says that nature teaches that a man should have short hair and a woman long hair. |
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On the World Wide Effort of Translating the Un-translatable
The Torah is indisputably the most intelligent and most influential document in history. It has been pondered and loved by people from all social standards. But most of us appreciate this marvelous Text through secondary representations; translations and explanations, in a tradition that was set by the prophet Ezra.
While rebuilding the nation Israel, Ezra rediscovered the incredible depths and benevolent significance of the largely forgotten Text and installed a number of explainers in order to present the un-presentable. Though job, because how does one explain the inexplicable? |
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A Brief History of the End of Time
| In order for us to entertain thoughts about the end of something, we must first study the something itself. Time has baffled many for long, because what is it? Where does it come from? How come it's only going one way? Einstein once said that time is that which prevents everything from happening at once. This statement is, of course, miraculously clever, but it doesn't lead anywhere but to a hardy chuckle. |
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There's something about The Time Line.
| Since both emergences of the Christ on the earthly arena are meticulously timed, and planned according to the readiness of mankind to receive Him, the First and Second Comings are preceded by levels of human development that are highly self-similar. A closer look at the time line reveals more than one symmetry. Like a snowflake, the time line seems to have multiple symmetric axes; it's a palindrome. |
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On the Incredible Significance of the Human Reproductive Cycle.
| The death-and-resurrection of Jesus Christ is the pivot of Scriptures but besides its enormous theological impact, the principles and dynamics behind the Golgotha Event have been admitted enigmas to the Church throughout the ages. No more so. Since man was made in God's image, the production of Jesus and the Body of Christ are self-similar to every human reproductive cycle. |
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Meet Mrs. God
| Pretty much everybody knows that Scriptures depict the church as a woman, and that she is betrothed to the Creator to be His wife some great and splendid day. But what hardly anybody knows is a detail that has been eagerly swept under the ragged rug of assumed white supremacy: Mrs. God is black! |
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From the Desert to the Grand Unification; a Brief History of Monotheism
| Monotheism means that the sense of divinity is translated into the quest for or worship of one single God. All various forms of monotheism are generally classified in three major religions: Judaism, Christianity and Islam. But advances in logic mathematics allow many to conclude that science is the fourth great monotheistic religion; its coveted objective the Grand Unified Theory - or the Theory Of Everything; its certainties as much leaning on belief as any other faith. Advances in quantum mechanics and chaos theory have revealed that science, the way it is conducted and the conclusions it derives, is highly similar to the intellectual thrust that once brought forth the three much older monotheisms. |
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