37x73


The Communion Sum

The above graphic shows one of the many thousands of patterns that appear in the Communion Sum, a number found both in the communion passage of the New Testament and the advanced mathematics of Genesis 1:1. The above displays the Genesis 1:1 star of stars, culminating in the 6th cube. All three are regular feature of the first verse, where the outline of the 73rd triangle of Genesis 1:1 comes to 216 or 6*6*6.

THE COMMUNION SUM


            It wouldn't be wrong to say that the search for meaningful math in the Bible is the search for improbability. This word is the technical term for something rare and a rarity that can be mathematically measured. Random patterns will always appear in any large body of text or data. Take the collected works of Shakespeare, any edition of the dictionary or a random phone-book for that matter. Look long and really hard enough and you will find an amazing pattern (somewhere). That's not intelligent design, that's just random chance.

           The patterns we find in the text of the Bible are different, because they are amazing patterns in amazing places and these patterns very often exhibit amazing rarity (improbability). In addition to all of that, they are also part of an integrated systemic pattern seen in both the Hebrew and Greek Testaments. That is very much different than randomness. The Communion Sum is the perfect example of this, because it is calculably rare and specific to the most holy rite of Christianity.

           The actual liturgy of Communion is based on both the Gospel accounts and from a passage of the epistle of Paul to the Corinthians. Christians will recognize the language so often recited in their Church services during the Mass and/or Communion, from 1 Corinthians 11:24-25, hereafter the Communion Sum.2 The sum of these two verses has a sign immediately apparent to any mathematician worth their salt. For it is a palindromic number but this isn't just a normal palindrome, it is very much one of the most super-palindromic numbers ever discovered.

           The Communion Sum is the 7th square-root of an EPRN (Equal Product of Reversible Numbers). These numbers were studied by modern day mathematician Shyam Gupta of India, which makes their discovery very much a retroactive miracle of the modern day. The equation below shows the exceptional rarity and power of this number, as it is only the 7th number of all numbers that can do this. Indeed the Communion Sum is the first example used in the OEIS listing of A117281.

           These numbers are double reversible square roots. This means a number that can be expressed as a product of digitally reversed multiplication in two or more ways. But the Communion Sum is even more rare, as it is only the 7th such number (out to the first 5,000) whose square root is a palindrome. This is like a mirror within a mirror that produces yet another mirror.


1Corinthians 11:24-25

And when he had given thanks, he brake it, and said,

Take, eat: this is my body, which is broken for you: this do in remembrance of me.

After the same manner also he took the cup, when he had supped, saying,

This cup is the new testament in my blood: this do ye, as oft as ye drink it, in remembrance of me.

           

Communion Sum = 27972

27972 × 27972 = 15984 × 48951

The Cross of the Lord Jesus Christ

The graphic above shows what happens when you divide the Communion Sum Squared by the name the Lord Jesus Christ in its original, ordinal Greek of 294. This is of course a 3D cross, where each individual unit of the cross (cross = 1296 units) is the fabulous sum of 777^2 or 3*7*7*3*37*37. 


The extreme rarity of such a number as the EPRN Communion Sum, is then clearly intended to be squared, i.e. as the number is a 'double-reversible-square-root' the square of the number is the one that will really flourish under study. For instance if we look at the other side of the equation, 15,984, we find that it too is a buzzing beehive of Three-Seven Patterns.


((37th hexagonal number) - 1) x 4 = 15,984

((37th star number) - 1) x 2 = 15,984

((73 x 73) - 1) x 3 = 15,984


The reverse of this number (48,951) is also a multiple of 37 and similarly filled with such patterns:


(3 x 7 x 7 x 3) x (37 + 37 + 37) = 48,951

(3 x 7 x 3) x 777 = 48,951

(3 x 7 x 3 x 7 x 3) x 37 = 48,951


The last one is of particular interest, as it is 37 times the repeating digital sum of the reciprocal of 3773, which has an astounding 294 digits just like the cross pictures above.


1/3773 =

0.00026504108136761197985687781606148953087728597932679565332626557116353034720381659157

169361250993904055128544924463291810230585740789822422475483699973495891863238802014312

218393851046912271402067320434667373442883646965279618340842830638749006095944871455075

5367081897694142592101775775245163


Digital Sum = (3 x 7 x 7 x 3) + (3 x 7 x 7 x 3) + (3 x 7 x 7 x 3)

  FIG. 10.2 The Communion Sum of 37 × 36 × 21


The Communion Sum is made all the more biblical by the fact it is a multiple of 37. The illustration displays just one of the thousands of configurations this Communion Sum can produce all related to the number 37. You can find many more for yourself by using an online number encyclopedia and searching the numbers 27972 or 27972². There you will find all the Bible math you could ever desire, hidden for thousands of years in the very words that gave us the holy rite of Communion.

 As this sum is a highly composite multiple of 37 it will fit hundreds of undiscovered mathematical puzzles in the Bible. When it is squared the number of puzzles expands exponentially: 279722 = (3 × 7 × 7 × 3) × 362 × 372. This is the untold power of these 37-based identities, they keep on making puzzles forever in the mountain ranges of their multiples. Here are four that prove the point with the numbers for JesusSG, ChristSG and Jesus ChristSG (2368) and Genesis 1:1SH (2701).

  

 (30 × 888) + ((37 – 1) × 37) = 27972 = Communion

 (18 × 1480) + ((37 – 1) × 37) = 27972 = Communion

  

 (12 × 2368) – (12 × 37) = 27972 = Communion

 (10 × 2701) + (26 × 37) = 27972 = Communion

  

The last equation can also be rewritten with the name of the Lord (Yahweh (26)). As we shall shortly see the Communion Sum is cubic in literally thousands of ways, where the eternally auspicious number 26 is the first hollow (holy) cube: 3^3 - 1 = 26.


 (10 × 2701) = 37 x 730 = 73 x 370

 (3 x 3)^3 + 1^3 = 730

 3^3 + 7^3 = 370


What’s truly amazing about the Communion Sum is that it is a replication of Genesis 1:1 in over 140,000 ways. The key to the arithmetic is found in how the prime factors relate to the number thirty-seven: 27972 = 37 × (T(27) + T(27)), which is thirty-seven times two triangles. When you square the Communion Sum it becomes a cubic masterpiece for the ages. The illustration below shows a series of cubes (1-27). In the circle is a type of fractal called a Jerusalem cube (really that’s its name). These are cubic fractals generally known as Mengor sponges. It is the Hebrew spelled out version of Genesis 1:1 whose sum is JesusOE × JesusOE or 742. In other words every minor cross-cube has the sum of the Jesus in English, while the whole major cross-cube has the sum of Genesis 1:1 expanded (Mishpar Shemi). This was one of my first (and biggest) discoveries in the math of the Protoverse.

FIG. 10.3 The Mengor Sponge of Jesus squared & the first 27 cubes


When you square the Communion Sum it connects with one of the earliest and greatest discoveries in the history of mathematics, made by the Roman-Syrian mathematician Nicomachus of Gerasa, circa 60-120AD. His discovery way back then is even today described by mathematicians as one of the most marvelous facts and feats of math.

 

What he discovered so long ago, was that when you square a triangular number it becomes the sum of a series of cubes. Or that a series of cubes is a triangular number squared. For instance: T(4) = 10. Ten squared is 100 and 100 equals 13 + 23 + 33 + 43. The Communion Sum incorporates this ancient discovery into its implied arithmetic.

 

279722 = 742 × T(27)2

 

279722 = 742 × (13+23+33+43+53+63+73+83+93+103+113+123+133+143+ 153+163+173+183+193+203+213+223+233+243+253+263+273)

 

What this means is that in the illustration, all those cubes in the series 1-27 and indeed every unit that makes up those larger and larger cubes are all in fact a cross-cube fractal of Genesis 1:1, based on the name Jesus(74). So in the illustration when you see all those seemingly endless groupings of cubes you must imagine each one is the cross-cube fractal of Jesus squared. This is an exponential cubic modularity. That means the Communion Sum squared has over ten-million references to the modern English name of Jesus.

THE STAR OF THE NEW TESTAMENT


 One of the most shocking mathematical truths of the Bible is in the very title of the New Testament. The math here is very clear and another easy example of prime mechanics. The Greek for the New Testament is hey Kaine Diatheke (η Καινη Διαθηκη) from 1 Cor. 11:25 and as the basis for the title of every New Testament Bible since.


 But before we calculate its sum, let us remember those who have calculated before, yet were unaware of its significance. The record of the early Church shows how common the practice of biblical gematria was in the ancient Greek speaking world. To read Greek was to know Greek arithmetic or the alphanumerics of isopsephy. You had no choice, Greek letters were your numbers.


 With this in mind, it is safe to say that likely many members of the early Church must have calculated the sum of the title of their most valued holy text—The New Testament. Those nameless many who must have tried this, likely could not comprehend its meaning. Only centuries later after the scientific revolution had thoroughly mathematized the world, could the impact of its sum be understood.

The New TestamentSG (η Καινη Διαθηκη) = 157 = The 37th Prime

                   

The missing perimeter in the star configuration here is the perimeter of the 3rd star of 37 and is meant to double-down on the importance of the number 37. 

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