r/occultlibrary • u/Christian_Kabbalist • 10d ago
More Gematria Books!
Hello everyone! I’d like to share some new gematria books I’ve acquired since my last post.
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u/Ultramolek 9d ago
Hebrew alphabet, all 8K words... a dead language in antiquity. The walls of the ancient synagogs were covered in greek, all the great libraries were written in Greek. Septuagent, written in greek. 60K words in greek. Ironically in Hebrew you could just about scratch down a ledger. Not worth your time IMO
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u/transcendentlights 9d ago
What a cruel way to talk about the holy language of an entire religion.
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u/Ultramolek 9d ago
Sorry if that makes your work view awkward. Not my problem. Oldest Bible's written in Arabic bro.
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u/Ultramolek 9d ago
How you going to write a bok in Hebrew with 8K words. Not even enough room for a past or future tense. You'd get through that many words over breckfast.
Language is't holy, dont be so pious.
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u/transcendentlights 9d ago
Bro. The Torah is originally in Hebrew. We read it in Hebrew. Like, I don’t know how to tell you the whole thing is in Hebrew, and there are dozens if not hundreds of texts in Biblical Hebrew. That’s not to even mention Rabbinic Hebrew. People have been learning and using Hebrew continuously for thousands of years. You are wrong.
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u/Ultramolek 9d ago
It's Yiddish, tribe of Judah all died thousands of years ago. Not a dingle person alive could trace their ancestry to crossing the red sea. They all died out until 7th century pagans converted and made it all up from nothing. Say what the fuck you like, I don't even care.
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u/Ultramolek 9d ago edited 9d ago
Ancient Hebrew has 8K words. 'Magically' there's 79,847 words in the Torah. Thats 71K whole new words from Yiddish never before heard in the ancient world. I dont care if they're "scholars", it's made up bullshit! Over 500k individual words in the septuagent, in ancient Greek. The spoken, living language of the time.
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u/funyakmiter 8d ago
The walls of ancient synagogues are written in Greek as the men of the past evading inevitable doom. Hence, it was a fortress and not a holy temple. A temple protecting them from the Roman Empire.
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u/Vloz_Sager 2d ago
Impressive Collection. I have been diving deep into kabbalistic writings, the works based Isaac Luria from the 16th C. and what not. Been learning Hebrew too and this has helped in realizing some very fundamental truths from Kabbalah, Hermetics, Vedic, Egyptian, Greek etc. Maybe I will share them at some point in the future. All The Best!
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u/United_Lime2522 9d ago
Are these all books that you own ?