Bonnie
Gaunt has been for me the premier "gematrician". She has several
books covering many different areas a study, including Stonehenge, the Great
pyramid and the solar system, just to name three. If ever there was a proof of
God's reality, it is in Bonnie Gaunt's work with gematria.
Gematria
is very simple, but I thought it appropriate to include a page telling how it
works. The following is taken from Bonnie Gaunt's book, "The Stones Cry
Out", appendix I. Thank you, Bonnie.

All
creation, from the largest to the smallest. can always be reduced to numbers.
Pythagoras, the father of mathematics, discovered a great truth when he said
'Numbers are the language of the universe." In the writings of the ancient
philosophers there is common agreement that the purpose of number is for the
investigation of the universe. From the atom to the galaxy in the heavens, the
same unchanging laws apply the laws of arithmetic, the language of number.
Just
as the hand of God spread the vast expanse of the heavens by number, so too His
written word can be reduced to number; and those who have tried it have stood
in awe of the intricacy and beauty of the design. It was an intentional design.
The
secrets locked up in the Number Code of the Bible are there for all to behold;
and down through the centuries many have unlocked those secrets and revealed to
us the unspeakable beauty of the intended design. Part of the numerical design
of the scriptures is the science of Gematria. The Old Testament was originally
written in the Hebrew language, and the New Testament in Greek. These two
languages used the letters of their for symbols of amount. Their alphabets were
called "dual character systems", one of sound, or phonetics, and the
other of amount, or number.
Tobias
Dantzig1, a professor of mathematics at the University of Maryland (U.S.A.)
explained the phenomenon thus:
"The
sum of the numbers represented by the letters of the word was the number of the
word, and from the standpoint of Gematria two words were equivalent if they added
up to the same number. Not only was Gematria used from the earliest days for
the interpretation of Bible passages, but there are indications that the
writers of the Bible had practiced the art. Thus Abraham proceeding to rescue
his brother Eliasar drives forth 318 slaves. Is it just a coincidence that the
Hebrew word Eliasar adds up to 318?"
Within
the first century A.D., Barnabas, the traveling companion of the Apostle Paul,
wrote concerning this-number code.
"For
the scripture says that Abraham circumcised three hundred and eighteen men of
his house. But what therefore was the mystery that was made known unto him?
Mark, first the
eighteen,
and next the three hundred. For the numeral letters of ten and eight are I H.
And
these
denote Jesus. And because the cross was that by which we were to find grace;
therefore
he adds three hundred; the note of which is T (the figure of his cross).
Wherefore
by
two letters he signified Jesus, and by the third his cross."
Barnabas
leads us to realize that the knowledge of the use of Gematria in the word of
God is not something of modem discovery.
One
of the best-known demonstrations of Gematria in the Old Testament is the
section headings of Psalm 119. Any student of the Old Testament is aware that
the names for these sections are in fact the sequential letters of the Hebrew
Alphabet. These letters were simply used to number the sections. The some
Bibles the word for the letter is spelled out, (such as aleph, while in other
translations, the single letter is used - both of these translate, by Gematria,
to the number 1.
Gematria
among the Greeks was in common use at the time of the writing of the New
Testament. A copy of one of these early manuscripts, called papyri, (because
they were written on papyrus) exists today in Dublin, Ireland in the Chester
Beatty Collection. It is the earliest known copy of the book of Revelation
extant. It is dated somewhere between 200 and 300 A.D. This manuscript uses
Gematria for every number in the book of Revelation.
The
re-discovery of these Number Codes is not new. The noted Bible expositor, E. W.
Bullinger, was among the many who have added to our understanding of this
subject. His book Number in Scripture, published in 1894, shows the
supernatural design in the use of numbers, both in the works of God and in the
word of God.
The
number equivalents for the Greek alphabet can be found in any Webster's
Dictionary.
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