Curated findings
Codes analyzed with editorial context, visualized matrix and verifiable sources.
Mashiach in Genesis: the first finding of the messianic term
משיח appears encoded in Genesis with small skips — a pattern that the classical codes identify as significant. Complete analysis.
Read finding →Mashiach × HaMashiach: the messianic crossing in Genesis
When two related terms appear as ELS close to each other, the event gains statistical significance. Here we cross the two forms of the messianic term.
Read finding →Yitzhak in Genesis: the patriarch of the Akedah
Searching for the patriarch Yitzhak encoded in the book where his story is openly told.
Read finding →Hitler in Deuteronomy: the controversial case
One of the most cited — and most debated — cases of Torah codes. We reproduce the finding, present all objections, and let the reader decide.
Read finding →Rabin assassinated: the Drosnin case that changed the debate
The finding that brought Torah codes to global magazine covers — and the academic response that dismantled it.
Read finding →Mikdash in Exodus: the encoded sanctuary
Searching for the term מקדש in the book that already contains it as a central theme.
Read finding →Zayit (olive) in Deuteronomy: the seventh species of Israel
The olive is one of the seven emblematic species of the land of Israel — source of oil, symbol of peace and royal-priestly anointing.
Read finding →Pesach in Exodus: the festival encoded in its origin book
Pesach is born in Exodus. Searching it encoded in the same book is an ideal case to study convergence between manifest text and ELS pattern.
Read finding →Shabbat in Genesis: the seventh day encoded in the first book
Shabbat is born in Genesis 2: the seventh day of creation, sanctified by God. We search the term encoded in the book that introduces it.
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