Lois Posted September 25 (edited) **On Foreseeing the Future and the Codes of the Torah** Once, I wanted to see myself before my death. In meditation, I focused, and the future opened up to me. I saw myself in the future, and my future self was looking directly into the eyes of my present self. I saw the eyes of a person who had gained great knowledge. I am very frightened by the moment when I will finally see the eyes of my future self. A couple of days later, the Angel of Service appeared to me and said, "Mourn your death." This terrified me, and I thought I had only a few days left to live. In meditation, trying to solve this issue, I penetrated into the future after my death. I found myself next to my soul, which was in the afterlife immediately after my passing. I felt that a certain transformation was happening to my soul after death, and it was quite painful. I began to help my soul, trying to ease the painful moments. Then, I determined that the transformation was complete. An idea came to me that I needed to ensure that my soul would enter Paradise. In that realm, there were two versions of my soul: one of my present self and the other of my post-death self. I began to elevate the future soul into Paradise. Then, I saw that my soul, having risen to a certain level, continued on its own path toward Paradise. I did not see Paradise itself, but I saw that my future soul was heading there, and she was very joyful upon seeing someone in Paradise. Thus, the primary issue was resolved for me: that I would enter Paradise after death. Years later, when I was fiercely battling my Yetzer Hara (evil inclination), I had quite negative thoughts toward the Creator. One day, He appeared to me and showed that if I continued thinking negatively, I would end up in Hell. He even showed me my soul in Hell, tormented by infernal spiritual forces. This created an interesting paradox. I had clearly seen that my soul in the afterlife was entering Paradise, and at the same time, I knew that if I thought poorly of the Creator, I would end up in Hell. There is no logical way to resolve this dilemma. If I am certain I will enter Paradise, how can I possibly end up in Hell? Of course, I strive to control my thoughts, but from a scientific point of view, the problem remains. As it became known thanks to the prominent mathematician, Professor Eliyahu Rips, the Torah is encoded. It contains vast amounts of information about both the past and the future, as well as other types of knowledge. This raises a natural question: if we learn about a future event from the Torah's codes, then theoretically, we could influence that event, potentially preventing it from happening. So, the question arises: **But isn't it encoded in the Torah, meaning it must inevitably happen (if there is no warning of the event's cancellation)?** There is no logical answer to this question, but there is an answer on the level of allegory, and for the wise, it will be enough: The mystery surrounds everything. Threads from the future pass into the past, and through the present, a beam shines, encased in a crystalline armor. A ghost has no shadow, a shadow has no connection to reality, reality has no logic, and logic has no independence. Once, the Creator appeared to me and said: **"If only I could understand what randomness is."** Thus, even to the Creator, randomness is an unknown concept. If we were to roll a die, the numbers that come up would be those predetermined by the Creator. Under normal circumstances, the numbers would appear randomly, but if we connect the numbers of the die to real events in our minds, then the numbers would no longer seem random. Instead, they would reflect exactly what the Creator wants from a person in that particular moment. This principle underlies various systems of divination, such as the Chinese *I Ching* (Book of Changes), Tarot cards, and so on. However, when a person seeks to know the future through these methods, they connect to a system of impure forces, which will then dictate the future for the individual whose fortune is being told. If one were to connect a pseudo-random number generator to a Tarot reading system and learn their future, but later regret using impure forces, the same paradox I described earlier would arise again. The future is already known, but... Edited September 25 by Lois Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Nungali Posted September 25 1 hour ago, Lois said: **On Foreseeing the Future and the Codes of the Torah** Once, I wanted to see myself before my death. In meditation, I focused, and the future opened up to me. I saw myself in the future, and my future self was looking directly into the eyes of my present self. I saw the eyes of a person who had gained great knowledge. I am very frightened by the moment when I will finally see the eyes of my future self. A couple of days later, the Angel of Service appeared to me and said, "Mourn your death." This terrified me, and I thought I had only a few days left to live. In meditation, trying to solve this issue, I penetrated into the future after my death. I found myself next to my soul, which was in the afterlife immediately after my passing. I felt that a certain transformation was happening to my soul after death, and it was quite painful. I began to help my soul, trying to ease the painful moments. Then, I determined that the transformation was complete. An idea came to me that I needed to ensure that my soul would enter Paradise. In that realm, there were two versions of my soul: one of my present self and the other of my post-death self. I began to elevate the future soul into Paradise. Then, I saw that my soul, having risen to a certain level, continued on its own path toward Paradise. I did not see Paradise itself, but I saw that my future soul was heading there, and she was very joyful upon seeing someone in Paradise. Thus, the primary issue was resolved for me: that I would enter Paradise after death. Years later, when I was fiercely battling my Yetzer Hara (evil inclination), I had quite negative thoughts toward the Creator. One day, He appeared to me and showed that if I continued thinking negatively, I would end up in Hell. He even showed me my soul in Hell, tormented by infernal spiritual forces. This created an interesting paradox. I had clearly seen that my soul in the afterlife was entering Paradise, and at the same time, I knew that if I thought poorly of the Creator, I would end up in Hell. There is no logical way to resolve this dilemma. If I am certain I will enter Paradise, how can I possibly end up in Hell? Of course, I strive to control my thoughts, but from a scientific point of view, the problem remains. As it became known thanks to the prominent mathematician, Professor Eliyahu Rips, the Torah is encoded. It contains vast amounts of information about both the past and the future, as well as other types of knowledge. This raises a natural question: if we learn about a future event from the Torah's codes, then theoretically, we could influence that event, potentially preventing it from happening. So, the question arises: **But isn't it encoded in the Torah, meaning it must inevitably happen (if there is no warning of the event's cancellation)?** There is no logical answer to this question, but there is an answer on the level of allegory, and for the wise, it will be enough: The mystery surrounds everything. Threads from the future pass into the past, and through the present, a beam shines, encased in a crystalline armor. A ghost has no shadow, a shadow has no connection to reality, reality has no logic, and logic has no independence. Once, the Creator appeared to me and said: **"If only I could understand what randomness is."** Thus, even to the Creator, randomness is an unknown concept. If we were to roll a die, the numbers that come up would be those predetermined by the Creator. Under normal circumstances, the numbers would appear randomly, but if we connect the numbers of the die to real events in our minds, then the numbers would no longer seem random. Instead, they would reflect exactly what the Creator wants from a person in that particular moment. This principle underlies various systems of divination, such as the Chinese *I Ching* (Book of Changes), Tarot cards, and so on. However, when a person seeks to know the future through these methods, they connect to a system of impure forces, which will then dictate the future for the individual whose fortune is being told. If one were to connect a pseudo-random number generator to a Tarot reading system and learn their future, but later regret using impure forces, the same paradox I described earlier would arise again. The future is already known, but... It looks like you are asking ; if I can see the future and I can change it , how can I have seen it as the future before it changed ? Maybe a half dozen 'Twilight Zones' and many science fiction novels have that theme . One one hand , we have a seemingly unsolvable problem .... on the other hand , simply , you might be wrong . Now if you can mange to encompass the second solution, see it in you Tarot example ; tarot predicts the future - you will die in a train wreck next week . So you dont catch the train for a week , there IS a big train wreck but you where no on it so you are not dead so the original tarot reading was wrong . Looks rather stupid doesnt it ? And the problem evaporates . Its not that Tarot reading predicts the future , one could say it predicts future trends (if at all ) and one can change a trend . In case the Russian translator makes a mess of that : Trend ; noun A general tendency or course of events: Oh ..... okay ; tendency /tĕn′dən-sē/ noun A characteristic likelihood. "fabric that has a tendency to wrinkle." A predisposition to think, act, or proceed in a particular way. "his tendency to exaggerate." A characteristic pattern or point of view. and that also applies to what is encoded in the Tora , Of course, the other issue is you might not be able to read the Tora OR the Tarot correctly . You know the story in the Tora about the 'non - humans' ? My Jewish mate has decoded that to mean the rise of AI . Now he has to build tunnels underground (he was miner before ) for himself and the other Jews (of his specific persuasion ) to go and survive in ( Although I am not sure how being in a tunnel saves you from AI ? ) The future remains mostly unknown but .... 1 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites