Overview Of Pyramidology

Pyramidology Defined Pyramidology, or the study of the Great Pyramid from a religious standpoint. In other words, pyramidology centers around the great pyramid telling a story in the form of a timeline. A so-called timeline built into the structure before certain religious events make it prophetic in nature. There is also built-in symbolism to support…

Pyramidology Defined

Pyramidology, or the study of the Great Pyramid from a religious standpoint. In other words, pyramidology centers around the great pyramid telling a story in the form of a timeline. A so-called timeline built into the structure before certain religious events make it prophetic in nature. There is also built-in symbolism to support the timeline.

History

This Great Pyramid sat there on the Giza plateau for thousands of years gleaming and shining so brightly that “light shadows” came off of it which pointed in certain directions at certain times of the year. (I wonder if the light was an annoyance to those living in Cairo.) The reflected light came from the highly polished white limestone blocks encasing the pyramid. Some say 144,000 of these casing stones covered the pyramid. David Davidson goes into the light shadows if you’re interested in studying it further.

In 825 A.D. the Caliph, Al Mamoun broke into the Pyramid to find supposed treasure. He found none but tossed pieces of gold around the inside of the structure for his workers to find. Al Mamoun exposed the inner passageways of the pyramid from the original entrance to the king’s chamber. After this, the pyramid sat for centuries gathering bat guano making it very cave-like. To make matters worse, an earthquake around 1300 A.D. damaged the casing stones which were removed to repair and build mosques in Cairo. The desecration and damage of this greatest of the Seven Wonders of the World had a positive side in that it would give future explorers a head start in the unraveling of the non-physical treasures located inside the pyramid.

The Christians Go To Work

Various explorers stopped at the pyramids over the centuries. Workers cleared out the passageways as well as areas around the pyramid. A man named John Taylor came along and suggested that the passageways could be like a timeline where each inch represented one year. Piazzi Smyth came after Taylor and went inside the pyramid taking careful measurements of most of the interior features. Petrie came after Smyth denying the whole religious “book in stone” idea and made his own measurements. According to the Edgar Brothers, who came after Petrie and took many measurements of their own, said Pertie’s measurements pretty much confirmed those of Smyth’s.

Christian explorers ended up finding a lot of really neat things in the great pyramid such as the entrance furnishing a date of around 2500 B.C. which corresponds to the great flood around the time of Noah. A scored line in the descending passageway was discovered which provided an approximate date for the advent of Abraham. Christians also accounted for the three huge plugs at the beginning of the ascending passageway for being the advent of Moses and his three-part covenant. In addition, they found that the entrance to the grand gallery corresponded to the time of Jesus Christ.

John and Morton Edgar found that the angle at this point of the structure, when laid down on a map, pointed a line directly to Bethlehem where Jesus Christ was born which they dubbed the Christ Angle.

Christian explorers also found the date for the great step to be about 1844 A.D. At the point of the great step, their understanding of the pyramid’s timeline fell apart. They had the idea that each inch starting at the great step now represented one Gregorian 30-day month. All sorts of predictions based on that understanding came about which fell through making pyramidology look kind of silly.

The Problem

The Christians had a Jesus-centric view of the pyramid timeline which focused on the beginning of the grand gallery where the advent of Jesus Christ occurs. Because of this, and the fact that they are going by very old dates, their dating was imperfect.

A New Revelation Supplies The Answer

A Baha’i came along later and got pyramidology going again using a more accurate focus point, more recent dates, and a whole different calendar. Dr. Jensen taught that the great step with the 1844 date referred to the advent of the Bab. By using the starting date for the Baha’i calendar instituted by the bab at March 21st, 1844, and by realizing that each inch from that point onward represented a Baha’i month of 19 days, Dr. Jensen was able to count his way up to the entrance to the king’s chamber where he obtained the day for the proclamation of Baha’u’llah on April 21st, 1863.

Resources

Click here for a short article on how to find the Baha’i Faith in the great pyramid. Click here for audio fireside classes on the introduction to the Baha’i Faith.

Summary

The main focus of the pyramid passageways which match up to the main focus of the Bible. We start at the new beginning with Noah represented at the pyramid entrance. Then we come to Abraham who was given a special blessing by Melchezidek. This blessing continues on to the coming of the Kingdom of God on Earth. The passageway then takes a turn upward with the advent of Moses and the eventual start of the Davidic Kingship which also continues on to the Kingdom in our time.

The grand gallery represents the “good news” that the Kingdom is on its way. The passageway levels out at the advent of the Bab because he closed the door to the age of kingdom prophecy and opened the door to the age of the fulfillment of the promise of the Kingdom with the coming of Baha’u’llah, a descendant of King David, the great king at the entrance to the king’s chamber.


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Responses to “Overview Of Pyramidology”

  1. Ann Bristol

    Date should be 1863 not 1963! Blessings

    >

    1. Landrew

      ha! thanks! 🙂

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