TO RESEARCH NOAHIDE PYRAMIDOLOGY
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So this started as a journal on Charles Taze Russell's pyramidology (founder of Jehovah's Witnesses). I wanted to know if he got his Noahide-compliant Zionist pyramidology from the Masons because all other pyramidologists at the time were either Christian Zionists or British Israelist and believed Jews would convert to Christianity at the end, rather than Russell who believed the Jews would remain Jews and act almost as priests to the gentiles (who would be non-Trinitarian), in what Russell called using the term from the Talmud, "the world to come". There were differences in how the millennium kingdom would unfold. But when I finally found the Mason word on the matter, I found they were all British Israelists, so Russell did not get his Noahide-compliant Zionist pyramidology from them. But that does not mean he wasn't influenced by Freemason pyramidology. In his book on pyramidology, John Chapman has a chapter on pyramidology and the apocalypse, just like Russell and Isaac Newton. I need to read that chapter to see if there are similarities between Russell's and Mason's apocalypticism. I am waiting to receive a book on the the rise and fall of messianic pyramidology, God and the Pyramid by Timothy Lamb. This book seems to document the different strains of messianic pyramidology, and I hope he caught the Freemasons. But best of all it captures Charles Taze Russell's pyramidology by examining the works of his student Morton Edgar. I will be sending out summaries of the book, but if you want to purchase it it is linked below.
https://www.amazon.com/God-Pyramid-rise-Messianic-Pyramidology/dp/1291531408
A history of Messianic Pyramidology - the idea that the passages and chambers of the Great Pyramid were laid out on a chronological scale, with architectural features indicating important dates in Judaeo-Christian history contained in the Bible. The timeline covers such events as the Creation, the Exodus and the birth and death of Christ, extending forwards to the Millennium. The idea was introduced to Victorian readers by Charles Piazzi Smyth, and was modified and expanded upon in the 20th century by such authors as Morton Edgar, David Davidson and Adam Rutherford. The non-fulfilment of these theorists’ predictions has left Messianic Pyramidology more or less completely discredited, but the history of the movement remains a fascinating historical study. God and the Pyramid studies the lives of the theorists, their ideas, the successes and disappointments they experienced and the historical context in which they flourished.
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