Kingdom Bible overview

Additional Resources for understanding the Kingdom Bible

 

How the Kingdom Bible came into being

I started this project at the Lord's direction in 2001. You can read my testimony in the copyright information posted on this website. This document is intended to provide a fuller explanation of this project to those who are interested. It is best if I explain it to you in person, because a complete presentation requires a projector and about two or more hours to introduce the concepts and answer any questions; and that is really just a brief introduction. The material is not simple and will require you to think a little bit, but I believe that even a child can understand it, if they believe in Jesus Christ and desire to know God and His Word. Please email me at max@phibible.org with any questions you may have after reading this.


For those not familiar with the Kingdom Bible project, the essence of it has been to find the true format of the Bible, and God has enabled me to be successful in doing that. Over the last ten years of work, I started with basically a blank slate, because there are no books written anywhere that explain how to achieve this goal. In fact, it has never been successfully done in human history before, so I began with the most reliable English translation available (the KJV-using a plain text copy from the web) as a starting point, because I wanted the final result to use the best and most accurate English translation possible, but I didn't want to use Old English. There is much more that could be said on that, but for the sake of brevity I will not expand on that here.

My task was not to re-translate the entire Bible, because the King James version is already an excellent translation to start with and has been rigorously examined by thousands of better-qualified scholars than myself, so I reasoned that it was better to improve only those places in the KJV that have been found to be "less than ideal" or even wrong by those same scholars (if an examination of the original TR Greek confirmed that their criticism was valid), and spend the bulk of my time focused on the larger task, which was to determine if the Bible had a special format; and if it did, then determine what it was, and reformat the updated KJV text accordingly.

 Fortunately, there aren't very many places in the KJV that can be said to be "wrong" in the sense that the translation was so bad that it needed to be completely rewritten. Probably 99% of my text editing has consisted of bringing the Old English text up to modern grammatical standards, and making it even more accurate and readable than before. A good example of something that needed to be rewritten was Philippians 2:6: Jesus "thought it not robbery" (KJV); updated to "thought it unimportant" (KB). If I had used a modern translation like the horrible NIV, I could never be certain that the words on the page were really what the Bible said in the original text, because the NIV translators took far too much liberty with the Greek and Hebrew, as far as I'm concerned. If I had attempted a complete retranslation of the entire Bible, it would have taken at least ten years and probably a lot more, and I don't believe that is necessary at all. Why reinvent the wheel? I have very strong confidence in the original integrity of the KJV, and the subsequent analysis by the thousands of Bible scholars over the last 400 years confirms that integrity to a very high degree. So I'm satisfied that by standing on what has already been confirmed as excellent, and building on that strong foundation by bringing the text into conformity with modern English grammar, I have accomplished far more than I ever could have by trying to completely retranslate the entire Bible myself.

My main task, as the Lord led me, was to find the true format of the Bible, and produce a new Bible version that utilized the best of what the KJV had to offer, and also to format the Bible according to whatever the Bible itself dictated that it should be. When I started this work, I had absolutely no clue what that format would look like when I finished.

At first, I attempted to stay with the format most Bible readers are familiar with: the "Old Testament" and "New Testament", with the Greek documents in the "New Testament" and the Hebrew documents in the "Old Testament". After all (I reasoned), this format has been used since the 4th or 5th century (about 1500 or more years), so how could it be wrong? "This is the way 'it's always been', so it 'must' be right", right?. So after two years of work on the format staying within the "Old" and "New" "Testament" format, I published "The Thematic Bible" in 2003, and even printed 2000 copies, thinking that I must be done or very close to it, so it would be safe to spend all that money on getting it into print. But I soon discovered, to my utter dismay, that I was far from finished, and that the so-called "Old" and "New" Testament format was completely wrong and I was going to have to re-think the overall Bible format from scratch without relying on any of the reasoning that led to dividing the Bible into Old and New "Testaments" in the first place.

Actually, though, the work that I did on the high level organization of the Books for the "Thematic Bible" was fairly accurate, and the final format of the Kingdom Bible (its successor) is not far from the Thematic Bible in many ways. In hindsight, I'm glad that I published the Thematic Bible if only to prove to some very silly people that I did not receive any "inspiration" from God for this work. I had to dig into the Bible text for many thousands of hours and pray much in order to accomplish this work. The correct terminology is "illumination" of the Holy Spirit, which is freely available to any Born-again Christian through faith and prayer.

The real breakthrough in finding the true format occurred about 2005. God led me to notice something interesting about the Ten Commandments: that it was divided into two parts with five Commandments in each part: five "upward" toward God, and five "outward" toward man. And in the first part, three Commandments were closely related to each other, and the last two were distantly related, but still connected in a clear group of five. The first three had one that was Unique, two of them were like two sides of the same coin (or Complementary), and the last two were Opposite in theme to each other. "You shall not take the Name of Jehovah your God in vain" (Unique), "You shall make no graven images" and "You shall have no other gods before me" (Complementary to each other), and "Observe the Sabbath Day" was Opposite to "Honor your father and mother". Clearly, the theme bringing all five together was "Who is your authority? Answer: God, the House of God, and your father and mother.

I also noticed that this same pattern was in the second part of the Ten Commandments: (Unique) "Do not covet" (or WANT to take something that is not lawfully yours), (Complementary) "Do not steal" & "Do not murder" (do not take ACTUALLY something that is not lawfully yours, like property and the life of another human being); and the two Opposites are "Do not bear false witness" and "Do not commit adultery". So there you have two groups of Five, and each of the Five has the same interesting pattern: UCCOO: one Unique, two Complementary, and two Opposite. How this relates to the Golden Ratio, I will cover later.

Now when I saw this pattern in the Ten Commandments, I was struck by its similarity to the largest Books in the Bible (Genesis -> Deuteronomy, Matthew -> Acts, Jeremiah, Isaiah, Ezekiel, Samuel, Kings, and Chronicles. In each of these Books, the text divides naturally into two Parts, with Five Chapters in each Part. I had seen this pattern very clearly since 2003, so it wasn't something new to me at the time. I thought to myself, could it just be a coincidence that all sixteen of these large Books have exactly the same two Part, Five Chapter format as the Ten Commandments? And could it be that this "UCCOO" pattern also exists in these Books? Yes, indeed, that is exactly what I found. I was very excited when I discovered this, and knew then that I was on my way to solving the age-old puzzle of the true Bible format.

But what to do about the other 47 documents in the Bible? If those large Books contain ten Chapters, divided into two Parts, using the UCCOO format, then how do the other documents fit into this pattern, if at all? After all, if the Bible is the Word of God, then whatever the pattern is, should be consistent throughout the entire Bible. And if it is not consistent, that might call into question the integrity of the Bible text. The short answer is that it is indeed consistent throughout the Bible text, although I do not have space for adequately answering that question here.

In answering the question of what to do about the other 47 documents of differing text lengths, I started with the assumption that in view of the fact that there were already two groups of five large Books that everyone agrees belong together naturally: the Law of Moses (Genesis, Exodus, Numbers, Leviticus & Deuteronomy), and the Gospels (Matthew, Luke, John, Mark & Acts).

The mere fact that the number FIVE was repeated in both groups, and that the Ten Commandments also had two groups of FIVE with the pattern of UCCOO in each one, got me to thinking: "Do the five Books in each group also have the same UCCOO format?" The answer again is absolutely yes. (Unique) Genesis: Jehovah chose the children of Israel out of all nations to be his special people, (Complementary) Exodus: Jehovah led the children of Israel out of Egypt to Mount Sinai to give them his Laws & Numbers: Jehovah led the children of Israel from Mount Sinai to give them the promised land; (Opposite) Leviticus: Jehovah taught the children of Israel how to worship him under the Old Covenant & Deuteronomy: Moses taught the children of Israel how to serve Jehovah under the Old Covenant.

And in the Gospels, Matthew and Luke are Opposites, John and Mark are Complementary, and Acts is Unique, as follows: (Opposites) Matthew: written to the Jews under the Old Covenant to show them that Jesus was their Messiah; & Luke: written to Christians under the New Covenant, and written in a way which draws lessons for Christians from the life of Christ. (Complementary) John and Mark both show Jesus as the Son of God; John shows Jesus doing personal witnessing and evangelism, while Mark shows Jesus doing mass evangelism (kind of like a book about evangelist Billy Sunday), and Acts (Unique) takes the theme of evangelism to its conclusion by showing the Apostles doing mass evangelism, planting churches and speaking to large crowds of people. So the true format of the Law of Moses is Genesis, Exodus, Numbers, Levicitus, & Deutereonomy. The true format of the Gospels is Matthew, Luke, John, Mark, and Acts: from doctrine to action in the Gospels, and from action to doctrine in the Law. The Law is UCCOO, and the Gospels is OOCCU (the reverse).

So what about the other 47 documents in the Bible Canon? Well, the fact that I had two groups of large Books showing the UCCOO format repeated in each Book gave me the idea that this pattern must be something that is repeated for the rest of the Bible as well. There are two obvious groups of Bible Books that give us a starting point: the Prophets and the Historical Books. The Prophets are the Minor Prophets, Isaiah, Jeremiah, Ezekiel, Daniel, and Zechariah. And the Historical Books are Joshua, Judges, Samuel, Kings, Chronicles, and the post-Exile documents of Lamentations, Esther, Ezra, Nehemiah, and Haggai (and one other that I will explain in a minute).

In the first two groups of the Law and the Gospels, there are Five Large Books in each group; each Large Book has Five Chapters divided into two Parts (with the same UCCOO pattern as the Ten Commandments); so each Group of Five Books has a total of Fifty Chapters. So, using this as a template for the group of the Prophets: Jeremiah, Isaiah, and Ezekiel total thirty Chapters (each with ten Chapters divided into two Parts). There are ten Minor Prophets, and each of these documents are the same as an individual Chapter in a Large Book, so the Minor Prophets are actually a single Book of Ten Chapters, divided into two Parts (Judgment is coming, and the Day of Jehovah is coming). This gives us four Books so far. And the last two documents (Daniel & Zechariah) are Complementary to each other, and each one contains Five Chapters, so these two documents make up a single Large Book of Ten Chapters. Hence, the Prophets contain Five Books; each Book has Ten Chapters, and the Group of Five follows the UCCOO format, just like the Law and the Gospels: the Minor Prophets and Jeremiah are Opposites, because the Minor Prophets are sounding the alarm that Judgement is coming for the Old Covenant Kingdom of Zion (Israel & Judah) at some point in the future, while Jeremiah is sounding the alarm that Judgment is coming quickly (in Part 1), and Judgment is accomplished (in Part 2). So Judgement is coming, vs. Judgment is accomplished, making the Minor Prophets and Jeremiah Opposites. But Isaiah and Ezekiel are Complementary, since the theme of Isaiah is "The Old and New Covenant Kingdoms of Zion", and the theme of Ezekiel is "The Old and New Covenant Temples of Zion", and finally, Daniel and Zechariah are Unique, because their theme is "The Coming of the New Covenant Kingdom and King of Zion": Daniel is showing a preview of the Coming of the Kingdom, while Zechariah is showing a preview of the Coming of Jesus Christ (the King). So the pattern for the Prophets is OOCCU. The progress is from the past to the future: the Minor Prophets and Jeremiah are focused on the past, mostly; while Isaiah and Ezekiel show the futility of the Old Covenant and the wonder of what God has in store for this world under the New Covenant, and Daniel and Zechariah are focused on the End Times and the inevitability of the end of the devil's kingdom and the coming of God's Kingdom in the Millennium and beyond.

Using this same template for the next group of the Historical Books, we find the exact same thing. Joshua & Judges are Complementary documents (each Part is Complementary to the other) with Five Chapters in each one, so making a single Large Book of Ten Chapters. Samuel and Kings are Complementary to each other in their themes: Samuel: The Construction of the Old Covenant Kingdom of Zion; and Kings: The Destruction of the Old Covenant Kingdom of Zion. So the Book pair of Joshua & Judges are Unique (Theme: The Beginning of the Old Covenant Kingdom of Zion), and Samuel and Kings are the two Complementary Books in the group of Five Books. But Chronicles is different, because its theme is "The Second Temple of Jehovah" (the Tabernacle being the first); and the rest of these Historical documents are the post-Exile documents of Lamentations, Esther, Ezra, Nehemiah, and Haggai.

Now here is a great puzzle which only the UCCOO format can solve. I've already shown that there are three large groups of Books: the Law, the Gospels, and the Prophets. Each of these has Fifty Chapters in Five Large Books (Ten Chapters in each one). Using these previous groups as a template for the Historical Books, we have (Unique) Joshua & Judges (ten Chapters), Samuel & Kings (Complementary to each other and ten Chapters each), and Chronicles (ten Chapters), making a total of 40 Chapters so far. Lamentations, Esther, Ezra, Nehemiah, and Haggai are formatted like the Minor Prophets, making them the same as Five individual Chapters in a larger Book of Ten Chapters, but where are the last Five Chapters in this last Large Book? The answer is the Greek document of Revelation. How do I know this? It doesn't fit anywhere else, for starters! Also, it has exactly Five Chapters, fitting perfectly into Part Two of the Large Book with the post-Exile documents fitting perfectly into Part One, making a total of Ten Chapters, just like the first four Books in the Historical Group. And, most importantly, the Theme of Revelation fits perfectly into the flow of the Themes of the Historical Books, because the Theme of the Historical Books is "The Past and Future History of the Kingdom of Zion (or Israel)". God is showing us the history of Israel in these Books from its inception in Joshua to the final form of the Kingdom in Revelation, when Jesus Christ will sit on the throne of His Kingdom in Jerusalem, inheriting the throne of David and fulfilling all of the promises of God to the Jews as their Messiah and King. It is a completely natural transition from the post-Exile documents of Lamentations through Haggai to Revelation, because the first Chapter of Revelation shows us a preview of our own Age through the Seven Churches of Asian Minor. Then Chapter two begins with the Rapture (God calls John into Heaven), and we see a preview of the Tribulation Period, the Second Coming of Christ in Judgment, and the Final State. It is a truly awesome and beautiful thing to behold!! And so the format for the Historical Books is (Unique) Joshua & Judges, (Complementary) Samuel and Kings, (Opposites) Chronicles and the Large Book composed of Part one: Lamentations through Haggai, and Part two: Revelation, so making a total of Fifty Chapters for the Historical Books, showing that they are a complete unit, just like the Law, the Prophets, and the Gospels.

The fact that Revelation fits perfectly into the same pattern that we see in the Law, the Prophets, and the Gospels, proves beyond any possible doubt that God is the Author of the Holy Bible. Until the advent of the Kingdom Bible and the discovery of the UCCOO format, no one realized (although many probably suspected it but couldn't prove it) that there was such a strong linkage in the Bible between the Hebrew and Greek documents. I will address this point more at the end.

After accounting for all of the documents used so far, we have only a handful of documents remaining from the "Old Testament" (so called): Psalms, Job, Proverbs, Ecclesiastes, Ruth, and the Song of Solomon. And also we have all of the other "New Testament" (so called) Greek documents. Let's see if we can fit these documents into the same format as the other Four Groups as I've shown above. To begin with, notice that the Law pattern is UCCOO, the Prophets pattern is OOCCU, the Historical pattern is UCCOO, the Gospels pattern is OOCCU. Notice how the pattern reverses itself from group to group as you progress forward in the Kingdom Bible format. The higher groupings indicate that there are Five Groups of Books (I call them Volumes) in total, so that the Law and the Prophets are Opposite in theme (The Laws of the Old Covenant Kingdom of Zion vs. the Prophets of the New Covenant Kingdom of Zion); the Historical Books and the Gospels are Complementary to each other (The Past and Future History of the Kingdom of Zion & The Past and Future History of the King of Zion), so the last Group must be Unique, and it certainly is: the Theme of this Group is "The Saints of the Kingdom of God". Book One is the pair of Hebrews and Romans (five Chapters in each one) (Theme: The Way of Salvation under the New Covenant); Book Two is the pair of 1 and 2 Corinthians (The Way of Spiritual Maturity under the New Covenant); Book Three is a Group of letters of Paul (Galatians, Colossians, 1 and 2 Timothy, and Ephesians [Part 1] & 1 and 2 Thessalonians, Jude, 2 Peter and 1 Peter [Part 2]). Theme: "The Way of Christian Service under the New Covenant". Book Four is the pair of Job and Proverbs (each with Five Chapters): Theme: "Universal Principles of Wisdom", and Book Five is the Group of ten documents that remain: Philippians, Ecclesiastes, Ruth, Song of Solomon, and Philemon; and James, Titus, 2 John, 3 John, and 1 John. All of these documents total exactly Fifty Chapters, just like the first four Groups, so making a complete whole.

Without getting too much into detail, as there is much more that I could say, but must try to stay brief for your sake, the Five Books in this last Group (or Volume) have the same UCCOO pattern we've seen before. Recall that Volume 1 (the Law) has the pattern UCCOO, Volume 2 (the Prophets) has the pattern OOCCU, Volume 3 (the History of the Kingdom) has the pattern UCCOO, Volume 4 (the Gospels) has the pattern OOCCU, and we find, as expected, the same reversal of pattern in this last Volume of UCCOO, as follows: Book 1 - (Hebrews & Romans) - The Way of Salvation is Unique, Book 2 - (1 & 2 Corinthians) The Way of Maturity- & Book 3 - (Galatians -> 1 Peter) The Way of Christian Service - are Complementary to each other in their Themes, and the last two Books in Volume 5 are Universal Principles of Wisdom (Job and Proverbs), and Universal Principles of Walking (Philippians -> 1 John). The detailed format of these documents shows the exact same UCCOO format as you can see elsewhere in the Bible. I will not attempt to describe them further here, as it is already too long.

The last document in the Bible Canon that needs to be accounted for is the Psalms. The Psalms does not fit into the Five Volumes of the Kingdom Bible I've already described, because there are no more "slots" (if you will) for the Psalms to fit into; each Volume in Division One has 50 Chapters, divided into Five Books with Ten Chapters each. All five Volumes in Division one already have an equal number of Chapters and Books in each one, so there isn't any place for Psalms to fit into.

Also, the Psalms are about Prayer, not about Doctrine or Practice; therefore logically it belongs in its own Division of the Bible, called (appropriately) "Prayers". Division 1 of the Bible is Doctrine and Practice with Five Volumes, each with Fifty Chapters in each Volume. The Psalms contains 150 individual psalms written in different times and places, mostly by king David, but also by one or two others, perhaps. So it is an anthology, and the precise arrangement of these psalms was unknown until now, because no one knew about the UCCOO format until now. Using the template of the previous Volumes to guide us, we find that there must be Three Volumes of individual psalms, with 50 psalms in each Volume; and this is exactly what I found. In fact, it is a reversal of the same themes from Division 1, Volumes 3 - 5: The Past and Future History of the Kingdom of Zion, The Past and Future History of the King of Zion, and the Saints of the Kingdom of God. In the Psalms, it is the same groups in reverse:

Division One: Doctrine and Practice

[O]  Volume 1: The Laws of the Old Covenant Kingdom of Zion

[O]  Volume 2: The Prophets of the New Covenant Kingdom of Zion

[C]  Volume 3: The Past and Future History of the Kingdom of Zion

[C]  Volume 4: The Past and Future History of the King of Zion

[U]  Volume 5: The Saints of the Kingdom of God

Division Two: Prayer (the Psalms)

[U]  Volume 1: The Saints of the Kingdom of God,

[C]  Volume 2: The Past and Future History of the King of Zion

[C]  Volume 3: The Past and Future History of the Kingdom of Zion

How do I know that they should be in this order? There are five psalms with a special endings like this: "Blessed be God" (the last psalm of Book 1 of Volume 3), "Blessed is Jehovah forevermore. Amen, and Amen" (the last psalm of Book 2 of Volume 3), "Blessed is Jehovah God of Israel from Eternity past to Eternity future; and let all the people say, “Amen.” Praise Jehovah!" (the last psalm of Book 3 of Volume 3), "Blessed is Jehovah God of Israel from Eternity past and to Eternity future. Amen, and Amen." (the last psalm of Book 4 of Volume 3), and "Blessed is Jehovah God, the God of Israel, who only does wondrous things. And blessed be his glorious Name forever; and let the whole earth be filled with his glory; amen, and amen. The prayers of David the son of Jesse are finished." (The last psalm of Book 5 of Volume 3, AND, appropriately. the last words of the entire Bible). Amazing!

The theme of Volume 3 of the Psalms is "The Past and Future History of the Kingdom of Zion", and each psalm in this group is like a mini-commentary on the history of Israel from the days of the Judges to the Second Coming of Jesus Christ. The last psalm in this Volume is psalm 72 with its theme as "All nations shall serve the Lord Jesus Christ in the Millennial Kingdom". And David says at the end "The prayers of David the son of Jesse are finished". Therefore it makes perfect sense to place this Volume of the Psalms at the end, and the progress of the "Books" of each Volume of the Psalms follows the exact same pattern as I've explained for Volumes 3 - 5 of Division 1, except in reverse.

Division Two: Prayer (the Psalms)

Volume 1: The Saints of the Kingdom of God

Book 1 - Unique- The Soul of the Wise and the Fool

Book 2 - Complementary - The Mouth of the Righteous and the Wicked

Book 3 - Complementary - The Character of the Righteous and the Wicked

Book 4 - Opposite - The Obedient and Teachable Saint

Book 5 - Opposite - The Backslidden and Rebellious Saint

Volume 2: The Past and Future History of the King of Zion [i.e. God]

Book 1 - Opposite - Jehovah is our Deliverer and righteous Judge

Book 2 - Opposite - Jehovah is our merciful Savior and Protector

Book 3 - Complementary - Jehovah has revealed himself through natural and special Revelation

Book 4 - Complementary - Jehovah has revealed himself as the Great Creator of the Universe and Helper of Israel

Book 5 - Unique - Jehovah is praised by both Gentiles and Jews

Volume 3: The Past and Future History of the Kingdom of Zion

Book 1 - Unique - The Beginning of the Old Covenant Kingdom of Zion

Book 2 - Complementary- The Glories of the Old Covenant Kingdom of Zion

Book 3 - Complementary - The Destruction of the Old Covenant Kingdom of Zion

Book 4 - Opposite - Jesus the King of Zion was rejected by the Jews at his First Coming

Book 5 - Opposite - Jesus the King of Zion shall rule the world at his Second Coming

 

The Fifth Edition of the Kingdom Bible resolved some issues that I've struggled with for a long time. Specifically, I discovered that each Section of the Kingdom Bible has an introduction and a conclusion (except Psalm 119, because this is a Hebrew acrostic psalm specifically delineated into 22 sections of 8 sentences each, leaving no room for an introduction or conclusion). To provide a little background, I've known since around 2005 or so that the Bible was divided into Volumes, Books, Parts, Chapters, and Sections, with 5 paragraphs in each Section. The problem I faced was that while I could easily see an introduction and a conclusion to the Chapters, just formatting the text according to that didn't resolve all of the problems. So as a way of trying to keep things consistent, I just included the introduction and conclusions that I could see within the first and last paragraphs, respectively. But this created additional problems, because sometimes this didn't affect the UCCOO format pattern signficantly, while other times it had a dramatic impact and the UCCOO format was distorted. I'm writing from hindsight, because at the time, I didn't have the full understanding of what I can see now, so I just thought that was the best I could do at the time.

The key to understanding the difference between the Fifth Edition and previous editions of the Kingdom Bible version is that the Introduction and Conclusion do not have any UCCOO pattern at all. They are independent paragraphs that exist only for the purpose, for the Introduction, of laying the groundwork or background for what is coming in the "Body" of the Section, which consists of Five paragraphs with the UCCOO Golden Ration pattern. The Conclusion provides concluding thoughts. These are outside of the main Body of the Section, and do not have any special Golden Ratio pattern, as do the five paragraphs in the Body. This is something that I did not understand until about July 13, 2011.

But now with the correct understanding that there is an introduction and conclusion in every Section, the Bible format is far more accurate and clearer than ever before. I am amazed at what I have seen over the last few weeks as I have reformatted the Bible for the Fifth Edition. I am certain that you will be also, because the text looks far more natural than before, and it doesn't look contrived. I will never claim absolute perfection for anything except the original writings of the Apostles and Prophets (2 Timothy 3:16), but I will say that the Fifth Edition of the Kingdom Bible has easily brought this work very close to 100% accurate to what God intended it to be.

I actually had the thought that I should format the Bible this way a number of years ago, but at the time I thought that it was too radical, and so I brushed it off and forgot about it. Clearly, that thought was from God, and I wish now that I had listened to the Lord. But, better late than never, I suppose. Thank God for his patience and mercy!

There is simply too much complexity for me to try and explain it all here, but you can download a copy of the Kingdom Bible for yourself and see what God has truly done in His Word. Only God could have done such a wonderful thing as this, which proves that the Bible must be the Word of the only Living and True God; and the One to whom we all must give an account someday.

Finally, the UCCOO pattern is a manifestation of the Golden Ratio, which is something that requires a web page all to itself to begin to explain. There are literally thousands of web pages devoted to explaining what the Golden Ratio is and how it is found all through nature, which proves that all of nature must have a Creator, since disorder cannot create order all by itself. It is similar to finding a wristwatch on the beach; clearly the wristwatch must had had a Creator somewhere, since it has design and a clear purpose. Those things cannot come into being on their own (e.g. the wristwatch didn't just pop into existence with no outside help). Similarly, when we see the UCCOO Golden Ratio format on every page of the Bible, something that clearly the human writers of the Bible had no knowledge of, then we instinctively know that the Bible must have originated from God Himself. And since this UCCOO Golden Ratio format only appears in the Holy Bible and not in any other "religious books" like the Koran, the bhagavad gita of Hinduism, or the "Books of Mormon" or the thousands of other "religious books" in existence, then we can clearly see that the God of the Bible is the only true God, and all other religions are not of the true God (to put it nicely). I have devoted several webpages on my website to explaining the Golden Ratio and how it relates to the true Bible format, so I will point you there for more information to save space here.

Only God Himself could have designed the Bible from Eternity Past in such a way that the prophets and apostles wrote down what He wanted them write without any knowledge whatsoever of a larger purpose such as I have just described. Of course, God's people have always known and believed that the Bible was a Book of books, guided by the Providential Hand of Almighty God, and preserved by His power and grace for all Time. But proving that to an Unbeliever in Jesus Christ is very difficult without knowing about the UCCOO format. Many Christian writers have attempted to prove the Bible is true by showing the fulfillment of prophecies in the Life, Death, and Resurrection of Jesus Christ. Others have tried showing the fulfillment of prophecy from the Bible in the End Times that we live in today, and both of those are very helpful, but depend a lot on a person accepting the Bible as true to start with. The UCCOO format of the Kingdom Bible require no such faith to start with, because any honest person can see that the incredible complexity and harmony of the UCCOO format of the Books, Parts, Chapters, Sections, and Paragraphs demand that a Divine Hand must have been behind the creation of these documents; hence, there must be a true God (the God of the Bible, Jehovah), and therefore there must be a Heaven, and a corresponding Hell for those who reject the true God. These are things which demand a response from anyone who sees it: either believe in the true God and receive the Lord Jesus Christ as your personal Savior, or reject it with full knowledge and condemnation. If you are not a Born-again Christian by faith in Jesus Christ, then you must know by now that the Bible is everything that Bible-believing Christians have always said it was, and far more; and you need to accept the Lord Jesus Christ as your Savior right now, before it is eternally too late. The Bible tells us that Jesus Christ came to earth, was born of the Virgin Mary, lived a sinless, perfect life for 33 years, and then died on the cross to pay for our sins, and rose again bodily from the dead. The Bible also tells us that the Gospel of Jesus Christ is Good News: this sinless Life and Death on our behalf, if we believe in and accept Jesus Christ as our only Lord and Savior, will bring forgiveness and peace from God for all Eternity, which is called "salvation". It is salvation from your ultimate destiny (if you have not been born-again), which is Hell; and later, the Lake of Fire, which is God's just punishment for your sins. Without Jesus Christ as your personal Savior, you have no hope whatsoever for salvation and peace with God. Acts 4:12 says it best: "Neither is there salvation in any other: for there is no other Name under Heaven given among men, whereby we must be saved.”

And Jesus Himself invited everyone to come to Him and be saved in Matthew 11:28-30: "Come unto me, all you that labor and are heavily burdened, and I will give you rest. Take my yoke upon you, and learn from me: for I am meek and lowly in heart. And you shall find rest to your souls: for my yoke is easy, and my burden is light.”

Here is a prayer that you can use as a pattern for your own to receive Jesus Christ as your Savior right now: "Dear Lord Jesus, I know that I am a sinner, and I believe your Word and believe in You as my personal Lord and Savior. Please forgive me of my sins, and come into my heart and become my Savior from sin and Lord of my life. Thank you for saving me! In Jesus' Name, amen."

For a detailed explanation of how to be saved and receive Jesus Christ as your Savior, go to this page.

 


 

Postscript 1: There are many places and things in the Bible that show the same UCCOO format, and not just in the format of the Bible text. Here is a quick list: The Old Covenant and the New Covenant (Five promises and Five promises in each one, and the UCCOO format is seen in each group) The Seven Days of Creation: Day 1-3 is Phase 1, Days 4-6 is Phase 2, and Day 7 is Phase 3. Phase 1 (Complementary): Jehovah prepared the earth to support life in three stages; Phase 2 (Complementary): Jehovah populated the earth in 3 stages; Phase 3 (Unique), Jehovah rested from all his creative work on the Seventh Day. Phase one Days are UCC, Phase two Days are UCC, and Phase three (Day seven) is Unique. And Day 6 is divided into three sub-stages as well: [C] Jehovah created reptiles, animals, and insects [C] Jehovah created a man and a woman [U] Jehovah gave fruit and herbs for mankind and animals to eat 3. The Ten Woes of Christ in Matthew 23: Two Parts with Five Woes in each one, each group clearly showing the UCCOO pattern. The full listing is on my website. I encourage everyone to see it, because it will astound you.

Postscript 2: The UCCOO Golden Ratio in found in nature also. Examples include your own hands: five fingers on each hand (ten total), showing the UCCOO pattern (middle finger - Unique; two on each side - Complementary, big thumb and little finger - Opposites) Also your body design: one Unique head, two Complementary legs, two Opposite arms. Also your face design: one Unique mouth, two Complementary nostrils, two Opposite ears. The website contains a full listing of examples such as these. All of these things prove conclusively that the God of the Bible is also our own Creator who designed both the Bible and us for a special purpose. We are indeed special in God's Creation and God has a Plan and Purpose for your life and mine. Do you know what God's Plan is for you? If you are not saved yet (see above), then you do not know what God's Plan is for you; but you can know, if you repent of your sins and receive Jesus Christ as your Savior. You and I need Him more than anything else in this world.

Postscript 3: The false teachers in schools of "higher" education have got a lot of explaining to do after they finally figure out what the Kingdom Bible is all about!

Problem 1: How do you reconcile the Bible with the UCCOO Golden Ratio format on every page with the baseless assertions made in colleges and universities all over the world that the Holy Bible is nothing but an old book of myths and legends?

Problem 2: How do you reconcile the Bible with the UCCOO Golden Ratio format on every page with baseless assertions that the Universe is supposedly "billions and billions" of years old, but there is no hint whatsoever in the pages of the Bible that this is true? If the Bible truly were a Book of myths and legends, there might be some basis for believing in Evolution, but if it is not (and the UCCOO Golden Ratio format proves it), then the Theory of Evolution could not possible be true. Many more problems I could mention, but it's a great start!