If the Great Pyramid is indeed the sign and witness unto the God of
the Bible, how does it present a witness of Him? The definition of the
word witness is 'anything that serves as evidence, a sign.' Therefore,
the Great Pyramid should be able to give evidence of the God of the
Bible:
l) that He exists, is real, and
2) that what He says is true. The Great Pyramid must corroborate the
teachings of the Bible.
How does the Great Pyramid give evidence of God? Chapter 1 explains
how the Great Pyramid gives evidence of supernatural intelligence.
Uninspired man could not have known the tremendous amount of scientific
data hidden within the measures and proportions of the Great Pyramid.
Even if uninspired man did know these things, the chances that he could
have consolidated them into the single expression of the Great Pyramid
are beyond human imagination. Thus, the Great Pyramid, as a scientific
harbinger, declares the Creator of the universe, which the God of the
Bible claims to be.
How does the Great Pyramid corroborate the teachings of the Bible? As
already noted, there were never any hieroglyphics on the walls of the
passages and chambers to explain this relationship. In the past century,
however, Pyramid students have discovered a far more sublime expression
of Biblical teachings in the passages and chambers of this magnificent
structure. The entire passage system has been found to corroborate,
symbolically, the teachings of the Bible! The Great Pyramid was
discovered truly to be that sign, that symbolic witness, unto God.
The Bible in Stone
The Bible speaks of three ultimate destinies of men. The Great
Pyramid has three chambers, three ultimate destinations. Each of the
chambers is reached through a passage. Each of the destinations of the
Bible is reached through a way. The three ways of the Bible are:
(l) the broad road that leads to destruction, Mt 7:13,
(2) the narrow way that leads to life, Mt 7:14, and
(3) the highway that leads to holiness, Isa 35:8. The Great Pyramid's
whole passage and chamber system symbolizes God's plan for mankind as
presented in the Bible.
Descending Passage and Pit Room
The Bible speaks of man's general passage and common destiny as an
hereditary descent to destruction. It says that all mankind were plunged
into a downward course of suffering because of father Adam's
disobedience. {Ro 5:12} Jesus calls it a broad road to destruction-broad
because everybody must walk it; all of Adam's children must die. {Mt
7:13 Ec 3:19-20 Ge 3:17-20} .
The Bible describes man's life-descent. The Great Pyramid depicts
this in the Descending Passage system. The Descending Passage is the
long, low and steep passage that leads from the entrance straight to the
Pit Room. In the picture, the Descending Passage represents the broad
road that men descend on their way to the grave. The Descending Passage
is a fitting picture of the struggles and difficulties of man's life
because it is low and cramped. Man cannot stand upright before God. He
is condemned before God because of Adamic sin. The Descending Passage is
steep and long. Man has no sure footing in this passage just as he lacks
stability in his life without God. He cannot change his course by
himself. If he were to slip in the passage, he would tumble all the way
down to its end, entering the Pit Room that much sooner than normal. Man
often accelerates his own natural descent into the grave by his lack of
wisdom in his life.
The Pit Room represents the death state, oblivion, described in Ec
9:10. The Bible calls death the pit of destruction. {Ps 55:23 Isa 38:18}
The Pit Room is an appropriate picture of the death state. It is large,
there is no way around it, and in its original condition the entire
floor gravitated toward the Pit Shaft. The Pit Room symbolizes the
natural end of man's downward course-death, destruction. 'The wages of
sin is death.' {Ro 6:23}
Ascending Passage and Granite Plug
In the Bible, the first opportunity man had to escape death was
through the Law God gave to the nation of Israel. God told Israel that
if they kept the Law they could live, but if they disobeyed it they
would die. They soon discovered the Law was God's perfect standard, and
they as imperfect people were unable to keep it.
The First Ascending Passage branches upward from the Descending
Passage. It represents the opportunity God gave to Israel to escape from
their downward course into death and have full access to Him and His
gift of life. This passage is low and very uncomfortable to ascend. One
must stoop over to walk it, picturing Israel's bondage under the perfect
Law of God. However, the passage is completely blocked at its entrance
by a large piece of red granite. Red granite is only used in two places
in the construction of the Great Pyramid. Being a superior type of
stone, it symbolizes in each location a superior form of life or
principal-that of heavenly or divine com pared to the human life or
principal shown by limestone. Here, in the First Ascending Passage, the
red granite plug pictures the divine standard of God, the Law. Thus, the
plug, denying entrance to the First Ascending Passage, represents the
Law's power to deny imperfect men full access and reconciliation to God.
The Apostle Paul states that the Law which he thought to be unto life,
he found to be unto death. {Ro 7:10} Israel could not keep God's perfect
standard.
The Well Shaft
After some sixteen and a half centuries from the giving of the Law,
there was a man who was able to obey it. In fact, it was by his
obedience to the Law that he proved to be both the Messiah of Israel and
the Savior of the entire human race. The Bible teaches that the only
real hope of salvation from death is through Jesus Christ. Jesus Christ,
by his death and resurrection, is said to have abolished death and
opened up a new and living way. That whosoever believeth on him should
not die but have everlasting life. (11Ti 1:10; Heb 10:19-20; Joh
3:16-17, 36; 6:47)
Jesus Christ has provided the only real hope of rescue. It is this
hope of rescue that is pictured in the Well Shaft. The Well Shaft is the
only original means by which one may leave the Descending Passage and
gain access to the upper chambers of life. Jesus Christ is the only
means by which man may have access to and obtain life. {Ac 4:12}
Jesus has provided this hope to two groups, l) His followers,
disciples, and 2) the remainder of mankind. To the first group Jesus
invites them to share his life, death and the glory of his resurrection.
{Mt 5:10 11Ti 2:12 Ro 6:3-5???} His invitation was to a very privileged
life of sacrifice and a special salvation. {Ro 12:1 2Pe 1:4} The second
group includes all other members of the human family. God's promise to
them is to be a full restoration to life that they would have enjoyed if
they were perfect and could obey God's commandments. {Ac 3:20-21 Isa
65:17-25} The Apostle Paul explains: 'For since by man (Adam) came
death, by man (Christ Jesus) came also the resurrection of the dead. For
as in Adam all die, even so in Christ shall all be made alive.' {50
15:21-22???} By the single act of Jesus' sacrificial love, his death, he
has opened up the way of salvation to all men. The two upper chambers
picture the Bible's two salvations provided ultimately for all men.
The King's Chamber, made all of red granite, pictures the divine
nature that is promised to those faithful to the teachings of Jesus in
this present life. But before one may obtain the divine nature, there
are steps that must be taken to prove their faithfulness. These are
pictured by the Grand Gallery and Ante-Chamber.
The Grand Gallery
The Ante-Chamber
Total dedication to do the will of God is basically a three step
process. Jesus states that if any one will follow Him in doing the will
of God, he must first deny himself, put off self will, secondly take up
his cross, take on the will of God, and thirdly, follow Him, Jesus, in
doing the will of God. {Mt 16:24}
Walking the 3.5 foot high passage leading to the King's Chamber, one
has to stoop three times and is able to stand up only twice. The first
stooping represents the first of the three steps-self-denial. All
earthly hopes and ambitions must be voluntarily put aside before one can
take on the will of God. After the first stoop one may stand up in a
short space of 21 inches in the Ante-Chamber between the south wall of
the Grand Gallery and the Granite Leaf. Stooping under the Granite Leaf
represents the second step, the taking up of one's cross, the taking of
the will of God, the presenting of one's body as a living sacrifice. {Ro
12:1} The red Granite Leaf pictures the divine will of God to which one
must abjectly yield and bend and subsequently take as his own if he is
to be a follower of Jesus. After stooping under the Granite Leaf, one
can stand straight in the larger portion of the Ante-Chamber. This area
represents the life of a Christian-who is totally devoted to the.will of
God. Here the Christian is instructed by God, that he may obey the third
step, follow Jesus. He is to follow Jesus' example, to follow His
teachings, and eventually to follow Him faithfully into His death. This
transition of physical death is represented by the third stooping in the
path leading to the King's Chamber. Continuing on into the King's
Chamber one stands up straight to see the red granite glory of the
King's Chamber, picturing heaven itself.
The King's Chamber
The King's Chamber is the highest of the three chambers, or
destinations. It represents the highest level of existence offered to
man by God. Made entirely of red granite, the King's Chamber fitly
represents the heavenly salvation, the divine nature promised to all
those who are faithful in following the footsteps of Jesus. {Re 2:10 2Pe
1:4} Immortality, a death proof condition, will be given to those who
receive the divine nature. {Ro 2:7 1Co 15:53-54 Joh 5:26}
The King's Chamber contains the only article of furniture in the
Great Pyramid, the Coffer. The lidless Coffer gives the King's Chamber
the ancient name, The Open Tomb of Resurrection. The Coffer, as the
ancient name implies, never had a lid. This unique fact pictures
Christ's victory over death itself, opening up the prison house of
death, just as the Garden Tomb stone was removed at Jesus' resurrection
in Jerusalem.
The Horizontal Passage
Returning to the beginning of the Grand Gallery, the traveler meets
the entrance to the Horizontal Passage. The Horizontal Passage leads
from the bottom of the Grand Gallery to the Queen's Chamber. The
Horizontal Passage is separated into two parts by a 20 inch drop, or
step, in the floor near the Queen's Chamber. Sir Flinders Petrie
recorded the length of this passage and found the last part of it
measured exactly one-seventh the length of the entire passage. This
peculiar design proves to be very meaningful in the symbolic picture.
The Horizontal Passage represents the length of the entire plan of
God, from the fall of Adam, to the end of the millennial age. The Bible
tells us this period is seven thousand years long. The seven thousand
years is divided into two parts. The first six thousand years from the
fall of Adam to the second advent of Jesus Christ is a period of
mankind's educational turmoil under the reign of sin. During this
period, all people learn the oppression of sickness, suffering and
finally death incurred as a result of Adam's sin. This oppression is
represented by the 46.5 inch height of the first six-sevenths of the
Horizontal Passage. The feeling of walking here is very similar to that
experienced when walking in the Descending Passage.
The last thousand years is called the 'Kingdom of Christ.' {Eph 5:5}
During this period, Jesus Christ and his church will restore all things
on earth back to the perfection that existed in the Garden of Eden. {Ac
3:19-21} In that last thousand years, all peoples will learn by
experience the joy of obeying God's law. All will have the opportunity
of knowing, understanding and loving their Creator, God. As a result,
they will be able to walk uprightly before God.
This last one-thousand years is represented by the 66.5 inch height
of the last one-seventh of the Horizontal Passage. The traveler is able
to stand upright and walk into the Queen's Chamber. Thus, the two
heights of the Horizontal Passage symbolically contrast mankind's
oppression under the reign of sin in the first 6,000 years, to their
liberation from this bondage by Christ and His Church in the following
1,000 years. The reign of Christ and His Church will fulfill God's
promise to Abraham to bless all the families of the earth. {Ge 22:15-18}
At the end of the thousand year reign, the Horizontal Passage ends and
mankind enters into the condition of perfect human life for all
eternity. This is the time in the scriptures when Christ will have put
all things under his feet, when He will have accomplished his redemptive
work on the behalf of all mankind and will deliver up His rulership unto
God. {1Co 15:24-28}
The Queen's Chamber
At the end of the Horizontal Passage the traveler enters the Queen's
Chamber, the third of the passage system's destinations. Whereas the Pit
Room represents Adamic death inherited as a result of Adam's
disobedience and the King's Chamber represents the Christian's hope for
a heavenly resurrection, the Queen's Chamber represents perfect human
life on earth. It will be the life which Christ will restore to the
human race by His reign.
This earthly salvation is commonly referred to in the Bible as the
Kingdom of God and is variously described as a paradise on earth. {Isa
2:4 35:1-10 65:17-25 Mic 4:3-5 2Pe 3:13 Re 21:4}
The fact that the Queen's Chamber is made entirely of white limestone
pictures the unique standing mankind will have before God. By virtue of
Jesus' sacrificial death and a successful probationary trial in Christ's
Kingdom, each faithful of mankind will stand unblemished before God. {Isa
1:8} No longer will man die a hereditary death. Man will be judged by
his own actions only. {Jer 31:29 30} He will now possess perfect human
life with the opportunity to live forever.
Summary
The parallel between the Bible's description of God's plan for man
and the Great Pyramid's passages and chambers is both profound and
sublime. The harmony between God's justice and love revealed in the
Bible and confirmed in the Pyramid is deep-reaching. God created mankind
to live happily on earth according to the laws of His creation. If he
had obeyed, mankind would have lived in harmony with his Creator. But
sin began man's descent into death, (Descending Passage and Pit Room).
However, God provided two opportunities of escape from man's descent.
The first opportunity was by perfect obedience to God's perfect Law (The
First Ascending Passage and the Granite Plug), but no one could keep
that Law. Thus far the upper chambers of life were unattainable.
The second opportunity of escape is found through Jesus' ransom
sacrifice and one's faith in Him to provide rescue, (Well Shaft and
Grotto). Through His ransom sacrifice we see two possible destinations
of salvation: a heavenly and an earthly resurrection.
The heavenly resurrection is open to those who now see and appreciate
the grandeur and magnificence of the Divine promises, (Grand Gallery),
and who go on to become Jesus' disciples, (The Great Step and the
Ante-Chamber). As these are faithful to God's will in their life, they
will be rewarded by God with a heavenly resurrection of immortal life,
(the King's Chamber and its lidless Coffer).
The second destination of salvation is the earthly resurrection. This
salvation, also secured for Adam's family by Jesus' ransom sacrifice,
will be attained by two phases of a person's life, (Horizontal Passage).
The first phase occurs between his birth and death, during the 6000
years of sin, sickness, suffering and death since Adam's disobedience,
(the first six-sevenths of the Horizontal Passage). The second phase
occurs between the awakening from the dead of all peoples during
Christ's Kingdom of training and blessing, and the end of His Kingdom,
(the last one-seventh of the Horizontal Passage). By learning the
lessons of the Kingdom, mankind will know how to obey God perfectly and
may enter into perfect eternal life on earth, (the Queen's Chamber).
The gracious simplicity of God's plan, explained in the Bible and
embodied in the Great Pyramid, is both brilliant and inspiring. Such a
message is beautiful in itself. Its confirmation in the Great Pyramid
strikes awe into the heart and mind of the thoughtful observer. It
stimulates a reverence for such a mighty Creator, Savior and Architect,
which strains the powers of the human soul.
CHAPTER 4
Past, Present and Future
Sir Robert Menzies was the first to discover that the passage system
of the Great Pyramid is a diagram of Biblical history. He first
theorized what has now been very well established, i.e., Biblical
history was charted out in the Great Pyramid's passage system before
most of the events ever occurred. From the development of Menzie's
theory we also find that the beginnings, intersections and endings of
the passages distinguish the order of the dispensations and ages of
Bible history. Thus, the passage system not only symbolizes important
events of Biblical history, it likewise organizes them in sequence as
they occurred.
The sequence of Bible events displayed by the Great Pyramid is truly
remarkable, for it agrees with the Bible's historical record. This
agreement is perfectly logical because the Bible claims that the Great
Pyramid is its stone-witness. However, before one can see and appreciate
the sequence of Bible history shown forth in the Great Pyramid, Bible
history must first be understood from the source, the Bible. The next
part of this chapter will condense and outline the sequence of Bible
history.
The Bible's Historical Record
The past, present and future of Biblical history is divided into
three major epochs, or dispensations.
The first dispensation lasted from the fall of Adam to the flood.
{2Pe 3:6}
The second dispensation started with the flood and ends with the
world-wide replacement of human society by the Kingdom of Christ at the
time of Christ's second advent. {Mt 13:30,36-40 2Pe 3:7 Ga 1:4}
The third dispensation begins with Christ's Kingdom. The scriptures
indicate that the third dispensation continues forever. {2Pe 3:13}
The second of these dispensations is divided into minor time periods
called ages which characterize the method with which God dealt with man
during that particular time period.
The Patriarchal Age
The first age is the Patriarchal Age. During this age, God dealt with
the patriarchs of the Old Testament as individuals. God covenanted with
Noah, Abraham, Isaac and Jacob based on their trust in Him. {Ge 9:9-17
22:16-18 26:24 35:9-15} He gave them the status of 'Friend of God' based
upon their works of faith. {Jas 2:21-26 Heb 11:8-9} This age started at
the flood and ended at the death of Jacob when the nation of Israel was
born. {De 26:5}
The Jewish Age
The second age is the Jewish Age. This age began with the birth of
the nation of Israel at he death of Jacob. During this age God dealt
with the Jewish people as a group and called them the nation of Israel.
The nation of Israel was God's chosen people, chosen because of the
faith of their fathers: Abraham, Isaac and Jacob. {1Ch 16:13 Isa 44:1}
God told Israel that if they kept the Law they would receive eternal
life, but if they disobeyed they would die. {Ro 10:5,Le 18:5 Ne 9:29}
The nation of Israel soon found that they could not receive life because
they were unable to keep the Law. The Apostle Paul recognized this and
wrote, '...by the deeds of the Law there shall no flesh be
justified....' {Ro 3:20} None of the children of Israel was able to
obtain life through the Law because it represented God's perfect
standard.
After some eighteen centuries, there was a perfect man, (God's son)
who was able to obey God's perfect standard. Jesus Christ was born a
Jew, under the Law. He obeyed every requirement of that Law. Therefore,
He was entitled to the eternal life promised for such obedience. Rather
than keep the eternal life to which He was entitled, He sacrificed it.
By His sacrificial death, He brought an end to the Law and opened up a
new and living way. {Col 2:14 15 Heb 10:19-20} By Jesus' fulfillment of
the Law, He brought an end to it's requirements. {Mt 5:17-18} The Jewish
Age ended shortly after Jesus' death when God ended dealing exclusively
with Israel.
The Gospel Age
The third age is the Gospel Age. This age began when God started
dealing with all mankind based on their faith in Jesus as God's means of
salvation from sin, rather than on obedience to the Jewish Law. The
special privilege of this age of the Good News, the Gospel, is the
invitation offered to each believer to be one of Jesus' disciples, to
follow in the footsteps of Jesus Christ. {Mt 16:24} Each disciple, if
faithful to the commitment of discipleship, will receive a heavenly
reward of eternal life and will reign with Christ as part of His Church
in Christ's Kingdom. {Ro 8:17 Re 20:4 11Ti 2:12 Joh 10:27-28 Ro 2:7}
The Gospel Age with its special privilege of discipleship, and its
reward of heavenly life with Christ, is the last age of the second
dispensation. Both the Gospel Age and the second dispensation end with
the violent termination of mans' centuries-old social structure. Brought
about and ruled over by Satan, mans' corrupt social system must fall
apart when Satan is bound during the 1,000 years of Christ's righteous
government. {Joh 14:30 12:31 Eph 2:2} This termination is required in
order for the world to receive the blessings God has promised for the
next dispensation and its ages.
The Third Dispensation
The third dispensation begins with Christ's second advent. The Bible
does not suggest an end to this dispensation. {Isa 45:17 Lu 1:33} We can
infer that it is the dispensation of eternal life and therefore has no
end.
The Millennial Age
The first age of the third dispensation is the last age described in
the Bible. It is the Millennial Age. {Re 20:6} The Millennial Age begins
with the second advent of Christ. The work of the Millennial Age is the
restoration of the human family to the life, privileges and
responsibilities once enjoyed by Adam and Eve before they sinned. {Ac
3:21} Jesus and His faithful disciples will do this work. They will
restore all people who wish to obey God's commands to perfect human life
and reconciliation to God.
The Millennial Age ends 1000 years after it begins. At its end,
Christ and His Church will return the perfected human family to God. {50
15:25,28???} Following the end of the Millennial Age the scriptures tell
of a little season during which all people will be tested by God one
last time before He awards each person everlasting perfect human life.
{Re 20:3,7-9} After the little season the scriptures indicate mankind
will live in a utopia-type condition for eternity. {Isa 11:6-9 65 :25}
Corroboration in the Great Pyramid
The corroboration of Bible history is seen in an overview of the
entire passage system. The passage system symbology begins with the fall
of Adam and ends in any one of the three destinations: death, life or
immortality. The passage system, when segmented into its different
parts, neatly arranges the dispensations and ages of Bible history.
First Dispensation
The first dispensation lasts from the fall of Adam to the flood.
Symbolically, this dispensation begins at the foot of the Great
Pyramid's outer casing and ends at the original entrance.
Second Dispensation
The second dispensation begins at the flood and ends at the second
advent of Jesus Christ. Symbolically, this dispensation begins at the
entrance of the passage system and ends at both the Great Step and the
entrance to the Subterranean Chamber.
Patriarchal Age
The Patriarchal Age lasted from the flood to the death of Jacob. At
the death of Jacob, God began dealing with the nation of Israel rather
than with the individual patriarchs. Symbolically it is fitting that the
beginning of this age be marked by the entrance of the passage system,
(the Noachian flood), and its end by the Granite Plug, (God's Law with
Israel).
Jewish Age
The Jewish Age is when God dealt exclusively with the nation of
Israel. Symbolically, this age began with their Law Covenant with God,
(the Granite Plug), and ended at the death of Jesus Christ, (Grand
Gallery).
Gospel Age
The Gospel Age begins with the death of Christ and ends at His Second
Advent. This age is exclusively represented by the Grand Gallery. The
Grand Gallery represents Jesus' call for discipleship which is held open
only in the Gospel Age.
Third Dispensation
The Third Dispensation is shown in each one of the chambers. The
Third Dispensation is everlasting, the three chambers picture
everlasting conditions:
King's Chamber - immortality,
Queen's Chamber - eternal human life,
Subterranean Chamber - eternal death.
The Millennial Age
The Millennial Age is the first age of the Third Dispensation. This
1000 year period will witness the restitution of mankind. Symbolically,
the Millennial Age is represented as part of the Horizontal Passage. The
Horizontal Passage is found to be a separate picture; apart from the
passage system as a whole. This does not take away from the
Bible-Pyramid corroboration. In fact, the Horizontal Passage sums-up the
entire plan of God.
The Horizontal Passage, divided into its two parts, pictures the two
parts of God's plan of the ages. The last part of the passage pictures
the 1000 year recovery program of the Millennial Age. The length of the
last part agrees proportionately with the length of the first part which
pictures the six thousand years from the fall of Adam to the Second
Advent of Jesus Christ.
In the last part of this passage the average man can stand up
straight, while the same man must stoop over for the first part of the
passage. This feature contrasts man's freedom in the Millennial Age
under Christ's righteous government with man's bondage in the first six
thousand years under the curse of death.
Thus we see the past, present and future, as detailed in the Holy
Bible, is symbolically outlined in the passages and chambers of this
colossal edifice. If one were to stop here in his study of the passage
system's witness of Bible history, he would surely have drawn closer to
its full intended meaning. However, just as a well written play comes
alive when we see ourselves portrayed in one of the actors, God's plan
of the ages takes on greater significance when we consider our
individual standing before our Creator.
[A man must bend over in the first 6/7ths of the Horizontal Passage.
The same man may stand up in the last 7th.]
Man's Standing Before God
Mankind's standing before God as a group and as individuals has
played an important role in the shaping of Biblical events and is
integral in the Bible-Pyramid relationship. Our understanding of this
feature of Bible history will help us see where we stand before God as
individuals, and what opportunities He has provided for us.
There are three basic planes (levels) of being described in the
scriptures. These three planes are as follows:
a) Plane of Human Depravity
b) Plane of Human Perfection
c) Plane of Spirit Birth
Plane of Human Depravity
Adam, created perfect, was banished from the perfect conditions of
the Garden of Eden and assigned to this plane because of his
disobedience {Ge 3:17-19 2:17} The entire human race is born onto this
plane through their inheritance of the curse put on father Adam. {Ro
5:12} However, all was not lost for the human race. God promised Adam He
would send a savior. {Ge 4:15} That Savior was revealed to be Jesus
Christ. {Lu 2:10-11}
Plane of Human Perfection
Adam and Jesus are the only two men who were perfect human beings.
Adam was created perfect, Jesus was born perfect. {Ge 1:26 Heb 3:7,9,10
5:9}
Jesus enjoyed the same close relationship with God that Adam had and
lost in the Garden of Eden. {Mt 3:17} Through Jesus' perfect capacities,
He was capable of perfect obedience to God under the Jewish Law. Jesus
did keep the Law and proved to be worthy of everlasting life, but He
willingly gave His life at His crucifixion.
Adam lost perfect human life for himself and the entire human race by
his disobedience to God. Jesus earned perfect human life for himself and
the entire human race by His obedience to God. By Jesus' ransom
sacrifice, mankind's standing with God will be changed from Human
Depravity to Human Perfection. This is how Jesus is the Savior of the
world.
Jesus had the ability to redeem all humanity from the depraved plane
after His resurrection. However, He is waiting (the length of the Gospel
Age) so He can develop a special class and award them a special reward.
During the Gospel Age, Jesus has extended a special invitation to all
who appreciate Him as the Savior. This invitation is given to His
followers to do much the same with their lives that He did with His, to
lay down their lives just as He did, (including their justified human
lives purchased for them by Jesus). Jesus promises immortality to those
who are '...faithful unto death.' {Re 2:10 1Co 15:53-54}
Plane of Spirit Birth
This Plane is reserved for Jesus and His followers. {2Pe 1:4} Spirit
birth is given to those who look to Jesus and follow Him in the 'narrow
way' of sacrifice. {Mt 7:14 Ro 12:1} Christians are given this reward
because of their obedience to Jesus' call during the Gospel Age. This
level of being is not bound by restrictions of the human environment.
The plane of spirit birth is a spiritual existence much higher than
eternal human life. {1Co 15:40,43,44,49,}
Corroboration in the Great Pyramid
The Great Pyramid pictures the three basic planes of being described
in the Bible. It portrays these planes in the same symbolic manner as it
portrays the dispensations and ages of Bible history. While the
beginnings, intersections and endings of the passages distinguish the
order of the dispensations and ages of Bible history, the three levels
of the passage system picture the three planes of being described in the
Bible.
The Plane of Human Depravity is the level of the low end of the
Descending Passage where it meets the Subterranean Chamber. All mankind
has arrived here after their long descent in sin, sickness, pain and
death, brought upon them by father Adam's disobedience.
The Plane of Human Perfection is the level of the Horizontal Passage
where it meets the Queen's Chamber. All mankind will be raised up from
the Plane of Human Depravity to the Plane of Human Perfection by virtue
of Jesus' ransom sacrifice, the Well Shaft.
The Plane of Spirit Birth is portrayed by the level of the King's
Chamber floor. The Plane of Spirit Birth has been offered throughout the
Gospel Age. This level-of being is awarded to those who see Jesus as
their Savior and follow Him during the Gospel Age. These followers,
Christians, are delivered through the way of escape (Well Shaft) early,
through their faith in Jesus as their Savior. Through faith, Christians
recognize the opportunity to follow Jesus up the Grand Gallery to the
Great Step and into the King's Chamber to a spirit birth.
Summary
The wisdom, justice and love of God's plan of the ages is powerful
enough to inspire the most depraved among us. We see that the
dispensations and ages of history were far from just a random ordering
of events. We see there was a designed purpose behind every event, each
contributing to the meaning of God's final purpose for man.
We see His wisdom in letting naive man get a taste of the results of
disobedience to Divine Law-while at the same time providing for ultimate
salvation. We see God's justice in providing Jesus as the Savior-a
perfect human life given for a perfect human life. We see God's love by
opening the Plane of Spirit Birth to those willing to put off their
depraved tendencies and follow Jesus. We see His love not limited to a
fortunate few but extended to all humanity, all of whom have been
blinded by the Great Deceiver. Finally, the Bible-Great Pyramid
correlation enlightens us to our own standing before God. Whether we are
now alienated from God, or drawn to Him through Jesus the Savior, we see
the opportunity to follow Jesus' footsteps and draw closer to our
Creator.
We take comfort in knowing that God is in control of our turbulent
society; He does have a plan which will ultimately display His wisdom,
justice and love for all peoples.
Conclusion
Once an ancient wonder, the Great Pyramid has become a modern mystery
to most of our progressive society. Most, believing it to be a tomb of a
venerated pharaoh, cannot explain the absence of all traditional
evidence of such.
When preconceived notions are laid aside, the expression employed by
the architect reveals the secrets of the Great Pyramid. The pi
proportion, the length of the base, the distance to the sun, the
incredible accuracy and workmanship in the passage system, the
fulfillment of Bible prophecy, the chronological record of Biblical
history, the corroboration of the glorious Biblical promises for the
world of mankind, all of these, and many more combine to form the most
significant building placed upon this earth.
The significance of the Great Pyramid unfolds as one moves about and
studies its separate parts. However, like many art forms, its full
meaning is perceived only after the configuration of the total
expression is understood. The shape of the Great Pyramid's exterior is
simple yet sublime in its proportions-ordinary, yet singularly
scientific in it's measurement. The interior passages and chambers
symbolically diagram God's divine plan of the ages. The passage goer is
made to feel, in moving through the spaces, not only that each passage
is related to the one before and after it but that each passage and
chamber advances the concept of the whole: a form that is greater than
the sum of it's parts.
Consistent with His style employed in the Bible, God has revealed His
message to us in a form we can see and understand. Once the purpose of
the Great Pyramid is deciphered, the message becomes exciting, for it
touches the lives of every one of us!
The message of the Great Pyramid is the same as that of the Bible.
Specifically to make known unto the world the 'good tidings of great joy
which shall be to all people.'
Poets, philosophers, and prophets have long expressed the profound
desire of the human soul for peace, brotherhood, harmony with God and an
end to death. The Great Pyramid, which to the casual observer symbolizes
the shape of the ancient past, becomes, in the light of the Bible, the
shape of things to come.
How the Great Pyramid Pictures God's Plan
THE PRESENT EVIL WORLD
This is the 'night of weeping' from which all men groan to be
released. {Ro 8:22,19} There is some righteousness in the world, but
evil predominates. See The Divine Plan of the Ages, chapter 4.
AIR PASSAGES
Symbolizing that life will be provided for all men on earth (Queen's
Chamber), and faithful followers of Christ in heaven (King's Chamber).
See The Divine Plan of the Ages, chapter 10.
GRAND GALLERY
28 feet high, 155 feet long, but only 6 feet wide. Its steep, narrow,
but vaulted climb aptly symbolize the privileges and difficulties of the
'narrow way to life' which Christ's faithful followers walk at the
present time and throughout the Christian Age. It leads to the King's
Chamber, which represents heaven. See The Divine Plan of the Ages,
chapters 5, 10.
FIRST ASCENDING PASSAGE
The first upward corridor in the Pyramid, it represents the promise
of life that was given to all Jews who would keep the law. It is blocked
at its lower end by an immovable 50-ton granite plug. Granite in the
Great Pyramid symbolizes that which is divine. Thus the granite plug
demonstrates that none could gain life during the Jewish age because
none could keep the perfect requirements of the divine law. See The
Divine Plan of the Ages, chapter 12.
DESCENDING PASSAGE
A slippery, downhill passage. Jesus called it the 'Broad Way' to
destruction. {Mt 7:13} All men have traveled this path toward death, but
all men will gain a complete opportunity for life through Christ in the
resurrection. See The Divine Plan of the Ages, chapter 11.
THE 'WELL'
Not really a well, but a way of escape for those in the lower reaches
of the Pyramid. It symbolizes Christ whose death as a ransom sacrifice
will provide a way of escape for all-even those in the 'pit' of death.
See The Divine Plan of the Ages, chapter 9.
THE PIT
Its sides and ceiling are finished, but its floor is extremely
uneven. Thus it is 'bottomless.' This symbolizes the condition of death.
All men will be raised from the dead by Christ. (Read Job 33:24 and Ac
24:15) See The Divine Plan of the Ages, chapter 9.
THE WORLD TO COME
(wherein dwelleth righteousness) - This is the 'morning of joy' which
all men pray for when they utter the words, 'Thy Kingdom come, thy will
be done on earth....' The first 1,000 years of this endless age is set
aside in God's plan for the restoring of man and the conquering of sin
and death. {Ac 3:19-21,1Co 15:25} See The Divine Plan of the Ages,
chapters 4, 14.
KING'S CHAMBER
The largest room in the Pyramid is also the most beautiful. With its
granite walls and life-sustaining air passages, the King's Chamber is
symbolic of divine life-immortality. This is the condition of Christ's
faithful followers in heaven. They will rule and bless mankind. {Re
20:6} See The Divine Plan of the Ages, chapter 5.
QUEEN'S CHAMBER
This large chamber symbolizes the everlasting home for all men-planet
earth. After they reach perfection in Christ's Kingdom, 'there will be
no more death, neither sorrow nor crying, nor any more pain.' {Re 21:4}
See The Divine Plan of the Ages, chapter 6.
HORIZONTAL PASSAGE
6/7 of its length is cramped and low. The last 1/7 has room for a man
to walk upright. This symbolizes the l,000-year rest, or Sabbath which
God has in store for his human family, following the 6,000 years of the
'night of weeping.' See The Divine Plan of the Ages, chapter 11.