Physics and Definition of Sin, Repentance and Forgiveness – Part 6: Physics of Sin, Repentance and Forgiveness: Physics of Repentance and Forgiveness

Sin is a broad subject with a lot to talk about.  I don’t want to talk about sin without talking about repentance.  I don’t want to talk about repentance without talking about forgiveness.  The few things I want to cover are:

If you do not understand something I’m saying, please ask.  The concept may be hard to grasp at first but it will change how you see yourself and your life when you do.

Physics of Sin, Repentance and Forgiveness

Physics of Forgiveness

We are often told that the Law of Moses is divided into moral, civil and ceremonial commandments.  There is no such division.  It has only been within the last 100 years that science has begun to be able to explain the physics of things God has known all along.  To start, let’s look at a verse most of us are probably familiar with.

Gen 4:10
10 And He said, “What have you done? The voice of your brother’s blood cries out to Me from the ground.”

God sounds like he is being poetic.  Remember the first dimension, that the word of God is literal?  This is no exception.  All of us use a computer.  Computers store information on a hard drive.  A hard drive is a metal disk where a frequencial code is written.  We are able to retrieve this code and translate it into something we can relate to with our senses.

Scientists have found that sound frequency is recorded on an atomic level.  The more dense the material, the better able it is to record sound.  Our blood is full of metals; it is the second densest tissue in our body after our bones.  They have been working on extracting and decoding these frequencies and last I heard, have been able to take someone’s blood and play back the sound from last ten minutes of that person’s life.

Now God, being the creator of all these things, all ready knows the code and knows how to play it back.  Do you realize the possibilities of unlocking this code?  This means that we could go to Mount Sinai, take a rock, and play back the spoken words of God when he declared the Ten Commandments.

Kippur – כפר

The Hebrew word kippur (כפר) pictographically means to ‘put a hand on the head and confess’.  It is commonly translated as atonement, pardon, purge, cleansed, forgiven and cover.  It is where we get the English word ‘cap’ from and why we wear it on our head or put it on the top of a container.  Whenever the sin and trespass offering was performed, part of the procedure was to place a hand on the head of the animal and confess the sin.

1 Tim 5:22
22 Do not lay hands on anyone hastily, nor share in other people’s sins; keep yourself pure.

Our hands are transmitters and our head, where 20% of our blood is at any given moment, is a receiver.  When we place our hands on somebody and speak, a frequency is generated and transmitted.  When a priest or the person who sinned put his hand on the head of an animal and confessed his sin, that sin, or corruption, is literally transferred to that animal.  That animal is then killed and his blood, which receives the corruption, is emptied upon the earth.  The rest of the animal is consumed with fire (Lev 4:1-12).

The last state of entropy is heat.  When the animal is consumed, it is transformed into heat energy and dissipates into the atmosphere.  This is an aspect of nasa forgiveness in the form of ‘lifting up of smoke’.  Our sin is literally removed from us and consumed.  Though this word is not used when talking about the sin and trespass offering, it is implied by the action.  God takes no delight in the slaughtering of innocent animals; he desires mercy over sacrifices and obedience over repentance (Hos 6:6).  Yet he knows the physics of the universe and how what he created works.    This is why the earth will one day be consumed in fire.  All the corruption will one day be consumed and removed leaving behind a world free from corruption; Eden before sin.

The God we serve, the Creator of heaven, earth and all that is therein does not require, ask or even want people to engage in vain, meaningless, empty, mindless rituals.  Everything he asks us to do and not to do, every form of worship and praise, every act of love has a practical purpose, which leads me into my next point.