Ensign for unified Judaism, Christianity and MormonismAdditional List of Established Words

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This page is under construction. So please pardon the disorder.

Contents of this page:
This page contains an additional list of the words which have been discovered to be words of the most high God because they are confirmed to be essential in the mouth/pen of two or three authors of books of the Bible and/or the Book of Mormon. These additional words were discovered after the original discovery of the essential words of the most high God, which original discovery was made by a comparison of the first four books of the New Testament -  first to each other, then to the other books in the New Testament, then to the books in the Old Testament. The words in this list (below) are shown in the sequence of their discovery. The process of discovery is still in progress. Additional discoveries will be added soon after they are discovered.

Navigation:
A sequential number was assigned to each group of essential words when they were discovered. Each sequential number is a link to another page which shows the verses of at least two books which establish that the group of words is a portion of the words of the most high God (who is sometimes called God for short). In addition to that method of navigation, the left margin of each page contains links to various other pages such as the preceding page of the sequence [Back], the successive page of the sequence [Next], the parent page [Up], or the homepage [Home]. Please note that the homepage contains the original discovery of the essential words of the most high God.

Sequence of these words:
The words in this group of additional words were not re-arranged into a particular sequence. This situation is different that the situation in the group of essential words called This Good Riddle. In that group of words, a logical sequence of words was available because the majority of the words (in that group of essential words) described the events in the life of a particular person, Jesus of Nazareth. In contrast to that situation, this group of essential words does not describe the events in the life of a particular person. So at first glance, there seems to be no structure in this group of words. Further contemplation nevertheless showed that this group does indeed have a structure, albeit a different structure than the sequence of the events in the life of a particular person. The nature of the structure of this group of essential words can be compared to the structure of a fishing net in which the various strands of thought are connected to all other strands of thought. A similar comparison would be to compare the structure of this group of essential words with the structure of a crossword puzzle in which all thoughts (words) are connected to all other words; but not in a linear manner. An even more exact comparison of the structure of this group of essential words would be to compare the structure of this group of essential words to the structure of a three dimensional crossword puzzle. Unfortunately, such a three dimensional structure seems to be a jumble when it is displayed in a two dimensional manner, such as on this page. Fortunately, hyperlinks are a partial remedy for that seeming jumble. Hyperlinks will therefore be inserted wherever they seem to be useful. Unfortunately, hyperlinks can only be inserted if the inserter is aware of the connection between one portion of these words and another. So the reader is urged to notify the inserter of any and all connections between various portions of this group of essential words with itself and with other groups of essential words, for instance the essential words in the Book of Revelation, or the essential words which are mainly in the four gospels, or eventually, the essential words which are in the Book of Mormon.

What determines which group an essential word belongs in?
The short answer would be: nothing determines which group of essential words a particular essential word should be considered to be a part of. For instance, the essential words in paragraph 001-a of This Good Riddle are confirmed to be essential words of God by some of the words in a verse in the New Testament and some of the words in two verses in the Old Testament. So, do the essential words in paragraph 001-a belong in the group of essential words which are confirmed to be essential by the New Testament, or in the group of words which are confirmed to be essential by the Old Testament? And what if those essential words in paragraph 001-a are later discovered to also be confirmed to be essential by some of the words in a verse in the Book of Mormon? Would that mean that those essential words should be assigned to the portion of words which are confirmed to be essential, in part, by some verse in some chapter of some book which is in the Book of Mormon? This situation shows that any separation of the essential words into groups is an artificial separation because the essential words of God are not actually separated. They are instead interconnected in a manner which is similar to the manner in which the knots of a fishing net are interconnected, or the words in a crossword puzzle are interconnected. The interconnectedness of the essential words of God was alluded to in the portion of the essential testimony which reads, "I will make you fishers of men."

001-099 100-199 200-299 300-399 400-499 500-599 600-699 700-799 800-899 900-999
                   

2008-02-21 is the date of the latest change to this page.