Over the New Year's weekend, a pair of NASA spacecraft arrived back-to-back at their destination in the first mission devoted to studying lunar gravity.
The moon’s far side is bulked-up and slightly lopsided, more hilly than the side always facing Earth; recent theories propose a second moon and an ancient collision – the Torah has an explanation based on a different understanding of time. In Torah, time is malleable.
The Cabala explains, The Seven Days of Creation derive from the lower seven attributes of the Ten Siferot/Luminaries also known as the Tree of Life; each of these seven attributes rules a thousand years – thus, the reasoning behind the 6000 years Hebrew calendar.
In the same way the week is broken up into six days of work and one of rest so too the first 6000 years represent work – the present date is 5772. In the first thousand years the attribute of Chesed/Kindness ruled, reflecting a nature gushing with life, even time sped up.
The second thousand years brought the flood described as a wet dream from planet Mars that hit the Earth and destroyed life – perhaps, also pushing against the far side of the moon causing this lopsided mountainous terrain. Scientific time is static and ultimately, untrue.
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