Rozzy1 Tue May 18, 2010 5:36 am
For Bible codes to be even remotely valid the text you are using must be faithful to the original manuscripts which the KJV is not, nor are any of the other modern versions I know of.
The KJV is not a copy of one particular MS, it is a compilation composed from several source texts that had been edited, redacted and corrected for centuries, the most well known to be that done by Erasmus. The KJV NT is derived basically from the six MSS that came down to them from Erasmus. The KJV OT is based on the Babylonian Talmudic rendering also known as the Masoretic text, but even this has interpolations from the Greek Septuagint to smooth out and correct the text.
Another problem is the modern Bibles versions including the KJV suffer from translation manipulation that serves doctrinal purpose and church dogma. Even amongst the Greek texts there are distinct text types and codexes, Byzantine, Alexandrian, Western and Caesarian are the four main text types with the Byzantine and Alexandrian leading the pack.
The oldest MSS are uncials and miniscules with no punctuation or separation of the letters whatsoever, the bottom line is computer generated codes are fun but do not lend any credence to them or validity as to the results rendered.
If you live in an earthquake zone it is a pretty good bet you will experience an earthquake, especially if one is overdue.