How Spiritual Values Were Developed
One question people often ask me is how I developed my spiritual values. Did I simply look them up in a dictionary or ask AI to generate a list of commonly accepted spiritual principles? The answer is no. I used numbers and the concepts behind them.
Numbers as God’s Archetypes
I focused on basic numbers, primarily one through eight, and also considered others such as zero, pi, and phi. These numbers contain inherent spiritual values. They are God’s archetypes. Let me give you a few examples.
The Spiritual Meaning of One
The number one represents integrity or wholeness in mathematics. It describes what we should strive for: to be whole. It is the foundation of healing—bringing all parts together into one unified system. One signifies God, you, and me. It is magical in that everything is divisible by one. It is a perfect whole number, symbolizing unity, interconnectedness, and source. These are simple yet profound spiritual values embedded in nature. One is the creation of all things.
The Meaning of Two and Duality
When we move to the number two, the meaning shifts entirely. Two represents duality, relationship, and balance. Two is made up of two ones. It marks the beginning and end of a line. In creation, one becomes two, reflecting how God creates another, just as we all carry God within us. As you can see, numbers naturally provide spiritual values and serve as a foundation for spiritual understanding.
Three, Structure, and the Trinity
The number three represents the Trinity. It forms the sides of a triangle, a structure known for its strength and stability. Three reflects the father–mother–child relationship and the concept of beginning, middle, and end. Without numbers, God, who placed energy into the universe, would face challenges in structure and order. Spiritual understanding would rely solely on personal experience, while numbers provide something absolute and quantifiable.
Seven, Frequency, and Divine Order
With just the first three numbers, we can derive many spiritual values. When we add the number seven, used in the days of the week and the chakra system, we arrive at a number often considered magical and lucky. Seven also represents completeness, wholeness, and divine order. There are seven colors in the rainbow and seven whole notes in music. Through this, we see spirituality as energy expressed through frequency and vibration. One can be symbolized as a circle with a dot in the center, and when observed over time, it illustrates the movement of electromagnetism.
Numbers in Daily Life and Technology
Of course, we cannot live without numbers. Computers operate using on and off, essentially two numbers. Money is measured numerically. Society uses a base-ten numerical system. In the Star of Light (SOL), we use eight as the foundational spiritual system. When geometric structures are associated with numbers, we begin to see how the universe was designed.
Sacred Geometry and the Star Tetrahedron
In the star tetrahedron, we use a three-dimensional triangular structure. It consists of an upper and lower triangle, forming a six-pointed star in three dimensions. The shadow, or silhouette, of a star tetrahedron is a six-pointed star. In the SOL system, the star tetrahedron represents consciousness through its eight points. Historically, the six-pointed star was also a symbol of wisdom in the Bible.
Using Numbers to Understand Creation
In the SOL system, we explore each number spiritually and connect it to sacred geometric structures. In this way, we use God’s magic within numbers to create life in the universe. This approach is deeply spiritual and should form the foundation of how we develop society. Unfortunately, human emotions, particularly the desire for control and power, have disrupted this balance. Interestingly, even these tendencies are embedded in numbers through our hormones and animalistic nature.