The Dice
By Juan Mirieth Auriel
Roll the dice, please.
The dice is a cube, the square prism of six faces, eight corners, and twelve edges.
The numbers on the cube ranges from 1 to 6. Yet the numeric symbols on the dice consists of the number of dots.
Yet, we ask: why are the numbers arranged in a particular order?
Why is 1 on the opposite face of 6? Why is 2 on the opposite face of 5? And why is 3 on the opposite face of 4?
Let us look at the days of Creation in the Book of Genesis. It is written that the Elohim has created the void, the earth, the heavens, the sun, the moon, the planet, the ocean, the land, the plants, the trees, the marine animals, the birds, the land animals, and us (as androgynous human beings) all within six days. Yet these six days are symbolic, not literal. The first six Hebrew Letters are Aleph (א), Beth (ב), Gimel (ג), Daleth (ד), Hei (ה), and Vav (ו). It is later written that on the seventh day (Hebrew letter Zayin [ז]), the Elohim had rested from their works of creation.
It is the number seven that we do not see on the dice. Yet we arrive to answer these very questions by the following order: Why is 1 on the opposite face of 6? Why is 2 on the opposite face of 5? And why is 3 on the opposite face of 4?
All these three questions sum up to the number 7. 1 and 6 is 7, 2 and 5 is 7, and 3 and 4 is also 7. We have arrived at the Law of the Seven: seven metallic planets, seven days of the week, seven archangels, seven metals in alchemy, seven bodies, etc.
We also arrive at the series of Gematria (https://juanmiriethauriel.writeas.com/the-secret-gematria-in-the-english-alphabet). The seventh letter in the English alphabet is G. The letter G relates to Gnosis, and it is the symbol of the Freemasons. Because there are 26 letters in the English alphabet (Alpha-Beth), we are going to divide it into two groups of letters into 13: A, B, C, D, E, F, G, H, I, J, K, L, & M for the first group and N, O, P, Q, R, S, T, U, V, W, X, Y, & Z for the second group. The first group is Alpha and is masculine. The second group is Beta (or Beth) and is feminine.
We are also going to be looking into the Menorah, a candelabrum of seven branches. We are going to be using 13 numbers by the following order: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 6, 5, 4, 3, 2, & 1. We are going to be removing all prime numbers from the group of 13 numbers. The prime numbers are 2, 3, 5, and 7; hence, they are no use for us on the next step that lies ahead except for 7.
All we are left now are 1, 4, 6, 6, 4, & 1. It is interesting to see that all numbers add to exactly 22. There are exactly 22 letters in the Hebrew Alphabet. What is standing on the menorah is the number 7. Now we have 22 and 7. It also reminds us of (22/7). 22 divided by 7 is 3.14285714285… and it repeats. This number also reminds of the real number, symbolizing the Greek letter: Pi. Pi begotten by 7 is exactly 22.
It is also interesting to see that any cube, especially the dice, forms into either of the two indecisive crosses: The Cross that the Christ was crucified, and the inverted cross that Yahweh is now crucified.














