English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

Baseball was obviously created by Freemasons, as it bears the unmistakable marks of Freemasonry. The field, from home plate to the left and right field wall forms a compass; the entire outfield wall is the semicircle which this compass draws. Upside-down, overlapping this compass, the bases form the square. Thus, the baseball field is the emblem of Freemasonry. Three strikes and three outs were assigned because three is the principle sacred number of Freemasonry. Four is a number of significance because it represents a square (the shape) and deals with the four directions, thus: four balls, four bases. Nine is sacred because it is three squared… there are nine fielding positions and nine innings. This brings us to a total of twenty-seven outs per team a game…and guess what? Twenty-seven, along with eighty-one, are the only two sacred numbers greater than ten. Though eighty-one doesn’t occur in baseball, because of the presence of two nines (fielders and innings) it’s appropriate to mention the reason eighty-one is so revered: the multiples of nine, 9, 18, 27, 36, 45, 54, 63, 72, 81, and 90 form a mirror image between the numbers 45 and 54. Also, each one of these numbers equal nine when adding the two integers which comprise the number: 18- 1+8 = 9; 27- 2+7 =9; etc. Because of this, nine times nine was deemed a ‘high’ number. This further explains the near obsession with numbers surrounding baseball averages, home runs, ERA’s, etc. It is truly a game for numerologists.

2007-11-13 05:22:12 · 7 answers · asked by Buke 4 in Sports Baseball

From: www.prisonplanet.com

Sorry, I should have put quotes and the source.
I thought some of you might enjoy it this one!

2007-11-13 05:35:46 · update #1

Apparently it does not help to predict the winning teams.

2007-11-13 05:53:47 · update #2

7 answers

humans are creatures of pattern, we find them everywhere even where they don't exist....

while this is all fascinating it is not true, there is no conspiracy between freemasonry and anyone, let alone the MLB...

2007-11-13 09:21:53 · answer #1 · answered by cl_freemason 6 · 0 0

It's not part of the regular Masonic ritual at all. "Riding the Goat" was like a fraternity prank, designed more for fun than anything else. It was sort of like a child's toy, but designed to throw the rider off- then everyone laughed and had a drink. The guy who was thrown off usually got to help set up the next unsuspecting guy. It doesn't sound all that funny now, and almost no one does those pranks now. There were chairs that fell over, tables that squirted water in your face, carpets that shocked you when you walked on them too- it's amazing that no one sued the Masons. I have a spanking paddle with a blank cartridge that explodes when you use it. (I have never used it)

2016-03-14 12:08:41 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

81 can occur in baseball only if the pitcher strikes everyone out on 3 strikes all nine innings but the mason thing maybe its just a coincidence our maybe they're trying to take over the world?

2007-11-13 05:28:23 · answer #3 · answered by willywonka 3 · 1 0

Very nice I must say but as a numerologist I have to also say that the number 9 is not "designed" that way but merely a bi-product of it because of the 10's system we use today. It's a nice thing to think about, but it has no REAL value. I will however think more strongly of things in the future regarding #'s given my field of expertise.

2007-11-13 05:28:34 · answer #4 · answered by Legends Never Die 4 · 1 2

I think you're right, but that you need to dig deeper.

You should also contact Erich von Daniken immediately.

2007-11-13 05:32:26 · answer #5 · answered by Craig S 7 · 0 0

You have been reading too much science fiction.

2007-11-13 05:28:21 · answer #6 · answered by Frizzer 7 · 0 1

Do you inhale?

2007-11-13 06:40:19 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

sure...

2007-11-13 08:47:57 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers