The idea this website attempts to document is that the book of Isaiah defines how the 66 books of the Bible should be arranged. By matching each book of the Bible with a chapter in Isaiah a book order emerges that is different from all others both in terms of it's arrangement and basis. We refer to this new book order as the Bible's Book Order.
It follows as well, that if Isaiah defines the order of the Bible's books it also witnesses to what books. Folks disagree at times on the canon. The best answer is not one based on personal opinion or tradition, but based on scripture. Isaiah fits that bill.
The other immediate value of matching the books of the Bible to the chapters of Isaiah is Isaiah begins to function like a commentary on the Bible. Each chapter in Isaiah contains insight related to it's matched book.
The website has a few other studies that complement the Isaiah study and confirm through other means that the book order resulting from the Isaiah research is in fact legit. In particular the Title Sentences study quickly shows the value of this book order.
This website is a work in progress. Each of the following areas of study are started, but none finished just yet.
An introduction to Isaiah explores the strategy of matching the books of the Bible to the chapters of Isaiah. Following the introduction is a growing list of reports for each chapter/book match in the study.
The Book Chain study asserts that if the books are correctly ordered they should connect together in context. Like a commercial where the script runs from start to finish but the speakers change every few seconds, the message of the Bible runs from start to finish switching books along the way. The Book Chain study shows how the books connect.
The Title Sentences study translates the names of the 66 books of the Bible in the new order to reveal a hidden message about the Bible. The message is 12 sentences long, each with the Divine name, and collectively summarize the message of the Bible.
Each letter in the Hebrew/Aramaic alphabet is a picture of something and therefore has inherent meaning. The question behind the Hebrew Letters study is whether the letters that were used to write the Bible can also speak at the book level by matching their pictographic meanings with the core themes of the books.
Though a work in progress the website is growing into an online book. If you want to read the pages in order use the Next >> link at the top or bottom of each page.