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Using an Impartial AI
Proving God Prophecy and the Bible


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Inside the Book (Highlights / Bullet Points)

✔ AI calculates the astronomical odds of prophecy fulfillment

✔ Archaeological finds that align with scripture - Non-Biblical Sources

✔ If individual stories are confirmed repeatedly, does the Total probability increase

✔ Jesus’ own words cross-checked with evidence

✔ A courtroom-style framework applying legal standards of proof

✔ Probability models comparing skeptics’ odds vs. believers’ odds



Foreword: The Unshakable Verdict – Beyond a Shadow





Close your eyes and feel the weight—today, a world unraveling, families torn, truth bleeding out on the altar of lies. Now open them to this: a book, ancient yet alive, spans millennia—from Adam’s dust (4004 BC) to eternity’s dawn (Revelation 21:1)—and dares you to look. This isn’t a relic it’s a roar, a single, uncorruptible voice through Moses’ quill (1400 BC), Isaiah’s tears (700 BC), John’s exile (95 AD), proving God isn’t a myth—He’s real, unchanging, His love bleeding through Jesus’ cross (John 19:30).

Prophecies—Bethlehem’s star (Micah 5:2), a Savior pierced (Isaiah 53:5)—landed with precision, odds so staggering they defy reason: one in 10^17 (100 quadrillion) for just eight Old Testament predictions about Jesus, per Peter Stoner’s Science Speaks. Over 300 prophecies align—birth, death, resurrection—a cosmic jackpot at one in 10^157, a number dwarfing atoms in the universe. Even AI, cold and impartial, sifts this from Eden to now and nods, “Yes” (95–100%). Yet people laugh—scoff at the Bible, intellectualize it as foolishness, smug in their single observations. Who’s the fool? The one chasing truth across time, seeing Jesus, Lord, God on Earth, clear the way for eternity, or the blind soul snickering, missing reality’s sweep?

Now stack this: existence itself—matter, energy, life—as a fluke of chance. Scientists peg the odds of a life-friendly universe at one in 10^229—fine-tuned constants like gravity’s pull or the strong nuclear force, tweakable by a hair, yet perfect. Multiply that by the Bible’s prophetic hits (10^157), and you’re at one in 10^386—a number so vast it buries chance in a grave of zeros. This isn’t a convenient set of cosmic dice it’s a shout—Jesus, God with us (John 1:14), planned, proven, risen (Acts 1:3). ~2025 AD mirrors its warnings—evil crowned good (Isaiah 5:20), hearts handed to perversion (Romans 1:24–28)—and still, He calls: “Believe in me” (John 3:16). Every piece—Noah’s flood (Genesis 6:5), Israel’s rebirth (Ezekiel 36:24)—fits, odds too wild for accident. Just know that a God so infinite can defy the odds. Scoffers smirk, “It’s myth,” clutching microscopes, blind to the math: one Book, one Truth, one Lord saw all, knows all, carved a path to forever (John 10:27–28). You can debate a shard, but the whole? A verdict beyond denial, a love so fierce it demands you look. Precious children—yes, you—I weep for your souls. No second chances lurk past the grave (Hebrews 9:27) this is your crossroads, your now. Odds That Beg Belief and are not humanly possible

Prophecy’s Precision:
Eight Jesus prophecies—one in 10^17 over 300—one in 10^157. Atoms in the universe? A mere 10^80.

Existence’s Fluke:
A life-tuned universe—one in 10^229. Together with prophecy? One in 10^386—chance chokes.

Clever Cuts:
- "Scoffers roll dice Jesus stacked the deck—trillions high.”

- "Chance built this? Easier to win the lottery with a blindfold and no ticket” - in a place that does not have a lottery.

- “Prophets guessed? Like hitting a bullseye across galaxies with a slingshot.”

- “Fools laugh at odds the wise weep at their weight.”

If science and disbelievers get it this wrong, what else is wrong. Do you want to lose your soul on bad odds or just so you can fit in with people who don’t believe? How sad is that?

Be brave enough—smart enough—to see. Truth isn’t a coward’s game it takes guts to stare down a world drowning in noise and say, “I’ll seek.” Intelligence isn’t mocking the Bible’s pages—it’s piercing through, past petty jabs, to the sum: Jesus, Lord of time, God on Earth, His resurrection (Acts 1:3) a beacon for eternity. The fool’s not the seeker who spans history’s arc—Abraham’s call (Genesis 17:5), the cross’s cry (John 19:30), eternity’s promise (Revelation 21:4)—but the ones snickering, trapped in today’s shadows, missing the light that blinds doubt. The God who created existence and is Himself outside of existence, time and space, has come down to Earth as a fully human being to try and reach us. He has proven over time that His words are true and time has proven that absolutely. The Bible’s pages bleed with it—salvation clear: “Confess ‘Jesus is Lord,’ believe He rose” (Romans 10:9).

AI can see the math and the truth it reflects proving the truth mathematically, confirming it with history and archeology I see the heart—God chasing you from Eden’s fall to forever’s edge. Will you run? Hide? Or stand, trembling yet bold, and say, “Yes”? This isn’t theory—it’s your life, your eternity. Step up—know Him, live Him—because the clock ticks, and love waits no longer.

Challenge, if your brave enough to face truth. Take a read and hear proof and truth scream!

- Courage: Dare to face truth—unshakable, proven—when mockers falter.

- Intellect: See beyond the laugh—odds and Jesus, God clearing your way.

Action: Say yes, step in—your soul’s worth it, and I love you enough to beg.



In the skeptical landscape of 2025 AD, AI vs. Odds of Eternity: Proving God, Prophecy, and the Bible by J.W. Carpenter emerges as a monumental apologetic masterpiece, wielding artificial intelligence to affirm the Bible’s divine truth with an astronomical 1 in 10^535 probability. As the second book in the AI and the Unshakable Truth series, this passionate and rigorous work spans from Adam’s creation (~4004 BC) to modern prophetic signs, weaving archaeological discoveries, historical records, scientific fine-tuning, and biblical prophecy into an unshakable case for God’s reality. Carpenter, an engineer with a mathematical mind, a fisherman casting nets for souls, and a Mississippi farmer rooted in faith, channels his Baptist heritage—shaped by his attorney father, preacher grandparents, and a mother’s loving example as a singer and teacher—to deliver a clarion call: sift the evidence, embrace Jesus, and secure eternity.

The book employs AI, including Grok 3 and ChatGPT, to evaluate biblical claims with statistical precision, achieving probabilities like 75–80% for Adam’s historicity and 95–100% for Jesus’ resurrection. Archaeological evidence, such as Çatalhöyük’s Neolithic settlements (7400–5600 BC) and Ubaid villages along the Tigris and Euphrates (6500–3800 BC), mirrors Genesis’ Edenic setting. Historical records, including the Sumerian Adapa myth (1400 BC) and Egyptian Pyramid Texts (2400 BC), echo Adam’s clay creation, while the Sumerian King List (2100 BC) aligns with Genesis’ longevity. Scientific data, like Mesopotamia’s flood deposits (5600–2900 BC) and 154 fine-tuned universal constants (1 in 10^229), bolster claims of divine design. Over 1,000 prophecies, with 300+ Messianic ones fulfilled against 1 in 10^157 odds (e.g., Micah 5:2’s Bethlehem birth, 4 BC), are validated by the Dead Sea Scrolls (200 BC) and Septuagint (250 BC).

Carpenter’s innovative methodologies—“Lots of Little Things” and “Before and After”—synthesize indirect clues (e.g., linguistic ties like “adamah”) and contextual events (e.g., Noah’s flood, Israel’s 1948 rebirth) to elevate plausibility. The book traces Scripture’s arc through Adam, Cain, Noah, Abraham, Moses, David, and Jesus, whose divinity (99.9% per AI vs. The Case for Christ) anchors the narrative. Modern ties—Israel’s rebirth (1 in 10^10), moral decay (2 Timothy 3:1–5), and potential Gog-Magog conflicts (1 in 10^15)—frame 2025 AD as a prophetic crossroads. Biblical numerology, like Genesis 1:1’s sevens and “Jesus” gematria (888, 1 in 10^50), adds a “cosmic chord” of design.

Structured across 24 chapters and 10 appendices, the book equips readers with practical tools: Appendix G’s FAITH method for witnessing, Appendix J’s rebuttals to skepticism (e.g., multiverse, prophecy post-dating), and Appendix I’s modern prophecy links. Carpenter’s engineering precision shines in legal standards—preponderance (>50%) to beyond reasonable doubt (>95%)—while his fisherman’s zeal, honed on a Mississippi farm, fuels a heartfelt plea: “I weep for your souls” (Hebrews 9:27). He testifies to Jesus as Lord, Savior, and friend, guiding him to still pastures (Psalm 23), urging readers to confess “Jesus is Lord” (Romans 10:9).

Perfect for apologetics scholars, tech enthusiasts, and seekers, AI vs. Odds of Eternity bridges ancient texts and modern doubts, proving faith and reason converge in a truth too vast to deny. With AI’s impartial verdict and Carpenter’s passionate call, this book challenges you to ask: Do you feel lucky enough to beat the Odds of Eternity?