Compute and analyze gematria (Hebrew numerical values) using standard, ordinal, and reduced methods. Covers word-to-number conversion, isopsephy comparisons, and interpretive frameworks. Use when computing the numerical value of a Hebrew word or phrase, comparing two words for shared gematria values, studying a biblical verse or divine name for numerical correspondences, or connecting a numerical result to its position on the Tree of Life.
Compute and analyze gematria — the system of assigning numerical values to Hebrew letters and words. Covers standard (Mispar Hechrachi), ordinal (Mispar Siduri), and reduced (Mispar Katan) methods, isopsephy comparisons between words of equal value, and interpretive frameworks for contemplation.
Establish the exact Hebrew spelling of the word or phrase.
HEBREW LETTER VALUES — Standard Gematria (Mispar Hechrachi):
Units:
Aleph (A) = 1 Bet (B) = 2 Gimel (G) = 3
Dalet (D) = 4 Heh (H) = 5 Vav (V) = 6
Zayin (Z) = 7 Chet (Ch) = 8 Tet (T) = 9
Tens:
Yod (Y) = 10 Kaf (K) = 20 Lamed (L) = 30
Mem (M) = 40 Nun (N) = 50 Samekh (S) = 60
Ayin (Ay) = 70 Peh (P) = 80 Tzadi (Tz) = 90
Hundreds:
Qoph (Q) = 100 Resh (R) = 200 Shin (Sh) = 300
Tav (Th) = 400
Final Forms (Sofit — used when letter appears at end of word):
Kaf-final = 500 Mem-final = 600 Nun-final = 700
Peh-final = 800 Tzadi-final = 900
Note: Whether final forms carry different values depends on the
gematria system. Standard (Mispar Hechrachi) typically uses the
same values for regular and final forms. The 500-900 values above
follow the extended system (Mispar Gadol).
Expected: The Hebrew letter sequence is established with confidence. The user knows exactly which letters are being summed and can verify the spelling.
On failure: If the transliteration is ambiguous (e.g., "chai" could be Chet-Yod or Chet-Yod-Yod in some contexts), present both options with their gematria values and let the user select.
Sum the letter values using the standard Hebrew number table.
Expected: A clear numerical result with the computation shown step by step. The user can verify each letter's value against the table.
On failure: If the user provides a word with uncertain Hebrew spelling, compute values for all plausible spellings and note the range. The "correct" spelling depends on the source text.
Compute alternative gematria values that reveal different patterns.
ORDINAL GEMATRIA (Mispar Siduri):
Each letter receives its ordinal position (1-22):
Aleph=1, Bet=2, Gimel=3, Dalet=4, Heh=5, Vav=6,
Zayin=7, Chet=8, Tet=9, Yod=10, Kaf=11, Lamed=12,
Mem=13, Nun=14, Samekh=15, Ayin=16, Peh=17, Tzadi=18,
Qoph=19, Resh=20, Shin=21, Tav=22
REDUCED GEMATRIA (Mispar Katan):
Reduce each letter's standard value to a single digit:
Aleph=1, Bet=2, ... Tet=9, Yod=1, Kaf=2, ... Tzadi=9,
Qoph=1, Resh=2, Shin=3, Tav=4
Then sum the digits. If the sum exceeds 9, reduce again.
Example: Shin(3) + Lamed(3) + Vav(6) + Mem(4) = 16 → 1+6 = 7
ATBASH:
A substitution cipher: first letter ↔ last letter.
Aleph ↔ Tav, Bet ↔ Shin, Gimel ↔ Resh, etc.
Used in biblical and Kabbalistic cryptography (Jeremiah's
"Sheshach" = Babel via Atbash).
Expected: Three numerical values (standard, ordinal, reduced) presented side by side. The reduced value often links to single-digit sephirotic numbers, making it useful for Tree of Life mapping.
On failure: If the user only wants one method, provide that method and mention the others exist for future exploration. Do not overwhelm with calculations if a single method was requested.
Identify other Hebrew words or phrases that share the same numerical value.
Expected: A set of words sharing the same gematria value, each with a brief note on why the connection might be meaningful. The user has material for contemplation.
On failure: If no well-known connections exist for the computed value, acknowledge this. Offer to compute the value's relationship to nearby significant numbers (e.g., "your value is 378, which is 2 more than shalom [376] — what does that suggest?").
Move from computation to contemplation — what do the numerical relationships suggest?
Expected: The numerical analysis has become meaningful — not just arithmetic but a lens for understanding the word's place in the symbolic network of Kabbalah.
On failure: If interpretation feels forced or speculative, say so directly. Some gematria computations are more fruitful than others. Honest acknowledgment of thin connections is better than fabricating significance.
read-tree-of-life — Map gematria values to sephirot and paths for structural contextstudy-hebrew-letters — Understanding individual letter symbolism deepens gematria interpretationobserve — Sustained neutral attention to patterns; gematria is a form of numerical pattern recognition