US
town escapes 666 phone prefix
The
reference to 666 is taken from the Biblical book of Revelation
A
town in the US state of Louisiana is to be allowed to change its telephone prefix
so that residents can avoid a number many associate with the Devil.
Christians
in Reeves have been unhappy since the early 1960s about being given the prefix,
666 - traditionally known as the Biblical "number of the beast".
For
the next three months, households will be able to change the first three digits
of their phone numbers to 749.
Mayor
Scott Walker said CenturyTel's decision was "divine intervention".
However,
he admitted it helped that Louisiana's two senators had also lobbied for the change
with the phone company and the state Public Service Commission.
It's been a black eye for our town, a stigma
"It's
been a black eye for our town, a stigma," he said.
"I
don't think it's anything bad on us, just an image," he added. "We're
good Christian people."
Mayor
Walker said he had already made the switch to using the 749 prefix and expected
about 80% of the town's 450 homeowners to do the same.
'Number
of the beast'
The
reference to 666 is taken from translations of the Biblical book of Revelation,
which talks about the events leading to the end of the world.
Revelation
13:18 states: "If anyone has insight, let him calculate the number of the
beast, for it is man's number. His number is 666."
Although
in recent years scholars at Oxford University said that they had discovered a
3rd Century papyrus, from Oxyrhynchus, which gives the Number of the Beast as
616.
And
a manuscript fragment from the 11th Century lists the number as 665.
The
traditional number, 666, has fascinated and puzzled Christians for centuries and
led to a great deal of speculation about its meaning.
Many
scholars believe it is a reference to the Roman emperor at the time Revelation
was written - either Nero or Diocletian. Both men put large numbers of Christians
to death.
Using
the Jewish system of Gematria, in which each letter is given a number, either
name can be made to add up to 666.
The
fear of the number 666 is known as hexakosioihexekontahexaphobia.