Other than ultradispensationalism, Bullinger had many unusual views. For example, Bullinger argued that the death of Jesus occurred on a Wednesday, not a Friday, after Pilate had condemned him at the previous midnight, and that Jesus was crucified on a single upright stake without crossbar with four, not just two, criminals and held that this last view was supported by a
group of five crosses of different origins (all with crossbar) in Brittany (put together in the 18th century). Bullinger argued for
mortality of the soul, the cessation of the soul between death and resurrection. He did not express any views concerning the final state of the lost, but many of his followers hold to
annihilationism. Bullinger was a supporter of the theory of the Gospel in the Stars, which states the constellations to be pre-Christian expressions of Christian doctrine. In his book
Number in Scripture he expounded his belief in the
gematria or
numerology values of words in Scripture (names and terms), a concept of which the
Encyclopædia Britannica says: "Numerology sheds light on the innermost workings of the human mind but very little on the rest of the universe." He strongly opposed the
theory of evolution and held that Adam was created in 4004 BC. He was a member of the
Universal Zetetic Society, a group dedicated to believing and promoting the idea that the earth is flat, and on 7 March 1905, he chaired a meeting in
Exeter Hall,
London, in which the flat earth theory was expounded. ==Works==