Actually I said "man does not live by scripture alone."
That's what I mean to type
the burden of proof lies with you since he who is of God hears God's word
(Since I made a typo in the previous comment, this will be my edited respond to this comment of yours):
The "Burden of Proof" as defined by the Oxford Dictionary is
"the obligation to prove ones own assertion". You are the one who asserted that "man does not live by Scripture alone". Therefore, the burden of proof lies upon you to substantiate the claim.
The second person knows how to read because he could understand the language you spoke when you asked him to read what is written on the piece of paper
From the way you worded it, it seemed like the language written on the piece of paper would have different from what the people were speaking. So that wasn't clear.
would you care to elaborate on your claim of 'many' languages which can be read but not spoken, which I presume you are referring unto non-verbal languages?
Of course.
Just to clear up any misconceptions first, a "phonetic language" does
not mean that a language can be spoken.
Phonetic languages are
languages that have a symbol for every spoken sound. I.e. Written=Spoken.
For example, when I learned
Greek, I was pleased to find out that the spoken language was completely consistent with its written form... I could know exactly how to pronounce a word just by looking at the letters and applying Elision properly.
These are not all the Greek letter and digraphs, I'm only listing a few for this example:
α = Like the a in “father.”
β = Like English v
η = Like ey in “they.”
θ = Like th in “thin.”
ξ = Like x in “fox.”
ψ = Like ps in “lips.”
αι = pronounced \e\
ει = pronounced \ē\
οι = pronounced like upsilon: \ü\
υι = pronounced \wē\ or \ē\ with a little bit of an \ü\ sound at the front of it
αυ = pronounced \äv\
ευ = pronounced \ev\
ου = pronounced \ū\
These letters correspond to these sounds 100% of the time. There is never a question of pronunciation because
Greek is a phonetic language.
English on the other hand is
not a phonetic language.
There are numerous example of how English's written form differs from its spoken form. Here are a few:
If someone merely knew the English alphabet, they could properly pronounce
some words. But without being taught the many rules about when to pronounce certain letters differently in certain situations, they would pronounce many words wrong. With phonetic languages, once you learn the alphabet and their digraphs, you can pronounce any words in that language correctly.
But let me ask if you know what scripture it is written that person who has not learned to read was given a book to read?
Yes I do (
Isaiah 29:9-12), but unfortunately, you have taken it out of its context:
The people were told to blind themselves (
verse 9) but God also caused the blindness (
verse 10). The fact that the prophets and the seers did not see and understand clearly was part of God’s judgment. They did not understand God’s revelation about His judgment on the Assyrians that Isaiah recorded on a scroll (
verse 11–12). No one, either people who could read or those who couldn’t, could understand this truth.