Hebrew the first language?

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Victor1999

Active member
Jul 8, 2019
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#1
The angels have Hebrew names and people before the baby tower incident also have Hebrew names. I think it makes sense that Adam spoke to God in Hebrew and not in tongues as some suggest (he wouldn't understand what he was saying if he did that). That means that Hebrew is the language originally intended for the entire world and we would all be speaking Hebrew right now if we didn't try to build a baby tower. It might even be the only God-made language today, if none of the other ancient languages are still in use. All other languages after that incident were invented by men but we have one like Hebrew that was taught to Adam by God... Not that it really matters, but it is an interesting thought.
 

Waggles

Senior Member
Sep 21, 2017
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#2
NO - Hebrew was not the first language of the entire world.
First: human beings existed before Adam and Eve > Genesis 1:26-31
Adam was formed not created after the period of time called the seventh day and separated from the rest of humankind
and placed in a garden who geography coincides with Canaan > promises to Abraham, Isaac and Jacob > Israel.

All other languages after that incident were invented by men but we have one like Hebrew that was taught to Adam by God...
This is not true as it is not what scripture teaches us.
7 Come, let us go down and there confuse their language, so that they may not understand one another's speech.”
8 So the LORD dispersed them from there over the face of all the earth, and they left off building the city.
9 Therefore its name was called Babel, because there the LORD confused the language of all the earth. And from there the LORD
dispersed them over the face of all the earth.
Genesis 11:
 

Waggles

Senior Member
Sep 21, 2017
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#3
In the OT the whole world does not refer to planet Earth but rather the Biblical lands of Mesopotamia, Canaan and Egypt.
In the NT the whole world again is not the entire planet but refers to the Roman Empire, Judea and Syria and over to the Euphrates.

1 In those days a decree went out from Caesar Augustus that all the world should be registered.
2 This was the first registration when Quirinius was governor of Syria.
Luke 2:
Caesar did not rule all the world from Ireland to China, but rather the known world that Luke resided in was the Roman/Hellenic
world from Britannia to Persia.
 

Victor1999

Active member
Jul 8, 2019
102
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#4
NO - Hebrew was not the first language of the entire world.
First: human beings existed before Adam and Eve > Genesis 1:26-31
Adam was formed not created after the period of time called the seventh day and separated from the rest of humankind
and placed in a garden who geography coincides with Canaan > promises to Abraham, Isaac and Jacob > Israel.


This is not true as it is not what scripture teaches us.
7 Come, let us go down and there confuse their language, so that they may not understand one another's speech.”
8 So the LORD dispersed them from there over the face of all the earth, and they left off building the city.
9 Therefore its name was called Babel, because there the LORD confused the language of all the earth. And from there the LORD
dispersed them over the face of all the earth.
Genesis 11:
It clearly says in Genesis 2:5 that there were no humans on earth to cultivate the soil before Adam was created. It is also written later that Eve would become the mother of all who live.

If the incident at baby tower only confused their Hebrew, not created more languages, then Hebrew is the ONLY language we received directly from God. Again I remind you that Adam is a Hebrew name from the word Adama (Earth/soil), Michael (who likely exists before Adam) is also a Hebrew name, and the list goes on. These aren't translated names, they are universal no matter which language you speak.
 
Dec 12, 2013
46,515
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#5
The angels have Hebrew names and people before the baby tower incident also have Hebrew names. I think it makes sense that Adam spoke to God in Hebrew and not in tongues as some suggest (he wouldn't understand what he was saying if he did that). That means that Hebrew is the language originally intended for the entire world and we would all be speaking Hebrew right now if we didn't try to build a baby tower. It might even be the only God-made language today, if none of the other ancient languages are still in use. All other languages after that incident were invented by men but we have one like Hebrew that was taught to Adam by God... Not that it really matters, but it is an interesting thought.
MEN invented nothing....it was GOD that confounded the LANGUAGES at the tower of Babel....and NO One can PROVE that HEBREW was the first language man spoke........nothing but pure speculation!

And how do you know the angels had HEBREW names? Just because the O.T. was written in HEBREW, it does not MEAN that Adam spoke Hebrew or that Hebrew was the the first language.
 

SoulWeaver

Senior Member
Oct 25, 2014
4,889
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#6
I don't know if Hebrew was the first language... however, we do know that Hebrew is the only resurrected dead language in the world.
It's never happened in history to ANY other language. Once a language "dies" (no active/mother tongue speakers), the language remains dead without exception. It will either be completely extinct, or be only used for usually religious purposes in a rigid way - such as Latin is used in Catholic mass or in medical or law - but it NEVER becomes a living language, that speakers use again as their mother tongue.

The process of the Hebrew language revival began on October 13th 1881, as Eliezer Ben-Yehuda and his friends agreed to exclusively speak Hebrew in their conversations. As a result, the language, which had not been spoken as a mother tongue since the second century CE, once again became the national language of Israel.

Hebrew is the only language that its people stopped using, it became a dead language, and came to life again, which is the unprecedented case in entire human history. I think that's an amazing testimony and a sign of God.
 

SoulWeaver

Senior Member
Oct 25, 2014
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#7
The angels have Hebrew names and people before the baby tower incident also have Hebrew names.
It would be safer to say that this was Proto-Semitic language which later developed into the Proto-Canaanite. It was close to the language of the ancient Phoenicia. The two alphabets have similarities if you compare them side by side.

Science will not take you too far because if you see proto- it's all reconstructed. It goes too much into the past, so we still know little about the first language. The closest we can come to it today, and most accurately, is imo observation of the Hebrew alphabet. It's a very interesting study.

Note that Torah wasn't written until some time later, (unless I remember wrong, it wasn't actually written down by Moses), so that's something to also take into account.
 

Marcelo

Senior Member
Feb 4, 2016
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#8
A Short History of the Hebrew Language
By Jeff A. Benner

From the Creation to the Flood

Hebrew is classified as a Semitic (or Shemitic, from Shem, the son of Noah) language. Was Hebrew just one of the many Semitic languages such as Canaanite, Aramaic, Phoenician, Akkadian, etc., that evolved out of a more ancient unknown language? Or, was Hebrew, and the Semitic family of languages, the original language of man?

According to the Bible all people spoke one language (Genesis 11:1) until the construction of the Tower of Babel, in southern Mesopotamia which occurred sometime around 4000 BC (Merrill F. Unger, "Tower of Babel," Unger's Bible Dictionary, 1977 ed.: 115). During the construction of the Tower, God confused the language of man and scattered the nations (Genesis 11:7,8).

It is at this time that the Sumerians (from the land of Sumer, known as Shinar in the Bible - Genesis 10:10), speaking a non-Semitic language, appear in southern Mesopotamia (J.I. Packer, Merril C. Tenney, William White, Jr., Nelson's Illustrated Encyclopedia of Bible Facts (Nashville: Thomas Nelson, 1995) 337.). It is believed that the Sumerians are related to the people living between the Black and Caspian Seas (Madelene S. Miller and J. Lane Miller, "Sumer," Harper's Bible Dictionary, 1973 ed.: 710) known as the Scythians, descendents of Noah's son Japheth (Merrill F. Unger, "Scythian," Unger's Bible Dictionary, 1977 ed.: 987).

At approximately the same time the Sumerians appeared in Mesopotamia, another civilization emerges in the South, the Egyptians. The original language of the Egyptians is Hamitic (From Ham, the second son of Noah) and is also unrelated to the Semitic languages (Merrill F. Unger, " Egypt," Unger's Bible Dictionary, 1977 ed.: 288).

During the time of the Sumerians and the Egyptians, the Semitic peoples lived in Sumeria and traveled west into the land of Canaan.

The descendants of Noah

It would appear that after the Tower of Babel, the descendants of Japheth traveled north with their language, the descendants of Ham traveled southwest with their language and the Semites traveled west with their language.

"That is why it was called Babel - because there the LORD confused the language of the whole world. From there the LORD scattered them over the face of the whole earth"(Genesis 11.9).

What was the one language spoken prior to the Tower of Babel? When God created Adam he spoke to him (Genesis 2:16) indicating that God gave Adam a language and this language came from God himself, not through the evolution of grunts and groans of cave men. When we look at all the names of Adam's descendent we find that all the names from Adam to Noah and his children are Hebrew names, meaning that their name has a meaning in Hebrew. For instance, Methuselah (Genesis 5:21) is Hebrew for "his death brings" (The flood occurred the year that he died). It is not until we come to Noah's grandchildren that we find names that are of a language other than Hebrew. For instance, the name Nimrod (Genesis 11:18), who was from Babylon/Sumer/Shinar and possibly the Tower of Babel, is a non-Hebrew name. According to the Biblical record of names, Adam and his descendants spoke Hebrew.

In addition, Jewish tradition as well as some Christian Scholars, believed that Hebrew was the original language of man (William Smith, "Hebrew Language," Smith's Bible Dictionary, 1948 ed.: 238).
 

Marcelo

Senior Member
Feb 4, 2016
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#9
From the Flood to the Babylonian Captivity

The first mention of a Hebrew is in Genesis 14:13 where Abraham is identified as a "Hebrew" (Eevriy in Hebrew). In Exodus 2:6 Moses is identified as one of the "Hebrews" (Eevriym in Hebrew) and throughout the Hebrew Bible the children of Israel are often identified as "Hebrews." A "Hebrew" is anyone who is descended from "Eber" (Ever in Hebrew), an ancestor of Abraham and Moses (See Genesis 10:24).

The language used by the descendants of "Eber" is called "Hebrew" (Eevriyt in Hebrew), but is never called "Hebrew" in the Hebrew Bible, but is instead referred to as the "Language of Canaan" (Isaiah 19:18) and the "Language of Judah" (II Kings 18:28, Isaiah 36:11, 13, Nehemiah 13:24, II Chronicles 32:18). While the Hebrew Bible may not refer to the language of the Hebrews as "Hebrew," we do know that their language was in fact "Hebrew," as attested to in the many inscriptions discovered in the land of Israel from this period of time.



From the Babylonian Captivity to the Bar Kockba Revolt

After the time of King David, the nation of Israel split into two kingdoms, Israel in the north and Judah in the south. The northern Kingdom of Israel was taken into captivity by the Assyrians around 740 BC and the southern Kingdom of Judah was taken into Babylonian captivity about 570 BC.

During their captivity in Babylon, the Hebrews continued to speak the Hebrew language, but instead of writing the language with the Hebrew script (often referred to as Paleo-Hebrew), they adopted the Aramaic square script to write the Hebrew language and the Hebrew script was used on a very limited basis such as a few Biblical scrolls and coins.

When the Hebrews returned to the land of Israel, around 500 BC, it was believed that the Hebrews had abandoned the Hebrew language and instead spoke the Aramaic language, the language of their captors in Babylon. The Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church, in its first edition in 1958, stated; "[Hebrew] ceased to be a spoken language around the fourth century B.C." However, much textual and archeological evidence has been discovered over recent years, which has revised this long established theory.


Bar Kochba letter from 135 A.D.
One of the most compelling evidences for the continued use of Hebrew into the 2nd Century A.D. is a letter from the Jewish General Simon Bar Kockba (Shimon ben Kosva, as the first line of the letter states in the above picture), which is dated at 135 A.D., which he wrote during the second Jewish revolt against Rome. This letter, along with many others, was written in Hebrew, establishing the fact that Hebrew was still the language of the Jewish people, even into the second century AD.

Because of the overwhelming evidence of Hebrews continued use, the Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church, in its third edition in 1997 now, states; "[Hebrew] continued to be used as a spoken and written language in the New Testament period."



From the Bar Kockba Revolt to Today

When the Jews, led by Simon Bar Kockba, were defeated in the revolt of 135 AD the Jews were expulsed from the land and dispersed around the world initiating the Diaspora. At this point most Jews adopted the language of the country they resided in, but Hebrew continued to be spoken in the synagogues and Yeshivas (religious schools) for the teaching and studying of the Torah and the Talmud.


Eliezer Ben-Yehuda, c. 1912
In the late 19th Century Eliezer Ben-Yehuda began a revival of the Hebrew language as a living language for the Jewish people in Israel and when the state of Israel was established as an independent nation in 1948, Hebrew became the official language and, once again, Hebrew became the native language of the Hebrew people.
 

JaumeJ

Senior Member
Jul 2, 2011
21,229
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#10
Just as all existing languages, Hebrew has evolved so much since the first form it is a new Hebrew. In its original form, it most likely was the first language...
 

Fastball

New member
Sep 2, 2019
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#11
It is indisputable that God and Adam communicated with each other, that is well documented in Genesis. How else was God able to impart knowledge of Himself or of His creation to Adam without a means to transfer that knowledge? That could only be done with some sort of 'language' understood by both.......a complex language created by God that he revealed to Adam. And the known language of the Bible is what we call Hebrew. It is not logical for another or multiple languages to be necessary accomplish this task. This language was designed as multi-dimensional. It was/is able to be understood in a spiritual state as a revelation where the message and its meaning are transferred instantaneously from one to the other. Think of how God relayed the secrets of the world to Adam, certainly not by a lecture. And the same for Adam when God showed him all the living creatures of the earth to be named, this was not done in the standard spoken/written language we use. Now I am not saying that knowledge or revelation from God can only come in Hebrew, but that only Hebrew was used until the scattering from Babel.
 

Nehemiah6

Senior Member
Jul 18, 2017
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#12
All other languages after that incident were invented by men but we have one like Hebrew that was taught to Adam by God
That is entirely possible. After all it is the language of the Tanakh (OT). Indeed the rabbis have some rather interesting ideas about how each letter of the Hebrew alphabet relates to creation. Then we have the Bible Code discovered within the Torah.

"For 3,000 years a secret code in The Bible has remained hidden. Now it has been unlocked by computer - and it may reveal our future. The code was broken by a distinguished mathematician, and later corroborated by world-famous academics. It foretells events that happened thousands of years after it was incorporated in The Old Testament - from World War 2 to the Gulf War. Now an extraordinary new book presents what best-selling author Michael Drosnin believes is irrefutable proof of the existence of God in "The Bible Code". It was one murderous deed that finally convinced him it was for real..."

http://www.jahtruth.net/bibcode.htm
 
Mar 28, 2016
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#13
Hebrews is the language Gods used to speak to Moses who wrote the first five books, after 1/3 of human history had passed away.

Whether there were other languages before that does not effect the outcome of the first God inspired language as it is written.
 
Mar 28, 2016
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#14
That is entirely possible. After all it is the language of the Tanakh (OT). Indeed the rabbis have some rather interesting ideas about how each letter of the Hebrew alphabet relates to creation. Then we have the Bible Code discovered within the Torah.

"For 3,000 years a secret code in The Bible has remained hidden. Now it has been unlocked by computer - and it may reveal our future. The code was broken by a distinguished mathematician, and later corroborated by world-famous academics. It foretells events that happened thousands of years after it was incorporated in The Old Testament - from World War 2 to the Gulf War. Now an extraordinary new book presents what best-selling author Michael Drosnin believes is irrefutable proof of the existence of God in "The Bible Code". It was one murderous deed that finally convinced him it was for real..."

http://www.jahtruth.net/bibcode.htm
No Bible codes .Metaphors used in parable but no secret codes other than the hidden manna as parables. without them he spoke not.
 

UnitedWithChrist

Well-known member
Aug 12, 2019
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#15
The angels have Hebrew names and people before the baby tower incident also have Hebrew names. I think it makes sense that Adam spoke to God in Hebrew and not in tongues as some suggest (he wouldn't understand what he was saying if he did that). That means that Hebrew is the language originally intended for the entire world and we would all be speaking Hebrew right now if we didn't try to build a baby tower. It might even be the only God-made language today, if none of the other ancient languages are still in use. All other languages after that incident were invented by men but we have one like Hebrew that was taught to Adam by God... Not that it really matters, but it is an interesting thought.
My undrstanding is that Hebrew is descended from the Phoenician language. Abraham was dwelling in Ur of the Chaldees at the time he was called by God. So, whatever was spoken by the Chaldeans is what he spoke.

And, this is what the Israelites spoke.

However, I am no expert on this topic. It really doesn't matter. The NT books were recorded in koine Greek, and my understanding is that it has facets that are more technically precise in expression than Hebrew. Of course, the thought patterns of the Hebrews are expressed sometimes in the Greek, and it is helpful to know about both to understand some nuances of the NT.

This utility can go too far, though..I have heard Hebrew Roots Movement people attempt to persuade other Christians that they cannot understand the NT because they don't understand the Hebrew thought patterns. Somehow they are unaware that there are tons of evangelical OT scholars who teach about the historical contextual references within the Bible. Apparently they are criticizing ignorant Christians who don't search those things out, and think it is simple "me and my bible" and God will give them the correct understanding through the Spirit even while they remain slovenly in their studies. It's sometimes comical to see what such individuals come up with, and other times it's tragic.

Prov 25:2 It is the glory of God to conceal things, but the glory of kings is to search things out.
 

Kavik

Senior Member
Mar 25, 2017
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#16
Others have beaten me to it - Hebrew, like its sister languages, derived from Proto-Semitic, which in turn developed from Proto-Afro-Asiatic. It common in the mythology of just about every culture to postulate that the language your'e speaking was the first.

"Hebrew is the only resurrected dead language in the world."

No, there are a number of languages which were "officially dead" which have been revived by their one-time speakers; Manx, Cornish, many American Indian languages (e.g. Massachusetts/Wompanoag), just to name but a few. Hebrew was revived about the same time Cornish was.
 

UnitedWithChrist

Well-known member
Aug 12, 2019
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#17
It would be safer to say that this was Proto-Semitic language which later developed into the Proto-Canaanite. It was close to the language of the ancient Phoenicia. The two alphabets have similarities if you compare them side by side.

Science will not take you too far because if you see proto- it's all reconstructed. It goes too much into the past, so we still know little about the first language. The closest we can come to it today, and most accurately, is imo observation of the Hebrew alphabet. It's a very interesting study.

Note that Torah wasn't written until some time later, (unless I remember wrong, it wasn't actually written down by Moses), so that's something to also take into account.
The Penteteuch was written by Moses, with some editing...obviously he couldn't record his death, and there were references to events that happened after his death used as reference points.

The script is different than the language, though. I"m sure you know this. The script can be used to speak a language by the reader, but the language itself is separate.
 

UnitedWithChrist

Well-known member
Aug 12, 2019
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#18
The Penteteuch was written by Moses, with some editing...obviously he couldn't record his death, and there were references to events that happened after his death used as reference points.

The script is different than the language, though. I"m sure you know this. The script can be used to speak a language by the reader, but the language itself is separate.
My remarks weren't very coherent. I shouldn't be replying to posts before I've had my morning caffeine.
 

UnitedWithChrist

Well-known member
Aug 12, 2019
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#19
The angels have Hebrew names and people before the baby tower incident also have Hebrew names. I think it makes sense that Adam spoke to God in Hebrew and not in tongues as some suggest (he wouldn't understand what he was saying if he did that). That means that Hebrew is the language originally intended for the entire world and we would all be speaking Hebrew right now if we didn't try to build a baby tower. It might even be the only God-made language today, if none of the other ancient languages are still in use. All other languages after that incident were invented by men but we have one like Hebrew that was taught to Adam by God... Not that it really matters, but it is an interesting thought.
Just one remark..God didn't teach Hebrew to Adam. He was born with the ability to speak a language. God can cause a person to be able to speak a language perfectly automatically. He did it with regards to those at Babel, and individuals healed by Jesus were able to function as if they never had to learn the functions involved in their disabilities. Pretty awesome thought.
 
Mar 28, 2016
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#20
Others have beaten me to it - Hebrew, like its sister languages, derived from Proto-Semitic, which in turn developed from Proto-Afro-Asiatic. It common in the mythology of just about every culture to postulate that the language your'e speaking was the first.

"Hebrew is the only resurrected dead language in the world."

No, there are a number of languages which were "officially dead" which have been revived by their one-time speakers; Manx, Cornish, many American Indian languages (e.g. Massachusetts/Wompanoag), just to name but a few. Hebrew was revived about the same time Cornish was.
Not sure what resurrected language is. Was the Hebrew ever a dead language?


Men might of spoken in other languages but Hebrews is the language inspired from God .First written by Moses a Hebrew. If the first author moved to do that will was German than it would of been German .