Ancient Hebrew:
The First Alphabet (Aleph-Bet)

INDEX:
t W R Q J P O S N m L K Y x h z U E D G B A

Genesis (Gen 4:15) states the Lord placed a sign on Cain other people would understand, showing earthly writing existed in the beginning. The first earthly alphabet is prophetic of future events 1000s of years into the future (as you will see as you continue), something men or angels cannot accomplish. This leaves us with an alphabet the LORD, Creator of Shamayim (Heaven[s]) and ‘Aretz (Earth), created. This first earthly language and writing is Hebrew [ref]. Different earthly languages and their writings came into existence after the Tower of Babel (Gen 11:1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9).

Hebrew letters were written differently in the time of Adam than in the time of Mosheh (Moses[ref]. Both ways of writing the letters are correct; and so, there are two or more forms of the same letter. The beginning form is found in the hands and feet. The final form is found in the head (This will be explained as we go through the letters). The original ancient Hebrew letters are drawn with a stick image that matches what the letter is about. Each ancient Hebrew letter’s name is the same name used for each letter of the modern Hebrew alphabet. Each letter’s name describes the stick image that is used for the ancient Hebrew letter pictograph. Words written with Hebrew are read from right to left just as ‘Aretz (Earth) turns from the right to the left if you are facing the Sun toward the south, or just as the blood in your body is pumped from the right side of your heart to the left side.

Each Hebrew letter has its own definition. So, a Hebrew word becomes defined by the arrangement of the letters within the word. The Hebrew spelling bA (bA) is the Hebrew word for father. By understanding the definition of A (A) (creator, leader) and b (b) (house, tent, tabernacle), the definition of the word bA, that means father, can be understood as creator/leader of the house/tent/tabernacle. As the letters are understood more fully, the words defined by them become clearer in meaning. (For the meaning of each letter and their references, refer to the Alpha-Bet Map of Hebrew.) This is unlike other languages where a word can have a different meaning over time. An example in English would be the word ‘gay’ in the past had the meaning of happy and has changed in meaning in our current culture. A Hebrew word having a concrete definition becomes important when we want to know the exact definition of a word when we are studying something like prophecy.

Hebrew is written with consonants only while being read with memorized vowels, just as there is the written Torah (Instruction / Law / First 5 books of the Old Testament) and the memorized Oral Torah (Oral Instruction / Oral Law / Mishnah). Different vowels read into the same consonants like bA (bA) can create a different word with a different meaning with the context of the writing pointing toward the correct word to be read. So, the Hebrew spelling bA (bA) with a different vowel can be the Hebrew word for a sprouting plant (shoot) with the letters defining the word as a newly created tabernacle/body.

Since each letter has its own meaning, the alphabet itself is a story. The story of the Hebrew alphabet is the salvation message starting with the 1st letter representing the LORD the FATHER and finishing with the last letter of Tav, which looks like the Cross. If man made this alphabet, how did he know how to write an alphabet that tells the story of events that would happen 4000 years into the future.


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