God Speaks: Origin of the Alphabet

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By Peter M. Lopez


Aleph

First Letter of Ancient Hebrew Alphabet
First Letter of Ancient Hebrew Alphabet

The Origin of the Alphabet

We take for granted that when we call someone on the phone, send someone an email, text message or IM they will understand what are trying to communicate (assuming we share a common language).

Obviously, this was not always the case. The other night, I was watching The Naked Archaeologist on television and he traced the origin of the alphabet out of Egypt, across the Sinai peninsula, up through modern day Israel and north and eastward (to the Greeks, then Romans, etc.). Essentially, he claimed the spread of the alphabet tracked the exodus of the Bible. The time frames, archeology, and ancient writings all seemed to match.

Now, this archaeological discovery did not claim that hieroglyphics or other ancient types of picture writing were traced to the same alphabet, only that the alphabet as we know it (symbolic pictures or letters that can be arranged to form words, not just a picture of a bird to show a bird, but the ability to spell B-I-R-D) seems to trace its origins to the time and location of the Hebrew exodus from Egypt.



God Speaks

 

While this is a really cool discovery, I cannot say that it came as a big surprise to me. I believe this truth is also revealed in the ancient Hebrew/Semitic alphabet. In fact, the Roman Alpha and Beta are derived from the ancient Hebrew ALEPH and BET, thus, the word "alphabet" is actually the Hebrew aleph-bet.

As I have discussed and will discuss in other hubs, the ancient Hebrew alphabet is made up of 22 letters or pictographs. The first letter of the alphabet is the ALEPH (similar to our letter "A"). The ALEPH is pictured as an ox head, and symbolically means strength or God, as in "the Lord is my strength". The word ALEPH is spelled in Hebrew ALEPH (A)(ox head, God); LAMED (L)(pictured as a shepherd staff or ox goad, meaning to shepherd or lead); and PEY (Ph)(pictured as a mouth, meaning to speak).

The Hebrew word El (spelled ALEPH LAMED) is a common Hebrew word for God. Actually, many of the ancient Hebrew pictographs discovered by archaeologists are of the Hebrew word El (an ox head and shepherd staff). So, every time anyone says the name El, they are saying, "the Lord is my shepherd". I have discussed the Hebrew word Elohim (or "God", the longer version of El) as prophetic of Psalm 23 in my hub The Name of God, please have a look if you are interested. Incidentally, Elohim is the first name God gives himself in Genesis 1:1, so the notion of God as a shepherd is of particular importance.

But, for the origin of the alphabet, all you have to do is look to the first letter of the ancient Hebrew alphabet: the letter ALEPH, which is actually GOD (EL) SPEAKS. The creation of an alphabet occurred when God first spoke.

Again, I have given a visual representation below. Enjoy.

God Speaks

God Speaks: The Origin of the Alphabet
God Speaks: The Origin of the Alphabet

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LdsNana-AskMormon profile image

LdsNana-AskMormon  says:
6 months ago

Peter,

Again, thank you for writing that which testifies to me, of God. Will you be writing on 1-10, and this symbolism as well? I am so grateful that God has left those 'signs' of Him, to those who will LOOK.

tDMg

LdsNana-AskMormon

Peter M. Lopez profile image

Peter M. Lopez  says:
6 months ago

Thanks, again, LdsNana. As for numerical symbolism, I will at some point as each Hebrew letter has a corresponding numerical value. I wish I had time to post on everything, but it is on my to do list, so keep reading.

debrakcarey profile image

debrakcarey  says:
4 months ago

It is very interesting to study the language the God used to reveal Himself. Consider John 1:1....Words are powerful....they are more than just ink on paper or vibrations of air....they are the creative force of the universe. Hebrew is the language God used to reveal Himself to mankind...there is much to be learned from the study of this language....thank you for posting this. Debi

Peter M. Lopez profile image

Peter M. Lopez  says:
4 months ago

It is a fascinating language, and the Word is alive, no doubt in my mind. Thanks debra for your thoughtful comments.

tanvir munim profile image

tanvir munim  says:
2 months ago

god can speak through numbers. isnt it?

Peter M. Lopez profile image

Peter M. Lopez  says:
2 months ago

I believe so, do you? Thanks for reading.

tanvir munim profile image

tanvir munim  says:
3 weeks ago

yes i believe.

Peter M. Lopez profile image

Peter M. Lopez  says:
2 weeks ago

Thank you, tanvir munim. Keep on believing.

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