The Promise of One Pure Language
Do you think those who claim Hebrew is the language of Heaven are teaching bibical doctrine?
Do you think those who claim Hebrew is the language of Heaven are teaching bibical doctrine?
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No, and it's pretty silly to suggest considering how simplistic Hebrew is.
It's also based around the concept of God speaking a verbal language, in spirit form. So the theory is, a spirit that cannot be measured in any known way; has some kind of spiritual vocal cords, a tongue and lips, and uses sound waves to communicate. And since sound waves naturally dissipate, it means that God can only communicate certain distances. So for God to speak to you if you're a few feet further away, He has to raise his God voice.
That just strikes me as someone who hasn't thought this through at all.
The Promise of One Pure Language
Do you think those who claim Hebrew is the language of Heaven are teaching bibical doctrine?
No...
God created all Lanuguages and He has spoken to the world using them..
Didn't English evolve from other languages?
Valid point.. English is a composite language of languages that already existed.. Latin, Frenc,h Norse, Dutch, and Gaelic, and you can probably throw in a few hundred smaller tribal languages that are now extinct..
(Isaiah 28:10-11) "For precept must be upon precept, precept upon precept; line upon line, line upon line; here a little, and there a little: {11} For with stammering lips and another tongue will He speak to this people."
So you don't think the names of God in the Bible are the actual names people in Heaven speak?
No, because I believe that there will be other ways besides language that God will communicate with us. Most likely, it will be something similar to the day of Pentecost, where each person attending heard the apostles speak in their own native language/tongue. Weren't the different languages originally created to thwart man's plan of building a tower to heaven so that they could be like God? If so, now that we'll be in God's presence, I don't see the need for many different languages to divide us.The Promise of One Pure Language
Do you think those who claim Hebrew is the language of Heaven are teaching bibical doctrine?
No, because I believe that there will be other ways besides language that God will communicate with us. Most likely, it will be something similar to the day of Pentecost, where each person attending heard the apostles speak in their own native language/tongue. Weren't the different languages originally created to thwart man's plan of building a tower to heaven so that they could be like God? If so, now that we'll be in God's presence, I don't see the need for many different languages to divide us.
I think it is a mystery, because it was never specified what language God used to speak to Adam and Eve, or what language the serpent used to speak to Eve. Maybe it was some kind of language that is universally known to God, humans, and angels alike. Until I get to heaven, I won't know for sure regarding the answer to that question.Do you believe Adam's language is something that is a mystery?
SistrNChrist:I think it is a mystery, because it was never specified what language God used to speak to Adam and Eve, or what language the serpent used to speak to Eve. Maybe it was some kind of language that is universally known to God, humans, and angels alike. Until I get to heaven, I won't know for sure regarding the answer to that question.
Didn't English evolve from other languages?
Exactly. I'm also fluent in Spanish, and a lot of the words used there are a mix of indigenous vocabulary, words borrowed from Arabic (back in the times when the Muslims had invaded the Iberian peninsula), Latin, and more recently, English. And if we could do an in depth detailed linguistics study, we'd find that pretty much every language on this planet is interrelated with another one.All languages evolve and borrow words from other.
Valid point.. English is a composite language of languages that already existed.. Latin, Frenc,h Norse, Dutch, and Gaelic, and you can probably throw in a few hundred smaller tribal languages that are now extinct..
(Isaiah 28:10-11) "For precept must be upon precept, precept upon precept; line upon line, line upon line; here a little, and there a little: {11} For with stammering lips and another tongue will He speak to this people."
No, because I believe that there will be other ways besides language that God will communicate with us. Most likely, it will be something similar to the day of Pentecost, where each person attending heard the apostles speak in their own native language/tongue. Weren't the different languages originally created to thwart man's plan of building a tower to heaven so that they could be like God? If so, now that we'll be in God's presence, I don't see the need for many different languages to divide us.
No, and it's pretty silly to suggest considering how simplistic Hebrew is.
It's also based around the concept of God speaking a verbal language, in spirit form. So the theory is, a spirit that cannot be measured in any known way; has some kind of spiritual vocal cords, a tongue and lips, and uses sound waves to communicate. And since sound waves naturally dissipate, it means that God can only communicate certain distances. So for God to speak to you if you're a few feet further away, He has to raise his God voice.
That just strikes me as someone who hasn't thought this through at all.