At about 1:47 he says that the image of a hand was/is the letter "Yad", (hand), but that really is not the case because it is most commonly known as Yod, (Yodh), or Yud, and moreover the pictograph-symbol is clearly not just a hand but an ARM, (with a hand at the end of it).
Here is the Pictorial Hebrew (above) and the Babylonian "square" Script:
Problem is now you have an arm, not a hand, (yad), and even worse the waw or vav was also used originally in the Ashuri Script as a word separator because, like ancient Uncial Greek texts, the original Hebrew square script was written in "scriptura continua" form, (without spacing), and for the same reason there are manifold places in the LXX where the waw-vav is clearly being recognized as a word separator right in the middle of the Name, (because Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob did not know the Tetragrammaton name of the Father, as per Exodus 6:3). And now, with the Genesis Tablet theory becoming much more widely accepted, this actually makes perfect sense. IMO the first pictograph is better understood as Ya, the (right) Arm of YHWH.
I believe your "sources" of information on Hebrew have not been first-rate.
You seem to be lacking in your understanding of ancient near-East cultures
and the "vocabulary" associated with that early period in man's history.
My Gospel??Hmmm, one of my better sources is Paul, whom you say preaches your Gospel:
My Gospel??
The subject of the Original Post is the Original Hebrew Language, ie: Pictographic (hieroglyphic) Hebrew
This reveals the non-Greek, ("Asian") "worldview" of ancient Hebrews, and the language that resulted from that worldview and cosmology.
Perhaps you are limited by the strictly "logical" worldview derived from Greek culture.
Here is the Pictorial Hebrew (above) and the Babylonian "square" Script:
Where does the pictorial "behold" appear in that video?
There is no physical archeological evidence anywhere of the Name having been written in the "Hyskos" Egyptian glyphs
Yet another example, by daq, of diversion with fake information to confuse the naïve.
The Hyksos were Semitic invaders from Mesopotamia, who took over Lower Egypt and forced the native Egyptians into Upper Egypt. The Hyksos were in control of the Delta region when Joseph was brought into Egypt. Joseph found favor because, like the Hyksos Pharaoh, he was Semite.
By the time of Moses, the Hyksos had long been overthrown, and forced to flee Egypt via the Mediterranean.
So, the Pharaoh of Moses didn't know about Joseph, he only knew that the Hebrews were non-Egyptian Semites, and so were made slaves.
I believe your "sources" of information on Hebrew have not been first-rate.
You seem to be lacking in your understanding of ancient near-East cultures
and the "vocabulary" associated with that early period in man's history.
The origin of the Hebrew alphabet, may have had nothing to do with simple pictographs, but we can't be sure. Adam was created with language and intelligence, so he may also have had the ability to of complex written language.
Yet another example, by daq, of diversion with fake information to confuse the naïve.
The Hyksos were Semitic invaders from Mesopotamia, who took over Lower Egypt and forced the native Egyptians into Upper Egypt. The Hyksos were in control of the Delta region when Joseph was brought into Egypt. Joseph found favor because, like the Hyksos Pharaoh, he was Semite.
By the time of Moses, the Hyksos had long been overthrown, and forced to flee Egypt via the Mediterranean.
So, the Pharaoh of Moses didn't know about Joseph, he only knew that the Hebrews were non-Egyptian Semites, and so were made slaves.
Like Egyptian hieroglyphics, the origins of Hebrew are Pictographic in nature. The graph is to convey a concept via illustration.I think you are confusing the language with the way it is written. Languages are spoken. Writing, especially alphabetic writing, is a way of recording the language. Though the letters may have started out as pictographs, once they are letters, the pictograph origin of the letter is no longer important.
Like Egyptian hieroglyphics, the origins of Hebrew are Pictographic in nature. The graph is to convey a concept via illustration.
I am aware of the Hyksos, thank you. The Hebrew alphabet evolved over time, but the language itself was never pictographic. Do you think there were only 22 words in Hebrew back then?The Semitic Hyksos were invaders and conquerors of Northern Egypt from Mesopotamia. As such, they would have used cuneiform to write their Aramaic.
Once Hebrew evolved into nothing more than an alphabet, then it became detached from its original pictorial concepts. The original "concepts" were then forgotten.
The writing was ancient Hebrew writing. Of course. not your made-up symbols, but similar to those actually found by archaeologists.*note the Proto-Hebrew's origins in Phoenician, which later became the basis for the Greek alphabet. So, the changes in Hebrew began early-on.
PS: What do you think the "writing" on the stone tablets, from Sinai, was??