The Hebrew Language - The DNA OF CREATION?
The Hebrew Language - The DNA OF CREATION?
Introduction

The Hebrew Language is called Lashon Ha Kodesh (the holy language) or Lashon Adonai (the language of the Lord)

25 October, 2018
The Hebrew Language is called Lashon Ha Kodesh (the holy language) or Lashon Adonai (the language of the Lord)

The Hebrew Language is called Lashon Ha Kodesh (the holy language) or Lashon Adonai (the language of the Lord)

The Hebrew Language - The DNA OF CREATION?
The Hebrew Language is called Lashon Ha Kodesh (the holy language) or Lashon Adonai (the language of the Lord) since it was revealed with the first divine utterance, 'Let there be light' (Gen 1:3). The words 'Let there light' mean so much more than that because at that precise moment, the divine met & transformed into the mortal & temporal reality. We also
know that the sun was created on the 4th day, so the "Light" here refers something far much greater, the "Light of mankind" which the darkness never comprehended & brought Man closer to God, that is the Messiah. (John 1:1-10)

It is said that before the Almighty created the world, He FIRST created the 22 letters of the Hebrew alphabet & by combining these letters together, He created the entire reality of everything we see & know. Each of these letters contain spiritual energies & these energies produced reality. In other words, the sacred letters of the Hebrew alphabet were the vehicles by which God created the rest of the cosmos. First came the letters, then came the formation of those letters into words and the words manifested themselves into physical reality. The word can't be spoken without a prior alphabet!!

The Lashon Ha Kodesh (the holy tongue) was first revealed with the first divine utterance of creation, 'Let there be light'.
This is echoed in the first verse of the Bible, Rabbi Dov Ber, Maggid of Mezritch, explained the first word of Torah:
Bereshit Bara Elohim et -In the beginning God created "et" (Gen 1:1). Note that "et" is an untranslatable word used to indicate that & a definite direct object is next " (thus there needs to be an "et" before the heavens & the earth). But Dov Ber points out that "et" is spelled -Aleph- Tav, an abbreviation for the Aleph-bet (the hebrew alphabet). Aleph is the first letter of the Hebrew alphabet & Tav the last. (If spoken in English, it would have said, In the beginning God created A-Z) Since God did this "before" creating the heavens & the earth, the letters are considered the primordial BUILDING BLOCKS of all creation.

Rabbi Shneur Zalman of Liadi stated that if the letters were to depart even for an instant, all of creation would become absolutely nothingness. Yahshua the Messiah testified that He is the Aleph & the Tav, the first & the last, the Beginning
& the Ending. Revelation 22:13 [13] I am the Aleph and the Tav, the First and the Last, the Beginning and the End.

When Yahshua said this, He was making a direct reference to Isaiah 41:4, 44:6 & 44:18, where Adonai himself says that He is the First & the Last - and explicitly declared that there is no other God beside Him.

As it is written in Gen 1:1- "In the beginning God(Aleph/tav) created the heavens & the earth. Not only is the Messiah the End of all creation, but He is the "Beginning of the Creation of God,"the Creator& Sustainer of all things: For by him all things were created, in the heavens and on the earth, things visible and things invisible, whether thrones or dominions or principalities or powers; all things have been created through him, and for him. He is before all things, and in him all things are held together. (Col 1:16-17)

Revelation 3:14 [14] The Amen, the Faithful and True Witness, the Beginning of God’s creation... Yahshua, the Word of Elohim, the One born the King of the Jews (Matt 2:2) assuredly spoke Hebrew (Luke 2:39-42, 4:16, Matt.5:17-19, Acts 26:14) & therefore it is no overstatement to say that Hebrew is the most important of languages, both logically & spiritually understood. There are those who ignorantly disregard the Old Testament & say it speaks of an alien God not found in the New Testament. But as we can see, perhaps through the microscope of the Hebrew language can we truly see the role of the Messiah from the beginning to the infinite.