The silent-yet-testifying witnesses of ancient Chinese pictographs, which remind us that the earliest Chinese generations knew much of what we read in Genesis, are a monument to God's truth, preserved in simple pictographic symbols. Uncover the fascinating connection between Chinese pictograms and the story of Genesis. Explore the ancient symbols and their significance.
The origin of the Border Sacrifice would appear to be explained in the book, God's Promise to the Chinese. 8 The authors, Nelson, Broadberry, and Chock have analyzed the most ancient forms of the pictographic Chinese writing and found the foundational truths of Christianity. This, third part of the series Genesis in Ancient Chinese Culture, shows very clearly how the events of Genesis had become embedded into ancient Chinese characters and even present.
Ancient Chinese pictographs are silent witnesses, like fingerprints, of historical events reported in Genesis. In particular, the details of these word. The pictographic word for "to create" in ancient Chinese is composed of the components "to speak/talk" and "walking"-consistent with the Genesis account of God using His mouth to create and Adam being created fully mature and thus able to walk, as follows.
Careful analysis of the most ancient extant Chinese pictographic character writing, found on bronzeware vessels and oracle bone artifacts, reveals identical narratives in ideographic characters to that found in the first three chapters of the Biblical Genesis. This "second Genesis" from a widely separated area of the world. gives added credibility to the human creation epic, as related by.
Was Genesis known in ancient China? Scientific research reveals that the Chinese probably knew about Genesis chapters 1-11 in ancient times, during the same period as the invention of their pictograph language, about 4,500 years ago. Chinese pictography is a language written as abbreviations and compositions using picture symbols. Based on the book "The Discovery of Genesis" by Reverend C.
H. Kang and Dr. Ethel Nelson.
We present 118 examples of Chinese pictographs which give unmistak.