Chinese
Language Supports Creation Account
One of the primary characteristics which separates human behavior from animals
is the ability to transfer abstract concepts to another human via written
language. The Bible teaches that this ability came directly from our Creator.
It also teaches that the vastly different languages of the world are a result
of the confusion of one original language during an event known as the tower of
Babel. Our English word babble (meaning gibberish, chatter, nonsense) has it
roots in this event. There should be accounts in ancient cultures for Biblical
events such as the creation of man, the fall of man, the existence of a single
creator (God), the world wide flood, and the tower of Babel if these were
actual happenings in time and space.
Knowledge of all of these events can be found not just in the Bible but
through the ancient writing of people throughout the world. One of the more
interesting collaborations can be found within the very characters of the
ancient Chinese letter symbols. Buddhism, Taoism, and Confucianism dominate the
religious beliefs of China today but 2000 years before the appearance of any of
these religious beliefs the ancient Chinese served a single creator god known
as "Shang Ti".
Ancient Chinese writing
consisted of a series of word pictures or pictographs which combined separate
features to express a idea or concept. The symbol for Shang Ti (God) is a
combination of the symbol for emperor and the symbol for heaven (or above).
Thus, the original God worshiped by the Chinese was a single heavenly
emperor (not many gods).
The Bible states that God
created man from the dust of the ground and breathed into him the breath of
life. The ancient Chinese symbol for create is a combination of person (or
breath), dust, walking, and alive.
Thus, to create, is to have dust walk, breath, and live.
The Bible describes a
world wide flood catastrophe in which all human life with the exception of
eight individuals on a floating vessel were destroyed. The ancient Chinese
symbol for 'boat' is vessel, eight, and people.
Thus, a boat is eight people onboard of a vessel!
The Bible describes that
man was told to spread out over the earth after the worldwide flood, yet he
rebelled and built a tower to his own glory. God ended this rebellion by
confusing man's languages so that they set out and journeyed across the globe
in different language groups. Interestingly, the ancient Chinese chose to use
the identical symbol for confusion and rebellion...a combination of tongue and
right leg (or journey).
Thus, to confuse is to set out on a journey with a new tongue (or
language).
These are just a few of many examples of the historical knowledge of the
Bible which the ancient Chinese people must have had as they developed their
written language. Many more examples can be found in an excellent book by C.H.
Kang and Ethel Nelson called The Discovery of Genesis.
This Article is from Bruce Malone's book Search
for the Truth.