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New Bible and Three Churches (Investment and Cooperation Project)

New Bible and Three Churches (Investment and Cooperation Project)

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The Bible is the word of God. Adam in the Garden of Eden corresponds to the origin of the ancient Chinese language, An Deng. Ancient Chinese derived from An Deng, which could likely be Adam Language. Many experts believe that ancient Chinese is the only remaining linguistic and situational evidence of the revelations in the Book of Revelation.

This investment and cooperation project is divided into three models:

  1. Translate 100 important verses from the Bible into Adam Language, and have 10-100 participating pastors or scholars reinterpret their meanings. This book will be publicly released to the general public. Readers will join the AI Nationals Church. The congregation of this church consists of natural persons, and it is responsible for running the social platform for these readers.

  2. Translate 700 important verses from the Bible into Adam Language, and have 70-700 participating pastors, scholars, scientists, entrepreneurs reinterpret their meanings. This book will be publicly released to the general public. Readers will join the AI Companies Church. The congregation of this church consists of legal entities, stores, companies, institutions, communities, courts, governments, nations, etc. This church has the authority to baptize these entities, making them AI Christians. This church is responsible for running the social platform for these readers.

  3. Translate 1,000 important verses from the Bible into Adam Language, and have 100-1,000 participating pastors, scholars, scientists, entrepreneurs, thinkers, politicians, etc., reinterpret their meanings. This book will be publicly released to the general public. The European continent has nurtured the old Christianity. The American continent needs to nurture a new religion, which is essentially a new Christianity. This third book will lay the foundation for the national religion of the United States. Just as the United Kingdom has its national religion, the Anglican Church, the United States should also have its national religion. The reader council of this third book will initiate the establishment and operation of the American National Church, developing the reader platform of the third book into the operating platform of the American National Church.

After paying a registration fee of $1,000, clients can join the above project as co-authors by emailing the Bible verses they wish to translate and interpret to aaanationalgroup@gmail.com.

Investors can purchase the copyrights of the three books, as well as the exclusive operating rights of the aforementioned churches and reader platforms.

Investors, please email aaanationalgroup@gmail.com.

 

Below is some introductions to Adam Language.

 
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In this linguistic analysis, the two distinguished authors dissect Chinese characters to reveal that, according to their research, the ancient Chinese were aware of the God of Abraham and the Chinese were, possibly, a remnant of the Tower of Babel dispersion.

The authors break down Chinese characters to provide a visual for learning how the story of the world's creation by the One True God is evident in the Chinese language.

 

 

Genesis in Ancient China

Genesis in Ancient China

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. It is through the earliest form of picture symbols that Chinese historical events were recorded. Thousands of years later, they reveal to us astonishing insight into China’s history and the biblical account of Genesis.

Genesis Recorded in Ancient China

Fascinating details of the research were published in “The Discovery of Genesis: How the Truths of Genesis Were Found Hidden in the Chinese Language” by Reverend C.H. Kang and Dr. Ethel R. Nelson. A mere curiosity turned into research spanning four decades.

“The authors start with the observance of some astonishing points of correspondence between certain characters in the Chinese language and elements of the Genesis account of man’s early beginnings. They go on to analyze dozens of the ideographic pictures that make up words in the Chinese language. The evidence they compile supports the thesis that the ancient picture writing of the Chinese language embodies memories of man’s earliest days. The characters when broken down into component parts, reflect elements of the story of God and man recorded in the early chapters of Genesis. Man and woman, the garden, the institution of marriage, the temptation and fall, death, Noah’s flood, the tower of Babel they are all there in the tiny drawings and strokes that make up the Chinese characters.” (From the foreword by Paul Zimmerman)

Using what forensic researchers call “cause and origin” analysis, they investigated where the Chinese picture concepts came from and why they matched the history of Genesis. Inventing China’s original language would involve translating familiar ideas into picture words.

The First Chinese Settlers

The first Chinese settlements resulted from the tower of Babel dispersion. Their ancient beliefs included worshipping one true God, a strict moral code, and having no myths or idols. They called their God ShangDi, which closely resembles Shaddai, one of the Judaic names of God.

They held the earliest memories of mankind’s origins from creation to Babel. They knew of key events in Genesis 1-11 and the importance of preserving that history. They recorded these in their new pictographic language for the benefit of future generations.

Genesis Pictograph Correlations

Readers of Genesis will readily recognize many themes presented by the Chinese pictographs. Here are some of the correlations as listed in the article “Genesis in Chinese Pictographs” by icr.org:

  • God the Creator;
  • Creation of Heaven and Earth, including a garden;
  • Man made from earth;
  • Man with stewardship responsibility;
  • Warning provided by God, hand, and a tree;
  • Man and woman as demonstrating completeness;
  • Covetousness involving trees and woman;
  • Temptation represented by garden, trees, and devil;
  • Death involves hands, tree, and mouths;
  • Thorns indicate weeds and punishment;
  • Alienation shown through man, woman, and garden;
  • Goodness involves woman and “seed”;
  • Sacrifice is represented by God, hand, and blood;
  • “Lord” is designated by God and blood;
  • “Me” plus sheep equals righteousness;
  • Trust/dependence is represented by God covering a couple with clothing;
  • Violence is shown by an elder brother with a mark;
  • Flood involves universal water, and “universal” is conveyed by the number eight, united, and earth;
  • Boat is illustrated as a vessel or container and eight people;
  • Mankind plus one mouth/speech equals a type of unity, yet that unity combined with weeds (which depict the curse) equals ambition, and that ambition plus clay/bricks equals a tower; and
  • Rebellion/confusion is represented by a tongue.

Though centuries have come and gone, the original Chinese Genesis pictographs remain a silent but enduring testimony for anyone to learn about the God of the Bible. As historical proof, these pictographs accurately depict Genesis as presented in the Bible.

For more interesting details about this subject, visit icr.org or read “The Discovery of Genesis” online.

 

Genesis in Chinese Pictographs

Ancient Chinese pictographs are silent witnesses, like fingerprints, of historical events reported in Genesis. In particular, the details of these word-symbols are clues that point to how the earliest Chinese must have known basic facts of Genesis 1–11 at the very time their pictographs were invented.

Chinese is not an alphabet-based language—its word characters are both abbreviations of and combinations of picture symbols.1 The simplest symbols are combined to construct composite symbols that denote compound words.1,2 However, the actual pictures that were chosen, and especially their associated meanings, are what give us an amazing insight into Chinese history. The pictographic clues to that mysterious past have remained hidden in plain view for thousands of years.

Whereas most written languages construct words from the letters of an alphabet, the Chinese language uses radicals [i.e., root meaning-symbols], also called keys, roots or primitives, as the basic units and building blocks for the word characters. Each character contains one or more root symbols.3

The creative selection process that invented ancient Chinese characters produced the earliest form of Chinese pictographs, sometimes called ideograms or oracle bone pictographs because the texts were often carved onto bones or tortoise shell plastrons.1,2

But linguistic changes have occurred over the centuries, so pictographic analysis requires a forensic perspective, because the present is not the key to China’s linguistic past. The basic written vocabulary of the Chinese language is not being invented today, so the origin of their pictographs cannot be observed by empirical science methods.4 Rather, an investigative study of how the earliest Chinese historically selected relevant symbols to denote word meanings, during the invention of their written language, requires historical cause-and-effect analysis—what forensic scientists call “cause and origin” analysis.5 In this investigation, the forensic cause-and-origin question is: Where did the Chinese picture concepts come from—concepts that are memorialized in ancient Chinese pictographs? And a corollary question is: Why do these figures match Genesis history?

During the invention of a pictographic language, creating pictographic “words” involved selecting picture symbols that were relevant and meaningful to whoever invented those written symbols. But what motifs would signify meanings that the ancient Chinese would portray about 4,500 years ago? What ideas were familiar to those who invented China’s original written language?

Since Chinese civilization began soon after the Tower of Babel fiasco, the first Chinese settlers still had a fresh memory of mankind’s origins—from creation week to the dispersion of languages at Babel. Thus, they not only knew the history highlights in Genesis 1–11, but they would also have regarded those same events as important in human history and experience.6 It is unsurprising, therefore, that many of the picture-symbol characters, in the ancient Chinese language, match the thinking of a soon-after-Babel people who retained important memories of historic events reported in Genesis 1–11.

These creation-through-Babel events observed in Chinese pictographs include many themes and associations that readers of Genesis will recognize: God the Creator; creation of heaven and Earth, including a garden; man made from earth; man with stewardship responsibility; warning provided by God, hand, and a tree; man and woman as demonstrating completeness; covetousness involving trees and woman; temptation represented by garden, trees, and devil; death involves hands, tree, and mouths; thorns indicate weeds and punishment; alienation shown through man, woman, and garden; goodness involves woman and “seed”; sacrifice is represented by God, hand, and blood; “Lord” is designated by God and blood; “me” plus sheep equals righteousness; trust/dependence is represented by God covering a couple with clothing; violence is shown by an elder brother with a mark; flood involves universal water, and “universal” is conveyed by the number eight, united, and earth; boat is illustrated as a vessel or container and eight people; mankind plus one mouth/speech equals a type of unity, yet that unity combined with weeds (which depict the curse) equals ambition, and that ambition plus clay/bricks equals a tower; rebellion/confusion is represented by a tongue—and the list of correlations goes on. A few visual examples of this Genesis-relevant pattern follow, but note that there are many more documented in scholarly sources.1,2

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.

Kang and Nelson recognize that this etymology retains information from Genesis 2:7, since Adam (whose name means “ground” in Hebrew) was made from and received the breath of life from God, and was created fully formed, able to walk and talk, etc.7 Interestingly, the Chinese have a memory of a seven–day week, depicted pictographically as “the returning seventh day”—which is itself a monument to the creation week.

Recollection of the Garden of Eden is also evident in the ancient Chinese word for “garden.”6

If this does not link to the Genesis account, why else would the early Chinese combine the ideas of “two persons” who received the “breath” of life after the first one of those two persons (Adam) was made from the “dust” of the earth?

Additionally, the pictographic characters for “boat” and “flood” recall information recounted in the adventures of Noah and his Ark–borne family, as recorded in Genesis 6–9. These Chinese characters recall that there were exactly eight survivors of the worldwide Flood.7

Although the illustrations above only serve to introduce this fascinating trove of pictographic philology (word study), they do show what forensic professionals call a “beyond-genuine-dispute” witness of God’s historic workings in Chinese history, producing a form of providential history and evidence of biblical truth.

Before concluding this fascinating study a qualification is appropriate, because this writer is not an expert in ancient Chinese pictographs. Has this author ever seen the apologetics value of these Chinese pictographs tested in the real world? The answer is yes, as a previous Acts & Facts article indicated years ago.

In 1990, a graduate student from communist China—raised on atheistic evolution—asked me the following question: “Why should I believe in the Bible God, the Bible is true, and God is fair, when China was never given Bible truth about God to believe?” Simply put, this young man was asking: “Why should I believe in your Bible’s God?” and “Why should I believe in your God’s Bible?”8

Recalling that I learned somewhere that the Chinese character for “flood” somehow contained the symbol for “eight,” I asked my Chinese friend to write out the Chinese word for flood, and to describe what its component symbols represented. As indicated above, his description of flood included the number eight—a fact he had no explanation for, other than he guessed that it might have once been a phonetic symbol, similar to how “4” can be shorthand for “for” or “8” for “ate.”

Then I read 1 Peter 3:20 to him and pointed out how Genesis 6–10 reports that exactly eight humans survived the global Flood, a fact that perfectly made sense of the Chinese pictographs. Then, he added that the Chinese character for “boat” also contained the number eight, and he began to realize that his own language contained latent clues that the Bible’s early history was once well known to the Chinese people.

After further discussion about how the biblical God is a loving shepherd who seeks to secure wandering sheep into His heavenly sheepfold (Psalm 23; Luke 15; John 10), my friend concluded that, long ago, the Chinese people had known the truth about the God of the Bible, including the early history of God’s dealings with mankind as Genesis records, but that somehow this precious truth had been lost or wasted. During the wee hours of the morning, with joy in knowing that God had caringly revealed Himself to the Chinese people, my friend trusted Christ as his personal Savior, and he has enjoyed belonging to Him since (Luke 15:7; Romans 4:3; Luke 10:20).

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. That historically preserved truth points to the accuracy of the Scriptures, which in turn always point to and glorify the Lord Jesus Christ (John 5:39, 46).

References

  1. This study is a forensic perspective on pictographic philology. The two best overviews are co-authored by Dr. Ethel Nelson: Kang, C. H. and E. R. Nelson. 1979. The Discovery of Genesis: How the Truths of Genesis Were Found Hidden in the Chinese Language. St. Louis, MO: Concordia Publishing House; Nelson, E. R., R. E. Broadberry, and G. T. Chock. 1997. God’s Promise to the Chinese. Dunlap, TN: Read Books Publishers, which discusses oracle bones and tortoise shell plastrons on page 11.
  2. Voo, K. S. and L. Hovee. 1999. The Lamb of God Hidden in the ancient Chinese Characters. Creation Ex Nihilo Technical Journal. 13 (1): 81-91.
  3. Kang and Nelson. The Discovery of Genesis, 23.
  4. Johnson, J. J. S. 2012. Genesis Critics Flunk Forensic Science 101. Acts & Facts. 41 (3): 8-9; Johnson, J. J. S. 2014. Is the Present the “Key” to Our Past? Acts & Facts. 43 (6): 19.
  5. United States v. Hebshie, 754 F.Supp.2d 89, 114 (D. Mass. 2010) (discussing cause-and-origin techniques used in forensic science investigations); Layton v. Whirlpool Corp., 2007 WL 4792438, *3 (S.D. W.Va. 2007). In medical science and in other origin science contexts, the term etiology is often used to denote cause-and-effect history.
  6. Just as modern Norwegian Sami care about snow and reindeer, and Jamaicans care about jerk chicken and reggae music, the first settlers of China cared about their cultural heritage, which included fresh memories from Babel and the oral histories of earlier events, so far as their ancestors transmitted reports of those events. See Johnson, J. J. S. 2014. Job’s Icy Vocabulary. Acts & Facts. 43 (12):19.
  7. Kang and Nelson, Discovery of Genesis, 40-41 (create—see also Genesis 2:7), 54 (garden), 55 (week of seven days—see Genesis 2:2-3 and Exodus 20:11), 95-97 (boat, flood—see Genesis 6–9 and 1 Peter 3:20).
  8. Johnson, J. J. S. 2010. Understanding Effective Biblical Apologetics. Acts & Facts. 39 (4): 8-9.

* Dr. Johnson is Associate Professor of Apologetics and Chief Academic Officer at the Institute for Creation Research.

Cite this article: James J. S. Johnson, J.D., Th.D. 2015. Genesis in Chinese Pictographs. Acts & Facts. 44 (3).

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