Oral teaching or storytelling
In the ancient days when writing was not yet a common thing among people, parents used to pass on their customs and traditions into the lives of their children through story telling.
Stories informs of myths, and fableswere spoken orally,
(elders and parents used their mouth to speak or tell stories) into the lives of their children,
this ancient tradition was both practiced by the pagan worshipers who worshiped false gods, and the descendant of Shem who worshiped the true living God.
God’s spoken stories and revelations transformed into written text.
Through oral teachings, the descendants of Abraham, Abraham the son of Terah, Terah being the grandson who sprang out of the genealogy of Shem (as in Genesis 11:10-27), passed down God’s oral law or spoken commandments via the telling of stories, which were transformed into the written law during the time of Moses.
Moses was used by God to write down the old testament in Hebrew as we know it today, the book of Genesis, Exodus, Numbers, and Deuteronomy were written down by Moses in Hebrew, and from Hebrew it was translated into other languages.
God created the world, or brought things from the spiritual realm, into the physical realm by the gift of oral declaration or speech.
Genesis 1:3 says: God said let there be light, and light existed
Words can contain a positive and negative effect over human life:
John 6:63 says; the words I speak to you they are spirit, and life, but also the words that some people speak can be many spirits, confusion, deception and death.
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By: Apostle A Ngabo