The Hebrews adopted an alphabet from the Philistines around 900 B.C., leading to increased writing and a shift towards a unified creation story after the Babylonian captivity. [1]
The Hebrew language, distinctly Andonite, was spoken by the Jewish descendants of Abraham, who carried the strain in their ancestry from the Andonite stock. [2] Jesus spoke Hebrew fluently, having mastered it as a young man in Nazareth. [3]
Moses' work is scarcely documented due to the absence of written Hebrew language during the exodus from Egypt, with records relying on oral traditions from over a millennium later. [4] The Hebrew language spoken by priests and rabbis in times of Jesus influenced the subsequent predominance of Greek in Jewish culture. [5]