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For the fictional language used in the 1997 film The Fifth Element, see Divine Language (The Fifth Element).
Divine language, the language of the gods, or, in monotheism, the language of God (or angels) is the concept of a mystical or divine proto-language, which predates and supersedes human phonetic speech.
Abrahamic traditions
In Judaism and Christianity, it is unclear whether the language used by God to address Adam was the language of Adam, which as name-giver, (Gen 2:19) used it to name all living things, or if it was a different divine language. But since God is portrayed as using speech during the creation myth, and as addressing Adam before Gen 2:19, some authorities[citation needed] assumed that the language of God was different from the language of Paradise invented by Adam, while most medieval Jewish authorities maintained that the Hebrew language was the language of God. German philologist Jacob Grimm wrote in 1851 that if God spoke language, indeed any language that involves dental consonants, God must have teeth, and since teeth were created not for speech but for eating, it would follow that he also eats, which, as Frits Staal puts it, "leads to so many other undesirable assumptions that we better abandon the idea altogether"[1] The Catholic nun Anne Catherine Emmerich stated in her private revelations that most direct descendants of the divine language were Bactrian, Zend and Indian languages. In this way Emmerich identifies divine language as Proto-Indo-European language, that was written in sentence-level ideographic script that was more abstract than word-level ideographic script.[2] Some Early Modern scholars on basis of Genesis 10:5 have assumed that the Japhetite languages are the direct descendants of the divine language, having separated before the confusion of tongues, by which also Hebrew was affected, confirming in this way Emmerich's private revelations. The sacred language in Islam is Classical Arabic, which along with Hebrew and Aramaic, both of which Jesus Christ spoke, is a descendant of Proto-Semitic language. Arabic along with Hebrew and Aramaic is also Abrahamic in origin being one of the three main Semitic languages. It is sacred because Arabic was the language in which God revealed his word to Muhammad. Indic traditionsIn Vedic religion, Vedic Sanskrit was considered the language of the gods. In Tamil national mysticism, the Tamil language is considered "more divine" than Sanskrit (see Devaneya Pavanar). OccultismIn 1510, Heinrich Cornelius Agrippa published Book I of his De Occulta Philosophia, which included further information concerning the Divine Language. Chapter 23 of the book is entitled "Of the tongue of Angels, and of their speaking amongst themselves, and with us" - wherein he states:
Later, in chapter 27, Agrippa mentions the Divine Language again:
In the late 1500s, the Elizabethan mathematician and scholar John Dee, and the medium and alchemist Edward Kelley (both of whom were familiar with Agrippa's writings), claimed to have received the "Celestial Speech", during skrying sessions, directly from Angels. They recorded large portions of the language in their journals (published today as "The Five Books of the Mysteries" and "A True and Faithful Relation..."), along with a complete text in the language called the "Book of Loagaeth" (or "Speech From God"). Dee's language- called "Angelical" in his journals, but often known today by the misnomer "Enochian", follows the basic Judeo-Christian mythology about the Divine Language. According to "A True and Faithful Relation..." Angelical was supposed to have been the language God used to create the world, and then used by Adam to speak with God and Angels and to name all things in existence. He then lost the language upon his Fall from Paradise, and constructed a form of proto-Hebrew based upon his vague memory of Angelical. This proto-Hebrew, then, was the universal human language until the time of the Confusion of Tongues at the Tower of Babel. After this, all the various human languages were developed, including an even more modified Hebrew (which we know as "Biblical Hebrew"). From the time of Adam to the time of Dee and Kelley, Angelical was hidden from humans with the single exception of the patriarch Enoch - who recorded the "Book of Loagaeth" for humanity, but the book was lost in the Deluge of Noah. George William Russell in The Candle of Vision (1918) argued that (p. 120) "The mind of man is made in the image of Deity, and the elements of speech are related to the powers in his mind and through it to the being of the Oversoul. These true roots of language are few, alphabet and roots being identical." Because of the relation to mathematics, Epsilonists hold that Greek language is divine or of extraterrestrial origin (see Gematria). References
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