Jan 24, 2022
And all the host of them by the breath of His
mouth.
7 He gathers the waters of the sea together [a]as a
heap;
He lays up the deep in storehouses.
8 Let all the earth fear the Lord;
Let all the inhabitants of the world stand in awe of Him."
Isaac went on to point out there are 2 universal languages,
music and math.
Mathematics is derived from the numerical values assigned to the 22
letters in the Hebrew Alphabet. The first 10 letters are
assigned #1-10, the next 9 letters #20-#100 (by 10's), then #200,
#300, and #400
Music comes from singing God's praises, the Torah was originally sung.
In music, there are 3 notes that make a unique sound together to make a chord. In Hebrew there are considered to be 3 mother letters: Aleph, Mem, and Shin, from which all other letters come from.
In music, there are 7 notes to form an octave and in Hebrew there are 7 what are called double letters because they each can form two different sounds.
In music, there are are 12 notes in an octave when you count the major and minor notes, on the piano that would be the white and black keys from one lettered note to the same lettered note an octave higher. And these relationships continue as you look at the electromagnetic spectrum
You might wonder why I'm talking about this number 22. Well, I'm learning Hebrew and found this fascinating, but I chose to share it with you because in the analysis the concept of work is right in the middle of this, which I hope reminds you that work matters to God.
The JewishEncyclopedia https://www.jewishencyclopedia.com/articles/8944-jubilees-book-of lists these 22 works of creation from the book of Jubilees: "On the first day—heaven, earth, water, the spirits, the abyss, darkness, and light; on the second—the firmament; on the third—the land, the seas, vegetation, and paradise; on the fourth—sun, moon, and stars; on the fifth—the sea-monsters (Behemoth and Leviathan, "the first things of flesh created by His hands"), the fish, and the birds; on the sixth—the wild and the tame animals, the creeping things, and man"