Where do they teach you the written word originated from; do they teach you that the LORD first taught man how to read and write the written spoken word?
For therein is the righteousness of God revealed from faith to faith: as it is written, The just shall live by faith. Romans 1:17
Do you mean that God taught Moses ancient Hebrew? They (linguists and archaeologists) think that the first phonetic alphabet was behind the Hebrew language and in a sense one can see the Hand of God behind this development providently happening about the time Moses wrote.
Moses being raised in Egypt and with all the learning of the Egyptians (Acts 7:22 Moses was educated in all the wisdom of the Egyptians and was powerful in speech and action. ) The archaeological finds of the oldest phonemic script were from slaves in the Sinai Peninsula which is very interesting when you consider that Moses may have wrote a most ancient form of Hebrew in something that the "ex slaves" could read.
The first fully phonemic script, the
Proto-Canaanite script, later known as the
Phoenician alphabet, is considered to be the first alphabet and is the ancestor of most modern alphabets, including
Arabic,
Cyrillic,
Greek,
Hebrew,
Latin, and possibly
Brahmic.
[5][6] It was created by Semitic-speaking workers and slaves in the
Sinai Peninsula (as the
Proto-Sinaitic script), by selecting a small number of
hieroglyphs commonly seen in their
Egyptian surroundings to
describe the sounds, as opposed to the semantic values, of their own
Canaanite language.
[7][8] However,
Peter T. Daniels distinguishes an
abugida, or alphasyllabary, a set of graphemes that represent consonantal base letters which
diacritics modify to represent vowels (as in
Devanagari and other South Asian scripts), an
abjad, in which letters predominantly or exclusively represent
consonants (as in the original Phoenician,
Hebrew or
Arabic), and an "alphabet", a set of graphemes that represent both consonants and
vowels. In this narrow sense of the word the first true alphabet was the Greek alphabet,
[9][10] which was developed on the basis of the earlier Phoenician alphabet.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alpha...phonemic script,, Latin, and possibly Brahmic.