Breaking The Jewish Code Perry Stone

God rode into the garden on the wind. This agrees with the scripture that says, “He [God] rode upon a cherub, and flew; and He was seen upon the wings of the wind” (2 Sam. 22:11). The language Adamspoke was passed on fromAdamto Noah, the first ten generations of men (Gen. 5:3–32). There are also written traditions concerning Adam’s ability to communicate with the animal kingdom prior to his eating from the tree of knowledge of good and evil. The temptation to sin was initiated by a subtle, talking serpent (Gen. 3:1–4). Skeptics rightfully point out that snakes don’t talk. Yet, the Jewish historian Josephus answered this criticism when he wrote concerning man’s early history in the garden: But while all the living creatures had one language, at that time the serpent, which then lived together with Adam and his wife Eve, shewed an envious disposition, at his supposal of their living happily, and in obedience to the commands of God . . . 2 Any ability to communicate with the animal kingdom was severed following Adam’s sin. However, men continued communicating with men, as stated earlier when Josephus recorded how the sons of Seth etched a prophecy of future calamities coming to the earth on brick and stone for all men to see and be warned. These stone monuments have never been discovered, and the language or word pictures inscribed on them are unknown. At approximately 2344–2342 b.c., the floodwaters swept over the earth, bringing global destruction. There were eight

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