
Cracks of heaven
History Paradox Book Collection
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Rosalyn Hui Zhang, MSc, PhD (Cand.) is an author, researcher, and trauma-informed counsellor[1] whose work bridges neuroscience, ancient wisdom tradition, and cross-cultural history. With a Master’s in Applied Neuroscience from King’s College London, current doctoral research in Psychology, and advanced training in trauma recovery, she integrates scientific insight with the depth of human story. Her writing traces the threads that connect civilizations, faith systems, and the human nervous system—seeking t...
Rosalyn’s professional journey spans over a decade in clinical counselling, somatic therapy, nutritional wellness, and leadership in international business. She has worked with children, families, and communities across cultures, developing innovative Multipaths Neuro-Dan™ Meditation for subconscious trauma recovery and holistic health assessment. She is the inventor of the Multi-integrating neuroscience with symbolic and energy-based therapies
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Book: Cracks of Heaven

Cracks of Heaven: Decoding the Sacred Grammar of Ancient Civilizations
Civilizations once heard the voice of Heaven in fire-scorched fissures across bone and shell. In the procedure of oracle bone divination, cracks were not random marks of heat but signs interpreted as answers from the unseen. From this practice emerged early symbolic forms such as the Jiahu Symbols (c. 7000–5800 BCE), carved on bone and shell, which reveal traits later shared by both the Chinese oracle tradition and the Proto-Hebrew alphabet.
From this shared reservoir, two distinct language evolving paths unfolded: in the Central Plains of China, the fissures gave rise to hieroglyphic Oracle Bone Inscriptions, rich in pictorial imagery and ritual meaning; in the Near East, the same impulse distilled into the geometric clarity of Proto-Hebrew letters, encoding covenant and theology into minimal strokes. Together, they suggest that the origins of Hebrew and Chinese cultures may reach back to a similar symbolic source — a primordial grammar of the sacred..
This book uncovers how these ancient scripts preserve echoes of the same sacred memory in culture and traditions.
Chinese Characters as Sacred Windows
Chinese Characters as Sacred Windows
冲 (Wash)


Two Forms of “冲 (Wash)” in Oracle Bone Inscription
Appearing on oracle bones, this pictograph shows a figure immersed in flowing water — its form astonishingly close to Old Testament “water rite.” In Taoist scripture Tao Te Ching, “冲” represents purification of body and spirit, aligning with biblical accounts of washing and rebirth (Matthew 3:16–17).



吾(I). Oracle Bone Inscription
吾(I). Western Zhou Bronze Inscription
The Legendary Golden Ark of the Covenant
(Around 1300BCE)
(Around 1100 - 770 BCE)
(Around 1100 - 770 BCE)
This character resembles the Ark of the Covenant, with a container base and a lid adorned like cherubim. In Zhou bronze inscriptions, “吾” even shows a double-sealed vessel, echoing rabbinic traditions that the Ark “carried those who carried it.”
Two layers of the “Lids” in the ancient character 吾(I) found in Chinese Bronze rite artifacts Maogong Ding:

Bronze Antique: Maogong Ding (approx. 828 - 782 BCE)

“吾(I)”.Bronze Inscription
寿 (Longevity)

寿 (Longevity)
Contains Two Fixed Structures
From Mid-Late Western Zhou Dynasty

寿 (Longevity)
Contains Three Fixed Structure
From Late Western Zhou Dynasty
Early versions depict layered curtains and ritual spaces, resembling temple structures uncovered at Sanxingdui and paralleling Solomon’s Temple. “寿” embodies prayer for health, covenant blessing, and divine-human encounter.
神 (God) & 灵 (Spirit)


神.God
From East Zhou Dynasty
灵.Spirit
Contains Two Fixed Structures
Contains three Fixed Structure
From Mid Western Zhou Dynasty
In oracle and bronze inscriptions, these glyphs evolve into forms with dual and triadic structures. By the Eastern Zhou, 灵 emerges with a three-part form suggestive of the Holy Spirit within the biblical Godhead.
These are not coincidences. They are hieroglyphic testimonies, preserved in the strokes of Chinese characters yet resonant with biblical theology.
Proto-Hebrew Letters: Geometry of Covenant
At the same time, ancient Hebrews shaped their covenantal faith into symbols we now call Proto-Hebrew. Each letter was both pictograph and theology: