Restoring the language of covenant and origin

Institute of Paleo-Hebrew Research & Culture

We are a research and education institute dedicated to the study, preservation, and restoration of the original Paleo-Hebrew language and its cultural context—bridging rigorous linguistic scholarship with historical and spiritual insight.

Our purpose: to restore the pure language, recover covenant identity, and support the revival of biblical understanding across generations.

Serving scholars, teachers, and spiritual communities seeking Scripture as it was originally written and lived.

A living laboratory of Paleo-Hebrew

Through manuscripts, inscriptions, and immersive study of ancient Near Eastern culture, we pursue a precise, reverent understanding of the original script and its world.

  • Ongoing textual and epigraphic research
  • Scholarly publications and reference tools
  • Courses, seminars, and guided study tracks

Anchored in faith, accountable to scholarship, and devoted to clarity for the next generation.

Ancient Paleo-Hebrew inscriptions and scroll fragments

Our Mission

Restoring the pure language, renewing covenant identity

We exist to re-engage the Scriptures in the language and symbols in which they first came—Paleo-Hebrew. By uniting precise linguistic research with deep historical and spiritual awareness, we serve as a bridge between the academy, the community of faith, and all who seek to read, teach, and live the biblical text more faithfully.

Rigorous research

We analyze inscriptions, manuscripts, and comparative Semitic languages to reconstruct the forms, sounds, and meanings of Paleo-Hebrew with precision and care.

Formational education

Courses, workshops, and guided intensives equip students, pastors, and teachers to handle the text responsibly and share its insights clearly with their communities.

Covenant-centered culture

We explore how the original script shapes identity, worship, and community life—helping today’s readers rediscover an ancient covenant worldview.

Why Paleo-Hebrew

Reading Scripture in the script of its earliest witnesses

Most readers encounter the Hebrew Bible through later square Aramaic script or in translation. Paleo-Hebrew takes us further upstream—to the visual language of the earliest covenant communities, the script engraved on stone, etched on pottery, and inscribed in the daily life of ancient Israel.

  • Recover nuances of meaning embedded in the original letter-forms and symbols.
  • Clarify difficult passages by comparing early epigraphic evidence.
  • See how language, land, and liturgy formed a coherent covenant identity.
  • Equip communities to move beyond speculation toward grounded understanding.

Our work helps separate authentic, evidence-based insights from sensationalism—offering a stable path for pastors, professors, and serious learners.

A script that still speaks

Far from being a museum artifact, Paleo-Hebrew continues to illuminate the covenant story, prophetic imagination, and the pattern of redemption woven through Scripture.

“To restore a script is to restore a way of seeing the word—a visual covenant that shapes how communities remember, worship, and live.”

— Executive Director DurYah, 2026

Illustration of Paleo-Hebrew letters and their evolution

Research & Publications

From inscriptions to insight

Our team curates and studies ancient sources, then translates that work into tools that pastors, professors, and serious students can actually use.

Textual corpora

Curated collections of Paleo-Hebrew inscriptions, ostraca, and manuscript fragments, with transliterations, translations, and contextual commentary.

Status: expanding digital corpus through 2026.

Lexical & semantic studies

Research into how Paleo-Hebrew roots and symbols inform covenant vocabulary—names, titles, and key theological terms in the biblical narrative.

Outputs: research monographs & teaching essays.

Pedagogical tools

Charts, primers, reading guides, and visual aids that bring Paleo-Hebrew into classrooms, congregations, and study groups with clarity and reverence.

Designed for both academic and devotional settings.

Courses & Learning Pathways

From first letters to advanced exegesis

Whether you are just beginning to explore Paleo-Hebrew or are ready to integrate it into teaching and scholarship, our structured learning tracks meet you where you are.

  • Foundation Track: letter-forms, phonology, and script history.
  • Reading Track: guided reading of inscriptions and biblical passages.
  • Teaching Track: resources for pastors, professors, and small group leaders.
  • Research Track: mentored projects for advanced students and scholars.

Courses are offered in seasonal cohorts with live sessions, recordings, and curated reading. Certification options are available for those seeking to integrate Paleo-Hebrew into formal teaching or ministry.

Ideal for

  • Seminary and Bible college students
  • Pastors, teachers, and ministry leaders
  • Scholars in biblical and Near Eastern studies
  • Serious lay learners and small group facilitators

“Studying Paleo-Hebrew with the Institute reframed how I preach from the Old Testament. It gave me language that is both more ancient and more precise for today’s church.”

— Pastor & cohort participant

Stay connected

Receive research updates, course dates, and resources

A brief email a few times per season with new articles, upcoming cohorts, and practical tools for integrating Paleo-Hebrew into study and teaching.

  • No spam, no hype—only research-grounded resources.
  • Priority invitations to courses and seminars.
  • Early access to select publications and tools.

Request information

Share a bit about yourself and how you hope to engage with Paleo-Hebrew. Our team will follow up with tailored next steps.

We honor your time and inbox. You can unsubscribe at any time.

Questions & Clarity

Frequently asked questions

If you do not see your question here, reach out through the form above. We welcome thoughtful dialogue from scholars, pastors, and seekers alike.

Is the Institute affiliated with a particular denomination or movement?

We serve the wider body of Messiah and welcome participants from diverse denominational backgrounds. Our work is grounded in historic, confessionally orthodox faith and accountable to academic standards. While our faculty and partners have their own ecclesial homes, the Institute itself is not limited to a single denomination.

Do I need prior Hebrew or seminary training to begin?

No. Our Foundation Track assumes no prior knowledge of Hebrew. You will be introduced to the script, sounds, and historical context step by step. Advanced tracks, however, may recommend prior study of biblical Hebrew or related fields for maximum benefit.

How is Paleo-Hebrew different from the Hebrew in most Bibles today?

Most printed Hebrew Bibles use a later square Aramaic script with added vowel points developed centuries after the original compositions. Paleo-Hebrew reflects earlier letter-forms and orthographic conventions that can clarify how words were originally written and perceived in their ancient setting.

Can churches, schools, or seminaries partner with the Institute?

Yes. We regularly collaborate with institutions to design guest lectures, short-term intensives, and multi-week modules that complement existing curricula. Use the form above to share your context and we will follow up with partnership options.

Institute of Paleo-Hebrew Research & Culture

Dedicated to the study, preservation, and restoration of the original Paleo-Hebrew language and its cultural context—for the renewal of biblical understanding across generations.

© 2026 Institute of Paleo-Hebrew Research & Culture. All rights reserved.

Contact

For academic partnerships, speaking invitations, or cohort inquiries, use the form above or visit:
https://paleohebrew.org/contact