The Chain of Oral Transmission: Eyewitness Truth from Eden to Us in a Forgetting Age
Psalm 78:1-8
"Give ear, O my people, to my teaching; incline your ears to the words of my mouth! I will open my mouth in a parable; I will utter dark sayings from of old, things that we have heard and known, that our fathers have told us. We will not hide them from their children, but tell to the coming generation the glorious deeds of the Lord, and his might, and the wonders that he has done. He established a testimony in Jacob and appointed a law in Israel,
which he commanded our fathers to teach to their children, that the next generation might know them, the children yet unborn, and arise and tell them to their children, so that they should set their hope in God
and not forget the works of God, but keep his commandments; and that they should not be like their fathers, a stubborn and rebellious generation, a generation whose heart was not steadfast, whose spirit was not faithful to God."
History (especially God’s acts from the beginning) must be deliberately passed down so faith, hope, and obedience continue.
I find it fascinating and powerfully inspiring to think about how God has designed the timelines so that eyewitness truth could travel with minimal links.
Look what God had done with the history of mankind.
• Adam (eyewitness to the creation and direct history with the living God) → taught Methuselah (their lives overlapped 243 years).
• Methuselah → taught his great-grandson Shem (their lives overlapped 94–98 years; Methuselah died the year of the Great Flood).
• Shem (lived 600 years in total; 500 years after the Flood) → he could pass all that knowledge on directly to later generations.
Not myths and fables, not fact-less stories, but an oral historically relevant truth. God didn’t just give us a book of abstract doctrines or detached legends. He embedded the history of mankind in a living chain of eyewitness testimony that spans from Eden to the patriarchs with astonishingly few links.
And the significance doesn't end there.
• Abraham, the so called father of our faith, was born roughly 292–352 years after the Flood (depending on exact Terah/Abraham timing in Genesis 11). He was called out from a pagan world to serve God and build a nation of God's people.
• Shem continues to live 500 years after the Flood, so he actually outlived Abraham by about 35 years.
• Abraham overlapped with Shem for decades (some traditions even say Abraham lived with Noah and Shem for part of his early life).
• Ishmael, the son to his mother Hagar, was born when Abraham was 86 → still well within Shem’s lifetime.
• Isaac was born when Abraham was 100 → Shem was still alive (and outlived Isaac’s early decades; Shem died when Isaac was in his 30s–40s in standard timelines).
So Shem lived long enough to speak directly to Abraham, Ishmael, Isaac, and even into the early years of Jacob and Esau. That is not the stuff of "myths and fables." It is generational, face-to-face, heart-to-heart transmission. Grandfather to grandson, father to son, across centuries of overlap. The same God who created time arranged the timeline so that the truth would be guarded and passed on with maximum integrity.
That is why the Bible can open with "In the beginning God…" and expect us to receive it as reliable history. It wasn’t whispered across thousands of unknown mouths. It was spoken by men who could say, "My great-great-grandfather told me what Adam told him." It’s family testimony, passed mouth-to-ear, heart-to-heart, across overlapping lifetimes arranged by divine wisdom.
This is why Genesis reads like eyewitness-derived history rather than distant mythology. The timeline God ordained made it possible.
And it doesn't stop there.
Shem died when Jacob was roughly in his 30s–40s. Jacob (aka Israel) lived 147 years. So Jacob overlapped with Levi (one of his own sons), and Levi overlapped with Moses and Aaron who carried this oral tradition throughout the history of Israel's enslavement in Egypt.
In this way, the same living chain continues; still remarkably short, from Adam all the way to the man who wrote the Torah under the inspiration of the Holy Spirit.
Why is any of this important?
Because it reveals to us that God is a Master of both time and truth. He wove them together so we could know Him as the God who acts in history and speaks reliably to every generation.
In a generation now, the so called "information age". A time when nothing is real, everything is suspect, no one can be trusted to tell a truth. In this lettered but unlearned age, a timeline that is literate but ignorant, this ancient biblical record stands as a testament to God's faithfulness.
In an age flooded with information yet starving for wisdom; where everything is suspect, nothing feels solidly true, and trust has collapsed, the biblical timeline stands as a quiet, unshakable rebuke and invitation.
It anchors us in reality. It exposes the poverty of the "lettered but ignorant" mind. Today we have more data, more "knowledge," more access than any people in history; yet we are arguably the most confused, anxious, and rootless. Psalm 78 warns exactly against this: having the facts available but refusing to hide them in the heart, remember them, and pass them on.
The ancients had less information but far more faithfulness in transmission. We have the opposite problem. We have a generation today that cannot care less about what their grandparents have to say.
Many in this generation treat the wisdom of their own grandparents as outdated, irrelevant, or even oppressive. The living chain that once carried truth across centuries is being deliberately severed.
Grandparents’ stories?
"Boomer talk."
Family history?
"Irrelevant."
The old, old testimony of Scripture?
"Just ancient mythology."
And that dismissal is one of the deepest wounds of our age. When a generation labels grandparents’ stories as "irrelevant," and files the testimony of Scripture under "ancient mythology," it isn’t just cultural rebellion. It is the deliberate severing of the very lifeline God designed for passing truth, identity, and hope from one generation to the next. When we talk about how Jesus and the apostles prophesied that there will be a time when the people will no longer accept the knowledge of God, we aren't just studying the gospel and the New Testament witness, we're watching this historical timeline come to an end.
We are watching the fulfillment unfold before our eyes. It is a spiritual famine; exactly what the Scriptures warned would mark the closing chapters of this age.
But the good news is, this sad story about the collapse of the family and its historic witness, God has established even this outcome.
Amos 8:11
"Behold, the days are coming, declares the Lord God, when I will send a famine on the land —
not a famine of bread, nor a thirst for water, but of hearing the words of the Lord."
The living chain. From Adam’s eyewitness testimony, through Methuselah and Shem, down through the patriarchs, deliberately cut off in favor of a self-made narrative and digital noise. This is the fulfillment Jesus and the apostles spoke of.
A time when "people will not endure sound teaching, but having itching ears they will accumulate for themselves teachers to suit their own passions, and will turn away from listening to the truth and wander off into myths" (2 Timothy 4:3-4). A time when "the love of most will grow cold" (Matthew 24:12). Cold for the love of truth. A time of deliberate forgetting, just as Psalm 78 pleaded against. We are not merely studying these texts in a classroom. We are watching the page of history turn to its final chapters. The same God who masterfully overlapped lifetimes so truth could travel with integrity from Eden to Abraham is now allowing the natural consequence of rebellion to unfold.
A rootless, anxious, truth-starved generation.
But it's not yet all doom and gloom. There is still a remnant. There are still grandparents whose knees hold little ones while they tell the old stories. There are still parents hiding God’s word in their children’s hearts. There are still believers who refuse to call the testimony of Scripture "mythology" and instead declare with trembling confidence, "In the beginning God…"
The Master of time and truth is still sovereign over this famine. He who preserved the chain across centuries can still raise up faithful voices in the midst of all this forgetting.
Will we be among those who sever the chain…or among the remnant that guards it, remembers it, and passes it on while there is still time?
Time will tell.