Far Future Will See No Evidence of Universe's Origin
Dr. Eggman writes "According to an article on Ars Technica and its accompanying General Relativity and Gravitation journal article 'The Return of a Static Universe and the End of Cosmology', in the far future of the universe all evidence of the origin of the universe will be gone. Intelligences alive 100-billion-years from now will observe a universe that appears much the way our early 1900s view of the universe was: Static, had always been there, and consisted of little more than our own galaxy and a islands of matter. 'The cosmic microwave background, which has provided our most detailed understanding of the Big Bang, will also be gone. Its wavelength will have been shifted to a full meter, and its intensity will drop by 12 orders of magnitude. Even before then, however, the frequency will reach that of the interstellar plasma and be buried in the noise--the stuff of the universe itself will mask the evidence of its origin. Other evidence for the Big Bang comes from the amount of deuterium and helium isotopes in the universe.'"
No. In ancient Hebrew he would have written "YH DD T" or more likely "YHWH WS HR LLZ!"
You're assuming that God typically writes in Hebrew. Which presumes that, not only did the Israelites maintain a separate language from Abraham to Moses, but that Abraham maintained his language even when he forgot God -- and that the language his ancestor were given at Babel was the original tongue, and that there were no variations between Adam and Noah, AND that the written word taught to Adam was the language that God uses when He writes stuff down.