Vic
Elite Member
- Jun 12, 2001
- 50,422
- 14,337
- 136
The Hebrew word for Lord was "Adonai". This is the word that is most frequently used for God in the Bible.Originally posted by: Kyteland
The Jews did not forget the name Yahweh. The clergy decided that since the average man didn't always know why uses of the name would be blasphemous that they would ban use of the word altogether. Basically to protect you from yourself. If one never said Yahweh then one could never take the name in vain (or is it vane? I forget.) They clergy, however, passed the name down through the ranks and kept it alive. It is also still written in ancient texts.
The reason you see so many "The Lord, our God"s in the old testiment, etc. isn't because people thought it sounded good, or pious. It was because the original texts read "Yahweh, our God" or "Our Lord, Yahway". They weren't allowed to modify meaning texts so they simply changed all references to Yahweh to something like the above.
Yahweh, Jehovah, or YHVH mean the ineffable or unspeakable name of God. It was acceptable to speak and write Yahweh because it did not in fact mean God, but something to the effect of "the name we use instead of the unspeakable name of God". Still, its use was limited, and Adonai ("the Lord") was preferred for regular use.
The actual ancient Hebrew name for God was El, with its singular plural form Elohim. This word was never spoken to the extant that some scholars believe that it may have meant a different, earlier God (i.e. Joseph Campbell). However it is used commonly in names for people and places, like Michael ("like unto God"), Manuel ("the hand of God"), Bethel ("the house of God"), etc.
