Basically the scriptures are full of directions for us to love, and respect, and to share, and proclaim, the name of our creator, and the best evidence seems to indicate that the name is pronounced YAHUAH (Ee-Yah-ooh-Ah).
The only place a deity by the name of ‘God’ is mentioned in the Hebrew is in Isaiah 65 where it refers to a pagan deity of fortune:
But ye are they that forsake Yahuah, that forget my holy mountain, that prepare a table for Gad, and that furnish the drink offering unto Meniy. YESHA'YAHU (ISAIAH) 65:11 את CEPHER
Strong's Hebrew: 1409. גָּד (gad) -- fortune, good fortune (2. proper name, masculine god of fortune (Arabic WeSkizzen iii. 171; גד named often in Phoenician & Aramaic inscriptions)
Strong's Hebrew: 4507. מְנִי (Meni) -- "award," a heathen god - destiny (מְנִי proper name, of a divinity Menî, god of fate (award, apportionment; compare Arabic proper name, of divinity. Maniyyât, and perhaps Manât,)
doginventer 0 points 12 months ago
Yeah, sorry about the sarcasm :)
Basically the scriptures are full of directions for us to love, and respect, and to share, and proclaim, the name of our creator, and the best evidence seems to indicate that the name is pronounced YAHUAH (Ee-Yah-ooh-Ah).
The only place a deity by the name of ‘God’ is mentioned in the Hebrew is in Isaiah 65 where it refers to a pagan deity of fortune:
But ye are they that forsake Yahuah, that forget my holy mountain, that prepare a table for Gad, and that furnish the drink offering unto Meniy.
YESHA'YAHU (ISAIAH) 65:11 את CEPHER
Strong's Hebrew: 1409. גָּד (gad) -- fortune, good fortune
(2. proper name, masculine god of fortune (Arabic WeSkizzen iii. 171; גד named often in Phoenician & Aramaic inscriptions)
Strong's Hebrew: 4507. מְנִי (Meni) -- "award," a heathen god - destiny
(מְנִי proper name, of a divinity Menî, god of fate (award, apportionment; compare Arabic proper name, of divinity. Maniyyât, and perhaps Manât,)