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I need the words in the actual Hebrew, preferably with vowels, but definitely not transliteration.

2007-01-24 12:01:32 · 4 answers · asked by thewordofrashi 2 in Society & Culture Religion & Spirituality

The second responders misunderstood. I know how to write the first two words in Hebrew. What I need written are the words to the entire song. Here is the transliteration, if it helps anyone. My Hebrew spelling is awful:

B'shaim Hashem elohay yisrael
M'yimini michael um'smoli gavriel
Umilfanai uriel um'achorai refael
V'al roshi, v'al roshi, sh'chinat hel.

2007-01-26 07:40:57 · update #1

4 answers

HaShem: השם [with vowels: הַשֵּׁם]- "the name"
BeShem: בשם [with vowels: בְּשֵׁם]- "in the name (of...)"

~
Ohhh.... got yah..

If your transliteration is correct (and it seems fine), here are the Hebrew words:

בשם השם אלוהי ישראל
מימיני מיכאל ומשמאלי גבריאל
ומלפני אוריאל ומאחורי רפאל
ועל ראשי, ועל ראשי, שכינת האל.

Translation:
In the name of "the name", god of Israel
Who is on the right of Michael and on the left of Gabriel
Who is in front of Uriel and behind Refael
And over my head, over my head, there's the spirit of god

2007-01-26 06:05:31 · answer #1 · answered by yotg 6 · 1 0

This Site Might Help You.

RE:
Where can I find the words to b'shem hashem written in Hebrew?
I need the words in the actual Hebrew, preferably with vowels, but definitely not transliteration.

2015-08-19 00:44:29 · answer #2 · answered by ? 1 · 0 0

What is not as well known is that the classical view of the church through the centuries has also been, though not with as great a degree of certainty, that the author of Hebrews was the apostle Paul. As we examine the evidence (both external and internal), we will see that John Owen was correct in his assessment: “The evidence both external and internal is so satisfactory, that an impression is left on the mind, that Paul was the author of this epistle, nearly equal to what his very name prefixed to it would have produced.”

2016-03-17 04:59:41 · answer #3 · answered by Holly 2 · 0 0

For the best answers, search on this site https://shorturl.im/avDi5

No one knows who the authors of most of the Bible were since the majority of the books themselves do not say, and some contain material from entirely different centuries in the same "book." Even in the NT the Gospel of Matthew does not say "I Simon Levi, called Matthew, wrote this." Nor does the Gospel of mark say Mark wrote it, nor Luke/Acts nor John. and some of the Pauline Corpus is clearly not Paul's work even though it says it is. And we have attributions of Hebrews to Paul, Barnabas, Priscilla and Apollos of Alexandria. Today few scholars, conservative or otherwise argue that Paul wrote it, though Bible thumpers conitnue to cling to this discredited notion. Tertullian calls it Barnabas' Letter to the Hebrews, so I've never understood the long-time conservative commitment of American backwoods preachers to making it a letter from Paul, except to give it apostolic authority.

2016-04-08 09:12:45 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

www.israel.com
Or the www.history.com and ancient languages and culture and you can click on to the language you want. Or you could always visit a synogue on line? Or look for one in your neighborhood and ask the Rabbi? you may try www.judaism.com?

2007-01-24 12:09:38 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers