1 John 5:7 For there are three that bear record in heaven, the Father, the Word, and the Holy Ghost: and these three are one.
John 10:30 I and my Father are one.
2007-01-27 12:11:51
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answer #1
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answered by Selena Jade's Mommy 4
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Psalms 83:18 that people may know that you whose name is Jehovah You alone are the most high over all the earth
no human today can be certain how it was originally pronounced in Hebrew. Why not? Biblical Hebrew was originally written with only consonants no vowels. When the language was in everyday use readers easily provided the proper vowels. In time however the Jews came to have the superstitious idea that it was wrong to say Gods personal name out loud. So they used substitute expressions. Centuries later Jewish scholars developed a system of points by which to indicate which vowels to use when reading ancient Hebrew.But they put the vowels for the substitute expressions around the four consonants representing the divine name. Thus the original pronunciation of the divine name was lost. Many scholars favor the spelling"Yahweh" but it is uncertain and there is not agreement among them. ON the other hand Jehovah is the forum of the name that is most readily recognized because it has been used in English for centuries and preserves equally with other forms the four consonants of the Hebrew Tetragrammaton.
2007-01-27 12:18:02
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answer #2
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answered by mrs.mom 4
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Look in any dictionary, it is (in english); Jehovah
Ps. Do not trust mainstream "christians" to tell you the truth. They deny God by refusing to call him by the name he himself identified it to be, long before he sent his son Jesus to walk among humankind. These antichrists have even obliterated Jesus' Holy Father's name from their re-translations of the original Holy Scriptures. Disgusting! see Matthew 7:20-23, Titus 1:16, 1 Thessalonians 5:21
2007-01-27 12:40:11
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answer #3
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answered by homerispresident 2
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The father in heaven called GOD, the Son on earth called JESUS, the spirit of God called THE HOLY SPIRIT.
2007-01-27 12:14:26
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answer #4
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answered by michellen 3
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The Trinity is largely the concept the daddy, Son, and Holy Spirit are 3 separate persons, co-equivalent (how then does between the three deliver one among the different 2?), co-eternal. The Bible does no longer say "God in 3 persons," no longer one unmarried time. notwithstanding, many human beings imagine the Trinity merely signifies that the daddy, Son, and Holy Spirit are one God, that's authentic.
2016-12-03 03:16:21
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answer #5
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answered by mrotek 4
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The Hebrew is יהוה
It is unpronouncable because there are no vowels in the ancient Hebrew. The Masoretic rabbiis added the vowels from the Hebrew word for LORD, thus rendering it YAHWEH.
Because the Hebrews took the command from Exodus 20:7 "You shall not take the name of the LORD your God in vain, for the LORD will not leave him unpunished who takes His name in vain." seriously, they refused to even pronounce the name after the vowels were added. Instead they substituted the euphemism LORD for his name. In modern translations of the Bible, you will see this in the OT where the Name is rendered in all caps; the word behind the all caps is יהוה
So, in the NT when we hear people calling Jesus Lord, κύρίος (Greek), this was the same word that was applied to God's name יהוה
2007-01-27 12:24:15
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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It's God, Almighty, Father, All Knowing, All loving, the Alpha and Omega........Jesus the Son, God the Father, and the Holy Spirit are all one and the same. So any reference to God in the bible could be to any of the three or vice versa.
2007-01-27 12:12:48
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answer #7
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answered by VW 6
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he has many names here are some of them
1) Proper names: El, Yahweh, Adonai, Theos, Kurios
2) Personal names: Father, Abba, Son, Jesus, Holy Spirit,
3) Titles: Creator, Messiah, Christ, Paraclete, Comforter, Maker, King, Judge, Ancient of days, True Prophet, Only High Priest, Eternal King.
4) Essential names: Light, Love, Spirit, Living bread, Living water,
5) Descriptive names: Rock, Master, Rabboni, Shepherd, Door, Vine
6) Attributes: names of virtues or characteristics of God
2007-01-27 12:13:48
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answer #8
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answered by purpleaura1 6
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God is God. He said I am that I am. He is THE father, the creator. The father, son, and holy spirit are the same...which is hard to grasp at first with our limited minds lol. One day when we're all standing before God you can ask him this question lol.
2007-01-27 12:16:53
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answer #9
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answered by stang306gt 2
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Jehovah
Used by Jesus and his disciples. Thus, in the days of Jesus and his disciples the divine name very definitely appeared in copies of the Scriptures, both in Hebrew manuscripts and in Greek manuscripts. Did Jesus and his disciples use the divine name in speech and in writing? In view of Jesus’ condemnation of Pharisaic traditions (Mt 15:1-9), it would be highly unreasonable to conclude that Jesus and his disciples let Pharisaic ideas (such as are recorded in the Mishnah) govern them in this matter. Jesus’ own name means “Jehovah Is Salvation.” He stated: “I have come in the name of my Father” (Joh 5:43); he taught his followers to pray: “Our Father in the heavens, let your name be sanctified” (Mt 6:9); his works, he said, were done “in the name of my Father” (Joh 10:25); and, in prayer on the night of his death, he said he had made his Father’s name manifest to his disciples and asked, “Holy Father, watch over them on account of your own name” (Joh 17:6, 11, 12, 26). In view of all of this, when Jesus quoted the Hebrew Scriptures or read from them he certainly used the divine name, Jehovah. (Compare Mt 4:4, 7, 10 with De 8:3; 6:16; 6:13; also Mt 22:37 with De 6:5; and Mt 22:44 with Ps 110:1; as well as Lu 4:16-21 with Isa 61:1, 2.) Logically, Jesus’ disciples, including the inspired writers of the Christian Greek Scriptures, would follow his example in this.
Why, then, is the name absent from the extant manuscripts of the Christian Greek Scriptures or so-called New Testament? Evidently because by the time those extant copies were made (from the third century C.E. onward) the original text of the writings of the apostles and disciples had been altered. Thus later copyists undoubtedly replaced the divine name in Tetragrammaton form with Ky´ri·os and The·os´.
2007-01-27 12:15:39
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answer #10
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answered by Anonymous
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