google it, in hebrew the word allah means curse
Funny, no wonder why there was no mention of that name until 600 years after the death iof christ
The hebrew language is one of the oldest in the world, and allah ahs always meant curse in hebrew
so why after thousands of years, does God change his name meaning I AM in hebrew (as he is eternal and can not change) to ALLAH which means Curse?
when Jesus said he that brigns you a gospel other than this let him be accursed
what he was saying is, he that brings you another Gospel let him be allah
So imagine the dreasd on those Jews and chrsitians faces when people went round worshipping Allah all of a sudden in 600Ad
if you spoke hebreew you knew trhen and there it was astounding, why the Word Curse was used as a Deitys name
And no marvel; for Satan himself is transformed into an angel of light
So when Muhammed went round saying he sawe Gabriel, did he really?
2007-11-05
05:48:31
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13 answers
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asked by
Anonymous
in
Society & Culture
➔ Religion & Spirituality
Brother Dan,
your extraterrestrials are the fallen
sons of God, the nephilim
they are in Genesis 6
Sumeria and babylonia were developed after the flood, histroy supports this
2007-11-05
06:00:58 ·
update #1
To my friends who think that 'Allah' is Arabic for God; you are very wrong. the word Allah is neither Jewish or Arabic. "Allah' is originally Hindu. The first mention of an 'Allah' in History was used by Hindus as the name of an idol.
I really don't know why people fuss and fight over God's name when in fact, GOD HAS NO NAME.
2007-11-05 09:27:51
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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Wow. That's really interesting. Allah most certainly does not mean God. Then in the Hebrew Bible it would have been mentioned a lot. Not ONCE has anyone ever called God in Hebrew Allah. I don't know if it means curse or Islam means submission but Allah does not mean God in the Hebrew language. If it did, don't you think many Christians wouldn't be against Muslims? Allah is a different god from God. The Quaran tells different stories from the Bible. It says crap about Allah replacing Jesus with a burglar. So he never died. That just makes the rest of the book false because everything began when Jesus died for our sinsi
2016-04-02 06:34:44
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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so why after thousands of years, does God change his name meaning I AM in hebrew (as he is eternal and can not change) to ALLAH which means Curse?
Alex, I'd like to school this fundie in Biblical names of God for 1000.
First of all, I AM is one of the names used- usually due to the verse in Exodus where God tells Moses his name is "Eheieh Asher Eheieh," or "I am that I am." [Properly translated, however, it is "I am becoming that I am becoming." The national name of the Deity is YHVH [YHWH], which was not to be spoken except in the temple.
And, as a correction, to curse in biblical Hebrew is RRA [Resh, Resh, Aleph [ I think. Biblical Hebrew has to A's.] Not Allah.
And there would have been little dread. The Christians and Jews were stuck speaking Aramiac. Besides, Hebrew, until recently was really only used in a religious context.
2007-11-05 05:59:40
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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The Arabic word Allah is a cognate of the Hebrew word E-lo'ah, both of which mean G-d.
The Hebrew word ala does means an oath, a curse and a club (such as brandished by a policeman), but it comes from a different root.
There are also other words in Hebrew for oaths, curses and clubs. But that does not negate the existence of ala for those words.
Eila means an oak.
If you wonder about any other Hebrew words, please inquire, but try to avoid jumping to hasty conclusions.
.
2007-11-06 04:51:14
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answer #4
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answered by Ivri_Anokhi 6
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It is contestable. No reference from the Hebrew Bible has been quoted. So far the Etymologists of the Glorious Name-Word ALLAH had defied a common agreement as to its etymological origin, though, various conjectures were offered. It was commonly held that this Word has never been applied other than to a Deity--- The Supreme Deity. The Asker may please look again in his research.
2007-11-05 06:00:13
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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Must have been what led to the Catholic Church changing the Apostle's Creed after going to England where Isis forces like to travel.
2014-12-13 00:34:48
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answer #6
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answered by AdrienC 1
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Cite your source, please.
"Allah" is an ARABIC word, not a Hebrew one; when Muslims use the word, they are not speaking Hebrew, but Arabic, and in Arabic, the word simply means "God."
2007-11-05 05:55:13
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answer #7
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answered by Anonymous
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Actually it dousnt. It literally sounds like "the oak tree" in Hebrew. Also Jews respect the name of Allah since it is just another name for G-d.
The Irish name for G-d is Dia, but means door in Spanish, so that justifys Spanish speakers to mock the Irish name for G-d?
I'm getting pretty disgusted with Christians constantly insulting the name of G-d.
2007-11-05 05:56:53
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answer #8
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answered by Anonymous
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Experts in eschatology that have positively
identified the written Arabic script “In the name of Allah.” In
Arabic it is pronounced “Bismillah.” (this word is used in making
products Halal Certified)
https://youtu.be/HHfrMfYCIYw
Even Jewish experts in eschatology have confirmed this "prophecy" by
Jesus Christ as fact!
http://www.hope-of-israel.org/beastmark.html
If you are keen you might check out
Revelation 13:17
http://biblehub.com/revelation/13-17.htm
Matthew 24
https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Matthew%2024
2015-05-02 15:05:06
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answer #9
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answered by Harold 1
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Hebrew, Arabic and Aramaic came from Akkadian, the same language used by the Babylonians and Assyrians. Elohim and illa were derived from the Akkadian ilu which means "lofty ones". They were extraterrestrials some of whom became the worshipped pagan gods.
2007-11-05 05:56:33
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answer #10
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answered by Anonymous
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