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From Zephaniah 3:9 we can see that Yahweh himself sees a need for a pure language, why? So we can call on His name with one consent.

Exodus 23:13
“And in all things that I have said unto you be circumspect: and make no mention of the names of other gods, neither let it be heard out of your mouths.” AMEN.
This word cited at the finish of almost every Christian prayer has to be one of Ha Satan’s greatest deceptions. So very close to the original word,but far enough away, to have had all of us at sometime calling on the name of a pagan god at the end of each prayer. Amen-Ra was the name of an Egyptian god.

2007-12-04 05:31:41 · 23 answers · asked by Od Ephraim Chai 4 in Society & Culture Religion & Spirituality

The Hebrew word translated and spoken as “amen” is more correctly
Amein ( said as Aw-Mane) while this may seem to be a subtle difference,
when spoken out into the spirit realm the difference is significant.
Yahushua called Himself the “Amein” in Rev3:14. Let us not confuse Amein
with Amen.
For those who would like to check further on the Egyptian god Amen, we
provide the following links:
www.touregypt.net/amenra.htm
http://www.virtualegypt.com/newhtml/data/amen.htm

2007-12-04 05:32:51 · update #1

Regilions = fales christian

2007-12-04 05:41:14 · update #2

23 answers

Religions use words for the purpose of making more folks come to their churches. Some even use food to lure unsuspecting new comers into their cults.
Amen is easier to spell and say than Amein so it will be used by more than the other.
My imaginary friend is more powerful than your imaginary friend, seems to be the teachings of most churches today.

2007-12-04 05:38:05 · answer #1 · answered by killbasabill 6 · 0 6

Perhaps because in the Greek Bible the word is Amen.... not Amien. What is it though? First you spell it Amein then Amien. Make up your mind. And what is "Regilions" You think with all these errors you have any credibility on how to spell amen?

2007-12-04 05:45:05 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 6 1

Define Amen

2016-10-02 01:56:21 · answer #3 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

actually the Hebrew word is ’āmēn or ’āman and is an acronymn for ’El melekh ne’eman (meaning God King who is trustworthy in translation) . The Latin āmēn comes from the Hebrew.

There is no Lingistic or Theological support for what you are asserting about AMEIN. it appears no where in Hebrew or Greek scriptures, the theory is completely made up with no historical support.

The pagan god you are trying to link to this real name was Amon or Amun (Amon Ra or Amun Ra0 not Amen and Amen-Ra and his consort Amonet or Amunet. And they were two gods (god and goddess) not one. The heiroglyphicals support this translation and not the more modern theory you are putting forth.

EDIT: your wrong, quit giving everyone thumbs down because they have it right and you have it wrong. By the way I found the website you copied and pasted this from, not they list no references, cross references or writer credentials. That and the fact that site tries to hijack you and won;t let you leave it also disputes it credibilty.

2007-12-04 05:39:31 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 4 3

Well, if you want us to pronounce everything the way the ancient language required, we'd have a lot of re-learning to do. Jesus's name would be vastly different. I can't imagine Rat Pobertson .... er, I mean Pat Robertson, saying "Praise Yshwh."

2007-12-04 05:39:07 · answer #5 · answered by Acorn 7 · 2 1

G281
ἀμήν
amēn
am-ane'
Of Hebrew origin [H543]; properly firm, that is, (figuratively) trustworthy; adverbially surely (often as interjection so be it): - amen, verily.

2014-04-28 16:50:57 · answer #6 · answered by Gregg T 1 · 1 0

Its because religion and 'the word of god' is constantly updated and changed through an evolutionary process, where the leaders decide what is the best way to keep the money coming in and then change the facts to fit the current times.

2007-12-04 05:35:54 · answer #7 · answered by Jerry M 6 · 1 3

you play with words to no good end....it is the meaning, not the sound that counts, look it up in the dictionary....Amen means "let it be so", that's all. Using your logic, everyone should still be speaking aramaic in order for God to hear them at all, and that is just ridiculous, making your use of the bible and your logic ridiculous.

2007-12-04 05:36:01 · answer #8 · answered by essentiallysolo 7 · 9 2

I seriously doubt that our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ cares about the way we pronounce a certain word...

What about the poor little disabled person who can't pronounce a certain word due to a speech impediment? People who get all caught up in whether you say "God" or "Yahweh", "Amen" or "Aimen"...

...Well...

You need to get a life.

2007-12-04 05:38:28 · answer #9 · answered by CanadianFundamentalist 6 · 4 2

Quick question. Exactly how many is a regilion?

2007-12-04 05:34:33 · answer #10 · answered by Recreant- father of fairies 4 · 3 1

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