English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

I've seen this from time to time. People spelling god or God as "G-d". Is this supposed to show reverence? It was my understanding that "god" is a title, not a proper name so why do some people spell it this way?

2007-12-26 10:52:02 · 12 answers · asked by Perdition 2 in Society & Culture Religion & Spirituality

12 answers

Neurotic behavior I think.
If you cannot say things straight - then there is something wrong - mentally.

2007-12-30 10:09:29 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

It comes from the Hebrew tradition of never writing the name of God on anything that can be destroyed. So some Jews write God as "G-d". Other Jews argue that "God" isn't the original name of God anyway as used in the original Hebrew scriptures, so it doesn't matter. It's just a personal preference.

By the way, this question has been answered hundreds of times. Use the search engine.

2007-12-26 10:56:08 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 5 0

it extremely is not needed, even though it extremely is user-friendly. the rationalization is that actual Hebrew names of God are to no longer be mistreated, i.e. thrown away interior the trash or erased. This prohibition does not prepare to the English word God (or it extremely is equivelant in any language different than Hebrew). although, as a private stringency, lots of people do no longer write out the word God. It additionally does not prepare to text cloth written on a working laptop or laptop computer screen, yet does to text cloth it extremely is outlined; back purely Hebrew names of God. although, if I have been to place in writing between the Hebrew Names in my answer, i does not write it out thoroughly or as an entire for the reason that somebody examining it could print it and mistreat it. They do say God, Gott, Allah and in spite of the fact that different words equate in countless languages. Hebrew has no letter with a "J" sound, so there is not any such call as Jehovah in Hebrew. it extremely is an Anglicized pronunciation of the German (assumed) transliteration of the tetragramaton. A German "j" appears like a "y". present day Hebrew has included the "j" sound by employing employing a geresh (appears like an unmarried citation mark) after he letter gimel to indicate that it is not a stressful "g" sound. although, it does not prepare to the call, which has no gimmel in it.

2016-10-20 00:09:01 · answer #3 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

Every faith is different. Some do prefer to spell it that way -- simply a matter of belief. Particularly Jews.

And "god" may be used in one of two ways, for the record:

a) In reference to a greater being; not a specific god, but one of many gods.

or b) In reference to the Christian "God."

the way to tell the difference is generally simplest by looking at the capitalization; when "G" is capitalized, it signifies the latter case.

2007-12-26 10:56:48 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

It is showing respect to God, and also, an attempt to keep from using God's name in vain (ie blasphemy), because "G-d" is understood to mean "God", without actually using "God", so if the paper on which "G-d" is destroyed, it isn't an act of offense against God, whereas if the paper on which "God" is inadvertently destroyed, it could possibly be an act of offense against God.

2007-12-26 10:58:20 · answer #5 · answered by no1home2day 7 · 0 1

well, some people believe in gods [Roman gods, Egyptian gods] who are all fake by the way. But the real deal - God - the one who is perfect in every way, created everything in this universe - the universe itself! Yeah, that is a proper name. Only he can save you.

2007-12-26 10:58:10 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 1 1

My understanding is that it's a way to avoid saying God's name in vain.

2007-12-26 10:58:07 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 1 1

Its a Jewish thing - they think Gods name is too holy to say

2007-12-26 11:00:05 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

They are not allowed to speak or write the name of god, as it is against their scripture.

I'm pretty sure this is for Jews mostly, but I'm sure there are more.

2007-12-26 10:55:35 · answer #9 · answered by ryoma136 4 · 3 1

GOD, god, it means the same thing
who cares

2007-12-26 10:56:19 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 1 1

Comes from the "Jewish" notion that the name of the Almighty (Which is not God) should not be created, or destroyed. You are right, it is misapplied foolishness. there is a lot of that in religion.

2007-12-26 10:56:53 · answer #11 · answered by hasse_john 7 · 2 2

fedest.com, questions and answers