I disagree with you regarding your interpretation of John 8:58 and Rev 1:8, but you made good points regarding the divine name Jehovah. Good job on that part.
It's HU like the name HUGH and it's in all of their names and all over the world in other languages too. Also where in Europe mostly the J is pronounced like a Y so, Judah, or Judea...Anyway, you're totally right...
@@Noah_bsl33 Yes like a breath ,,,It's in all of the Hebrew Names HU like the name HUGH . Jesus's name was Hushuah Joshua meaning God is Salvation. Emanuel, Netanyahu Ya Hu Behold God...
Nobody knows how to say it. These books came into being around BC-200 in Alexandria written by unknown scribes in at least two languages. They are collected from oral tradition. So your contention that yhwh was forbidden to utter is nonsense. There were no consensus on the stories, as evidenced different versions in Josephus and Coptic texts. There are similar texts for Roman, Sumerian, Assyrian and Persians. They had nothing to do with truth or reality, just meant to praise certain kings and nobles. You can say the same thing about Gospels.
Yes, where does it say that anywhere in the תַּנַ״ךְ Tanaḵ? If you actually read it God wants his name to be proclaimed and known just read Ps 83:18 for example out of hundred verses.
God the Father is El or El Elyohn. The name by which Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob knew him. God the Son, the name given to Moses which was not known to his forefathers, is Yahushua (YHWH). Certain elements want that to remain hidden behind centuries of mispronunciations.
But هو" (huwa) is a general third-person singular masculine pronoun that can be used to refer to any male person it's not exclusive to Allah alone. The proper name for Allah alone in Arabic is يهوه (Yehuh) and Tawrat and Injeel verifies this.
wow, lets just call him zeus, seing you want to name him iao, just like old greeks used to...According to ancient sources, including Cornelius Labeo's writings, the Oracle of Clarian Apollo identified Helios (the Sun) with Iao, stating that Iao is Hades (winter), Zeus (spring), Helios (summer), and Iao (autumn). This oracle suggests a cyclical nature, where the same divine essence is manifest in different forms throughout the year.
I think you just made up a lot of opinions in the last 3 comments. Most scholars I am aware of would claim the grammar Sepher Yetzirah points to the second century, though acknowledging multiple recensions from obviously later dates. The second comment you oddly chose the wrong Hebrew word הָוה for whatever purpose. You should be looking at הָיָה as the correct Hebrew word. And your discussion about Zeus is just weird. I suggest doing the internet search for "Iao Greek". I am aware of outdated scholarship that sought to find an evolution of religious views in the past, but, such views have been long debunked except for fringe atheist groups
@@truthwatchers3405 all verifial, well documented. you are going by made up stories you are trying to shoehorn..tell me , how can a 6th century magickal book written by jewish jesus denies that say the vowels existed always , exactly when the vowel system was invented by masoretes scribes any proof that they always existed???
@@truthwatchers3405 im beign generous placing it 6th century, most probable is medieval... According to modern historians, the origin of the text is unknown, and hotly debated. Some scholars believe it might have an early medieval origin,[b] while others emphasize earlier traditions appearing in the book.
@@truthwatchers3405 jehovah _ the spirit that bring ruins , destruction, both spelled the same, arent what that mystical demon book yesirat says?? that the power of the spoken word?? you are saying the spirit brings destructionwhen you say jeh-hovah, but i already saw thru you... i already saw who you are , you are an ab blooded eastern european jew, thos ethat have zero semitic blood in themselves... i only hope you are right with Jesus , but i hardly can say that based from your videos.
@@juenmmonterrey7767 By reading your other comments I don't think you even understand or know the difference between הָוה (ho-vah) and הָיָה (hāyâ). I would recommend you take @thruthwatches3405 advice and look into הָיָה even your own reference Strong concordance H3068 will lead you the root word for Jehovah as הָיָה not הָוה .
hovah: a ruin, disaster Original Word: הָוה Part of Speech: Noun Feminine Transliteration: hovah Phonetic Spelling: (ho-vaw') Definition: a ruin, disaster
I'm assuming you're trying to discredit the holy English name Jehovah for the root word הָוה (ho-vaw) which has absolutely nothing to do with the name Jehovah. The root word for Jehovah in Hebrew is the Word: הָיָה Transliteration: hāyâ Phonetic Pronunciation:haw-yaw' definition: He causes to become. This is an elementary 101 mistake for those who don't know Hebrew to make such a silly argument that doesn't make any sense.
@@yahuhallah1259 holy english name??reaaly ??where did you get that?? im more astonished that YOU DONT KNOW WHAT MATTERS IS HOW ITS SPOKEN, AND HOVAH IS SPOKEN THE SAME WAY AS jehovah . im more astonishe dthat you spout lies and mad eup doctrnes as jehovah holy name..according to who?? a pagan catholic monk in middle ages?? stop smoking what you are smoking, seriously.
@@yahuhallah1259 more astonished someone who doesnt know semitic languages and thinks chaldean babylonian yiddish is real hebrew trying to school me!!!!
@@juenmmonterrey7767 Do you speak Yiddish ? You’re a joke my man you wouldn’t know the difference between Biblical Hebrew and Yiddish, and to make a comparison between hovah and Jehovah shows you don’t know an ounce of Hebrew. And yes Jehovah is holy because it derives from YHWH my friend.
No such explanation ? ONLY IN ARABIC IT MAKES SENSE ? يا هو ي ا is when you call upon a person, but God/Allah especially هـ و is HIM as God/Allah can NOT have 1 name for ALL his attributes, so he is referred himself as HIM. Arabic and Hebrew are Semitic languages, some words are interchangeable. This is one of them. يا هو It makes perfect sense? But don’t take my word for it ? ASK a non Zionist linguist.
Why ask a non Zionist linguist when the תַּנַ״ךְ Tanaḵ tells us God has one name? Since you're bringing up Arabic God's name in that language is يهوه (Yehuh) and he's the only الله (Allah) "اسمع يا إسرائيل: الرب إلهنا هو يهوه واحد/asmae ya 'iisrayiylu: alrabi 'iilahuna hu Yehuh wahid" Deut 6:4
I disagree with you regarding your interpretation of John 8:58 and Rev 1:8, but you made good points regarding the divine name Jehovah. Good job on that part.
sorry i dont take my hebrew pronunciation from people that dont speak hebrew
It's HU like the name HUGH and it's in all of their names and all over the world in other languages too. Also where in Europe mostly the J is pronounced like a Y so, Judah, or Judea...Anyway, you're totally right...
Did you ignore his sources to back up his claim? Obviously you did
Modern Hebrew has nothing to do with ancient Hebrew. They are completely different languages.
@@ricciluigi2592No it's YH *breathing In and WH *breathing out
It's the first and last thing we do, inhale and exhale
@@Noah_bsl33 Yes like a breath ,,,It's in all of the Hebrew Names HU like the name HUGH . Jesus's name was Hushuah Joshua meaning God is Salvation. Emanuel, Netanyahu Ya Hu Behold God...
Jeremiah = Yereh-mee-yah-hoo (yahu)
Elijah = Elly-yah-hoo (yahu)
Yahuwah yah-hoo-wah (yahu)
Yahoo! Kinda telling that search engine took that pronunciation.
The late Rob Skiba settled on Yahuwah so that is what I have been using.
YHWH = Behold the hand, behold the nail.
Jahu(Yahu)
Nobody knows how to say it. These books came into being around BC-200 in Alexandria written by unknown scribes in at least two languages. They are collected from oral tradition.
So your contention that yhwh was forbidden to utter is nonsense. There were no consensus on the stories, as evidenced different versions in Josephus and Coptic texts. There are similar texts for Roman, Sumerian, Assyrian and Persians. They had nothing to do with truth or reality, just meant to praise certain kings and nobles. You can say the same thing about Gospels.
Do you know that you are not allowed to pronounce it?
Where's the verse for that?
Yes, where does it say that anywhere in the תַּנַ״ךְ Tanaḵ? If you actually read it God wants his name to be proclaimed and known just read Ps 83:18 for example out of hundred verses.
God the Father is El or El Elyohn. The name by which Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob knew him.
God the Son, the name given to Moses which was not known to his forefathers, is Yahushua (YHWH).
Certain elements want that to remain hidden behind centuries of mispronunciations.
El is the mentionable name, meaning The Praised One...
As the Muslims call God "howa" (He), or Ya Howa (O He). As in Quran 59:23: He (Howa) is Allah-there is no god except Him (howa)...
But هو" (huwa) is a general third-person singular masculine pronoun that can be used to refer to any male person it's not exclusive to Allah alone. The proper name for Allah alone in Arabic is يهوه (Yehuh) and Tawrat and Injeel verifies this.
@yahuhallah1259 You should read up on Sufism to understand the importance of "Howa". It's a central name for God in Islamic mysticism.
wow, lets just call him zeus, seing you want to name him iao, just like old greeks used to...According to ancient sources, including Cornelius Labeo's writings, the Oracle of Clarian Apollo identified Helios (the Sun) with Iao, stating that Iao is Hades (winter), Zeus (spring), Helios (summer), and Iao (autumn). This oracle suggests a cyclical nature, where the same divine essence is manifest in different forms throughout the year.
I think you just made up a lot of opinions in the last 3 comments. Most scholars I am aware of would claim the grammar Sepher Yetzirah points to the second century, though acknowledging multiple recensions from obviously later dates. The second comment you oddly chose the wrong Hebrew word הָוה for whatever purpose. You should be looking at הָיָה as the correct Hebrew word. And your discussion about Zeus is just weird. I suggest doing the internet search for "Iao Greek". I am aware of outdated scholarship that sought to find an evolution of religious views in the past, but, such views have been long debunked except for fringe atheist groups
@@truthwatchers3405 all verifial, well documented. you are going by made up stories you are trying to shoehorn..tell me , how can a 6th century magickal book written by jewish jesus denies that say the vowels existed always , exactly when the vowel system was invented by masoretes scribes any proof that they always existed???
@@truthwatchers3405 im beign generous placing it 6th century, most probable is medieval... According to modern historians, the origin of the text is unknown, and hotly debated. Some scholars believe it might have an early medieval origin,[b] while others emphasize earlier traditions appearing in the book.
@@truthwatchers3405 jehovah _ the spirit that bring ruins , destruction, both spelled the same, arent what that mystical demon book yesirat says?? that the power of the spoken word?? you are saying the spirit brings destructionwhen you say jeh-hovah, but i already saw thru you... i already saw who you are , you are an ab blooded eastern european jew, thos ethat have zero semitic blood in themselves... i only hope you are right with Jesus , but i hardly can say that based from your videos.
@@juenmmonterrey7767 By reading your other comments I don't think you even understand or know the difference between הָוה (ho-vah) and הָיָה (hāyâ). I would recommend you take @thruthwatches3405 advice and look into הָיָה even your own reference Strong concordance H3068 will lead you the root word for Jehovah as הָיָה not הָוה .
hovah: a ruin, disaster
Original Word: הָוה
Part of Speech: Noun Feminine
Transliteration: hovah
Phonetic Spelling: (ho-vaw')
Definition: a ruin, disaster
I'm assuming you're trying to discredit the holy English name Jehovah for the root word הָוה (ho-vaw) which has absolutely nothing to do with the name Jehovah. The root word for Jehovah in Hebrew is the Word: הָיָה Transliteration: hāyâ
Phonetic Pronunciation:haw-yaw' definition: He causes to become.
This is an elementary 101 mistake for those who don't know Hebrew to make such a silly argument that doesn't make any sense.
@@yahuhallah1259 holy english name??reaaly ??where did you get that?? im more astonished that YOU DONT KNOW WHAT MATTERS IS HOW ITS SPOKEN, AND HOVAH IS SPOKEN THE SAME WAY AS jehovah . im more astonishe dthat you spout lies and mad eup doctrnes as jehovah holy name..according to who?? a pagan catholic monk in middle ages?? stop smoking what you are smoking, seriously.
@@yahuhallah1259 more astonished someone who doesnt know semitic languages and thinks chaldean babylonian yiddish is real hebrew trying to school me!!!!
@@juenmmonterrey7767 Do you speak Yiddish ? You’re a joke my man you wouldn’t know the difference between Biblical Hebrew and Yiddish, and to make a comparison between hovah and Jehovah shows you don’t know an ounce of Hebrew. And yes Jehovah is holy because it derives from YHWH my friend.
@@juenmmonterrey7767 Your comments prove you don’t know anything about Hebrew.
No such explanation ?
ONLY IN ARABIC IT MAKES SENSE ?
يا هو
ي ا is when you call upon a person, but God/Allah especially
هـ و is HIM as God/Allah can NOT have 1 name for ALL his attributes, so he is referred himself as HIM.
Arabic and Hebrew are Semitic languages, some words are interchangeable.
This is one of them.
يا هو
It makes perfect sense?
But don’t take my word for it ?
ASK a non Zionist linguist.
Why ask a non Zionist linguist when the תַּנַ״ךְ Tanaḵ tells us God has one name? Since you're bringing up Arabic God's name in that language is يهوه (Yehuh) and he's the only الله (Allah) "اسمع يا إسرائيل: الرب إلهنا هو يهوه واحد/asmae ya 'iisrayiylu: alrabi 'iilahuna hu Yehuh wahid" Deut 6:4