rEVOLVEr said:
I agree. This is a confusing thread. I am even more confused than before I started.
Some say, it's important to know the name of God, some say, it isn't.
Some come with different names which others don't agree with but both sides can quote verses to back up their claim. :crazy
I reckon. The problem is that there are all these opinions flying in left, right and centre which are being disguised by the posters as fact - no one is being malicious or anything, they just believe what they believe very strongly and think that you should too.
In the end, Free has said what really needs to be said IMO - the name of God is not something that really has to be hung up on. In Exodus 6:3, he says his name is ???? - this is the Tetragrammaton (a word derived from Greek which literally means "a word having 4 letters") - and this word is unpronounceable because we don't have the vowel points necessary to pronounce it. All we can do is use the transliterations YHWH or YHVH, which have little meaning in themselves because they're just letters that can't be spoken in English because of a lack of vowels.
The Jews use and used a number of words to refer to their God: Adonai, El, Ha-Shem, Elohim, Yah, etc. These are used universally as substitutes for the true name of God as read in the Tetragrammaton (which is unpronounceable) - I went to a friend's Bar Mitzvah recently, and even today when they must read the Tetragrammaton they use the term Adonai, which simply means "my God" in Hebrew. It may also interest you to know that in the KJV, Exodus 6:3 is one of the few places that Jehovah (another English attempt at translating the Tetragrammaton into our language, which is probably just about as inaccurate as the most commonly accepted version which is Yahweh) is used. You'll notice as you read through that "the LORD" (with small caps) is used as an English substitute for the Tetragrammaton (and many groups refer to God as "the LORD" today).
It's all a matter of interpretation in the end. If you feel compelled to be absolutely safe from blaspheming the name of God, you can use Adonai like the Jews I guess. But to blaspheme the name of God is to place little value upon it as you say it, so as long as you are respectful of his name, it should all be fine.