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"But I Speak English"
All faiths and religions have identifying
characteristics that distinguish them and the one they worship from all others.
These features are instantly recognizable.
For instance, you hear the word “Hindu” and you
think of a man in shorts, sitting cross-legged with hands resting on his knees,
palms up, meditating on his trinity of Brahma, Vishnu and Siva. His deities,
with their unique names, embody a well-defined worship, faith, and set of
practices unique to Hinduism.
Similarly, when you hear the word “Islam” visions
of ornate mosques come to mind and turban-headed men on their knees bowing
toward Mecca with foreheads touching the ground as they worship Allah and
practice the dictates they claim are demanded.
These and nearly all other religions have a
worship that is consistent with the name of the one they worship. They would be
quick to tell you that worshiping any other way in any other name is not
worshiping Brahma…or Allah. The deity’s name invokes a unique regimen of
worship. This fact should be self-evident.
Closer to home, what comes to mind by the term
Roman Catholicism? The pope is prominent here. But unlike other faiths, he and
his followers worship a mighty one by the generic term G-o-d. They
believe this unnamed mighty one requires a specific kind of worship as well,
including the rosary, veneration of Mary and saints, Sunday worship, mass,
sacraments and popular holidays.
An offshoot of the Roman Church is the Protestant
movement. Protestants worship the same nameless mighty one using the same
nonexclusive title “G-o-d.” Nevertheless, they believe that their eternal one
that goes by the same common title the Roman Church uses demands a whole
different practice of faith. Although they worship the same
“G-o-d,” more than 500 Protestant divisions don’t agree on that worship
even among themselves, as they hold clashing beliefs and much different
doctrines. Amazingly, few people ever give this profound oddity a second’s worth
of thought.
Worshiping under the specific name of an
identifiable Mighty One limits one’s faith to a particular belief and practice.
But attempting to aim an exclusive faith at a
nonspecific mighty one, as
churchianity has done, leads to today’s hodgepodge.
Identify the One You Worship
In light of these facts it is critical that we
ask, is the revealed, personal Name of the Heavenly Father important? Does it
matter to Yahweh what you call Him? Does He need to have a name for proper
worship, as the rest of the world’s faiths demand?
Some say He knows who you mean no matter what you
call Him. How many Bible believers would fall on their knees in times of
desperation and call out to Vishnu? Or Baal? Or Zeus? How can one expect the one
true Father Yahweh to respond to a plea to a false god? What about your name in
the Book of Life? Does it matter if it is correct or not?
You bet it does! You see, names do
matter. Names do mean something,
as any honest worshiper will admit.
Names are definitive. In worship they identify
and specify the one being worshiped. For all other faiths on earth the name
called on points to a particular one who is worshiped in a specific manner and
who (supposedly) responds in well-defined ways to a particular worship. But in a
strange contradiction to this norm, Bible believers accept a common, generalized
title for the true Heavenly Father they claim to invoke.
And because only a nonspecific title is called on, widely divergent
beliefs and practices can and do result. Does this make any sense in light of
dozens and dozens of Scriptures commanding us to honor and call on His personal
Name and follow only one true way of faith connected with that Name (Ephesians
4:5)?
More importantly, how close is He to those who
refuse His personal Name? Does He eagerly embrace those who have decided that a
generic title is more acceptable than His revealed, personal Name – the same
title found at the center of contradictory doctrines, beliefs and practices?
Notice what the Apostle Paul said about this
title: “As concerning therefore the eating of those things that are offered in
sacrifice unto idols, we know that an idol is nothing in the world, and that
there is none other Elohim but one. For though there be that are called gods,
whether in heaven or in earth, (as there be gods many, and lords many,) But to
us there is but one Yahweh, the Father, of whom are all things, and we in him;
and one Master Yahshua the Messiah, by whom are all things, and we by him”
(1Cor. 8:4-6).
Names Have Meaning, Even Today
We in our Western culture have nearly lost the
significance of names. Today “Johnny” is as good as “Tommy.” Even still we may
be prompted to name our child after some beloved and admired individual with the
same name. The good attributes of that person come through when we hear his or
her name. Similarly we may reject a name for the reverse reason. All this from
what the name brings to mind.
Names are much more than mere labels when it
comes to the Bible. All Hebrew names mean something. For instance, Joshua (Yahshua)
means “Yahweh’s Salvation”; Nehemiah (Nehemyah) signifies “Comforter of Yahweh”;
and Daniel means “El My Judge,” which accords with the character and contents of
his book.
The Name of the true Father we worship is
particularly important because He tells us it is. Philippians 2:9 says His Name
Yahweh is above every name. His Name reveals His special identity as the one
true Mighty One of the universe. No other one worshiped has His Name. His Name
brings us close.
You don’t mind when a stranger calls you
“friend,” or “sir,” or “ma’am.” In fact you expect an unfamiliar person to use
such terms. But once you are introduced and you develop camaraderie with that
individual, you would feel put off if he or she continued to call you the
generic “sir” or “ma’am.” Your supposed friend would be rejecting the bond that
using your personal name engenders.
Yahweh feels the same way if once we know His
Name we insist on calling on Him by common titles, especially the titles of
other deities (Isa.42:8). His Name is the seal of a relationship that bonds us
with Him. He said in Isaiah 52:6, “Therefore my people shall know my name.”
When making His all-important covenant with
Israel one of the first things Yahweh did was to introduce His people to His
personal Name, Exodus 3:13-15. He wanted and expected the intimacy that using
His personal name would create. He called it His “memorial for all generations,”
Exodus 3:15.
He thundered to the prophet, “I am Yahweh that is
my name!” Isaiah 42:8. Notice He didn’t say, “I am Yahweh, that is one of my
names,” or “You can just call me whatever you wish, Isaiah, I’ll know who you
mean.” He said specifically, “That is my Name!” Period. (“…whose Name alone is
Yahweh…” Ps. 83:18).
In the Scriptures when a person gave his name to
another it signified the joining of the two in closest unity. When Yahweh gave
His Name to Israel He was calling them to a marriage covenant, the closest union
two can have. It is no different when a bride takes on her husband’s name. When
she shares his name she becomes at one with him, both in aspiration, goal and
commitment to a single cause – building a family.
Yahweh is creating his own heavenly family with
His people now, one day to be resurrected as a kingdom of priests, Revelation
5:10. We read in Acts 15:14 that Yahweh is taking out from the world a special
people “for His Name.” He is making a family of Yahweh. “For this cause I bow
my knees unto the Father of our Master Yahshua the Messiah, of whom the whole
family in heaven and earth is named,” Ephesians 3:14-15.
Esteemed by Name
Biblically, the person and his name are virtually
equivalent and inseparable. The word “name” in Hebrew is shem. Shem means
a mark or a memorial – a person’s individuality. His name implies his honor (or
dishonor), his authority, his character. In fact, scripturally a name describes
and defines a person in all aspects of his or her persona.
The Name Yahweh has great importance because of
what it signifies. Intrinsic to Yahweh’s Name is the very verb of existence. In
Exodus 3:14 He tells Moses: “I am that I am,” or “haYah asher haYah” in
the Hebrew. It means I am existence itself. I cause everything to come into
being. His Name Yahweh describes Him, defines Him, and expresses His attributes
as the one who causes us to exist in this life and the one who can give us
everlasting existence, too.
Joel 2:32 prophesies that the day will come when
whoever shall call on His Name will be delivered. That meaning is central to the
definition of His Name: “I am” or “I will be.” “Yahweh” also has the
connotation, “I will be there (for you),” especially to be your deliverance.
His Name is a family Name. His people, His very
Chosen, are a family called by His Name: “O Yahweh, hear, O Yahweh, forgive; O
Yahweh, hearken and do; defer not, for your own sake, O my Elohim: for your city
and your people are called by your name” (Dan. 9:19). His people take on this
wonderful Name because they are in covenant union with Him – obeying Him and
pleasing Him in all that they do. His Name Yahweh is found an astonishing 6,823
times in ancient Hebrew manuscripts of the Bible. It simply cannot be ignored or
dismissed.
Is ‘G-o-d’ an English Form of His Name?
A typical argument is, “I don’t call on Him by
His Hebrew Name because I speak English.” Does a person change his name when
traveling to foreign lands in which a different language is spoken? Or is his
name the same everywhere he goes? Does he get a new passport with the
corresponding name change at each new port of entry? Or is John Doe called John
Doe everywhere he goes? Clearly, the name is the same everywhere. If names do in
fact change then what would be the English equivalent of Vladimir Putin? It’s
none other than Vladimir Putin. What is the English form of the Japanese Prime
Minister’s name, Junichiro Koizumi? Why it’s Junichiro Koizumi, of course. No
English equivalent exists because it’s not needed! Names
don't change in going from one country to another or one language to another.
If the argument is, I speak English
therefore I use an English name for the one I worship, then please provide the
English name for Satan – because that name is Hebrew and it never changed
in our English Bibles. Can you supply the English form of Abraham? This is
another Hebrew name right out of the Hebrew Scriptures and carried over
virtually unaltered into our English translation.
What’s the English equivalent for the Hebrew name
Daniel? How about Sarah and Martha? These are all Hebrew names that are
unchanged in the English text because names are not translated. We have no
trouble using these Hebrew names without an English equivalent because there
is no English equivalent. Why should Yahweh’s Name be any different?
Besides, “G-o-d” is not a name anyway but only a generic title. Calling on Him
by this title is like calling out to your neighbor, “Hello human being!”
One of the most popular words of praise is
halleluyah. One hears it shouted out in churches all the time by those who have
no clue as to its meaning. Halleluyah is one of the most ancient words of
exultation in existence and it is pure Hebrew. “Hallel” means “praise” in
Hebrew, and “Yah” is the first part of the sacred Name Yahweh. Therefore
halleluyah means “Praise Yah”! The most common word of praise has our Heavenly
Father’s very Name embedded within it – “Halle1uYah.” We usually
see this word in the form hallelujah, but there was no “j” in Hebrew, Greek or
English until about the 15th century. The “j” is merely an “i” with a tail and
given a “juh” sound relatively recently. The “j” and “i” were used
interchangeably in alphabets until the 17th century.
Scripture records many well-known names that incorporate
the name of the Heavenly Father. “Elijah” was not pronounced that way in the
Scriptures. It was “Eliyah,” a name that means,” my El is Yah.” Isaiah (YeshaYah)
is a Hebrew name that means “salvation of Yah.” Jeremiah (YirmeYah) is “whom Yah
raises up,” Zephaniah (ZephanYah) means “hidden of Yah.” The names of many other
writers and prophets contain the shortened “Yah” Name of Yahweh, showing the
close bond they had to Him.
Inconsistencies Abound
If one sticks to the position that because we
speak English we should not use Hebrew name forms, then we shouldn’t use any of
the aforementioned, Biblical names, either, because they are all Hebrew names
and we don’t speak Hebrew. It would not be right to apply that argument just to
Yahweh’s Name and not to all the other Hebrew names and words in the Bible –
like Sabbath, a Hebrew term, and Messiah, another Hebrew word.
What about all the Biblical cities like
Jerusalem, Nazareth, Bethlehem, and the names of rivers, seas, deserts, and
mountains? These would all need to be changed to some English form to be
consistent with the argument for the exclusive use of English. The problem is,
there are no equivalent English forms for these Hebrew names! Neither is there a
proper equivalent or substitute name for Yahweh’s great Name. Let’s pursue this
point even further.
‘Dear (Nameless) President’
For argument’s sake, let’s say that there is an
English equivalent for the sacred Name Yahweh and that equivalent is “god,” with
a capital G..
First, we must note again that “god” is not a
name but a title. As we already read, Paul said there are gods many and lords
many. There are also many presidents in our country – presidents of
corporations, colleges, board presidents, bank presidents...but there is only
one president of General Motors, only one president of Harvard, only one
president of Citibank – and each has a specific, identifiable name that he
answers to. If I wrote a letter addressed “Dear President,” it could apply to
any one of these presidents. Only when I include the name with that title do I
reveal the one I am actually addressing.
If I pray to a god then according to Paul in
2Corinthians 4:4 I may be praying to Satan because Satan is called the “god of
this world.” Myriads of other god deities have been worshiped by man throughout
history.
Is “G-o-d” an English form for “Yahweh”? Does He
expect His people to change His Name to something else according to the language
spoken? And is that even possible? The Oxford English Dictionary
(OED) says “god” stems from the Old High German, got,
deriving from the Gothic guth and going back to the Teutonic
gudo, which stems from two Aryan roots – one meaning to invoke, the other to
pour in the sense of a molten image. Call on god and you call on an idol,
according to the origin of this word. Capitalizing it doesn’t change anything.
G-o-d is far from being an English term. Its
common English usage belies ancient foreign origins. Relatively few of the words
we use in English are purely English. The word “English” itself isn’t even
English. England is from Englaland, land of the Angles. Who were the
Angles? None other than Germans from the lowlands of Germany who settled in
eastern England in the 5th century. “English” is from Englisc, meaning of
the Angles – Germans! (see “English,” OED)
Our Impure ‘English’ Language
English is a melting pot language
borrowing extensively from many languages. The statement, "I speak English so I
do not use the Hebrew Name" is self-contradictory. Here's why:
Let’s break down the words etymologically: “I
speak English so I do not use the Hebrew Name.” Discovering the origin of
each of the words in that sentence proves enlightening indeed:
I = the
letter I is the ninth letter of the alphabet, coming through the Latin from the
Greek and ultimately from the Semitic or Hebrew yod – the first letter in
Yahweh’s Name.
speak =
from the German sprechen.
English =
a proper noun based in German
so =
akin to the Gothic swa
do =
traces to Sanskrit which was spoken in India.
not =
Old English nought, cognate to several old Saxon and French formations
use =
from Latin usus
the =
from Teutonic and Indo-European forms
Hebrew =
Hebrew Eber, one who “crosses over”
Name =
Greek onoma
In the statement, “I speak English so I do not
use the Hebrew Name,” only one of those 11 words is in fact English. English
is not by any stretch a pure language. Much of it is from the Romance languages
and vast numbers of its words derive from the Greek and Latin (and ultimately
Hebrew). Most of the words we use in English come from some other language!
The point in all of this is that language has
little to do with calling on Yahweh’s Name. He was Yahweh before He put man on
earth. Before He created all these languages from Babel, He was Yahweh. “Yahweh”
is existence personified. Psalm 135:13 says, “Thy Name endures forever,
your memorial throughout all generations.” His Name is His memorial that endures
for all time.
The First Commandment Is Foundational
The Ten Commandments in Exodus 20:2 begin, “I am
Yahweh your Elohim which brought you out of the land of Egypt. You shall have no
other mighty ones before me.” In the very first of the 10 Commandments Yahweh
established right off the bat that, above everything else, He has an identity.
If you don’t get that part right, everything else about your worship will fall
like dominoes. We must above all else worship the right Mighty One. As we
witness the general decay of Bible-professing religion and the perversion of all
that is right and moral on this planet, we can go back to the very first of the
Ten Commandments and see why Yahweh established Himself as supreme.
If man would have just kept Commandment One he
would have kept all the rest. All false worship can ultimately be traced to a
violation of this first of the Ten Commandments. Every sin we commit results
from an unwillingness to put Yahweh and His laws first in our lives. Before He
says anything Yahweh establishes at the start that HE is Yahweh our Mighty One.
Ecclesiastes 12:13 bears out this important truth: “Let us hear the conclusion
of the whole matter: Fear Yahweh and keep His commandments, for this is the
whole [duty] of man.”
We continue in Exodus 20:4: “You shall not make
unto you any graven image, or any likeness of any thing that is in heaven above,
or that is in the earth beneath, or that is in the water under the earth.”
Understand that heathens didn’t worship a stone image as the stone that it was,
but as a representation of some deity.
Yahweh says don’t make these things because they
will remove you from worship of Me, and I am the only one you are to worship.
When we employ substitute titles for His Name we are in idolatry not unlike the
pagan’s wood and stone. In the same way that an idol removes us from Him,
substituting His Name veers us away from Him and the specific worship expressed
by His Name and puts us in a generalized worship that is practiced by diverse
and conflicting denominations.
Moving on to 20:6 we are told to keep the
commandments if we love Him and He in turn will show mercy to us. Now notice
verse 7: “Thou shalt not take the name of Yahweh your Elohim in vain.” Taking
His Name in vain does not mean to curse when you smash your thumb with a hammer.
“Take” is the Hebrew nasa, meaning to lift or bring to. “Vain” comes from
shoaw, to rush over, bring to devastation, uselessness, waste – basically it
means neglect.
When we trade His name for some title, we are
breaking the Third Commandment. “You shall not bring His Name to desolation or
ignore it through neglect,” the Hebrew behind the commandment says. When we use
a common title in worship we are missing the most important aspect of who Yahweh
is and what He stands for; what He is all about and what He will do for us if we
would just follow and obey Him. His Name describes the very essence of who He is
– Yahweh: He is existence personified.
No title can begin to denote all that His Name
stands for. A title defeats the purpose of a name. It just sits there like a
pasted-on label, with no unique meaning and no particular identity attached.
Calling Him G-o-d is like greeting your neighbor, “Hello human being.”
When you call on the Name Yahweh you are invoking
the only true, active, all-powerful, majestic Being in the universe. Most people
would prefer a nameless mighty one who, like a kindly old grandfather, is there
to bail them out when needed but who otherwise is absent while they live out
their lives any way they choose without hindrance. Much better for them to keep
Him nameless and in the shadows and not make Him too real through the calling on
a personal name. Perhaps this is the underlying reason His Name is so often
avoided today.
Do we have such little respect and regard for our
Heavenly Father that we would deny Him His own Name and call Him whatever we
please?
Our prayer is
that you will grasp the critical importance of the truth presented here and come
to know your Creator through His personal, covenant Name Yahweh, the only Name
given to us for salvation, Acts 4:12; Joel 2:32.
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