Christian
Churches of God
No. 116A
Dialogue on the Name and Nature of God
(Edition 1.0 20140809-20140809) Audio
This is a dialogue between people of various
views on the Name and Nature of God.
Christian
Churches of God
E-mail: secretary@ccg.org
(Copyright © 2014 Wade
Cox)
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Dialogue on the Name and Nature of God
This
week we were asked a question that said:
“Is it
the name of our God that we must know or is it His character. Is this not
answered in this following verse.
John
17:3 And this is eternal life: to have knowledge of you, the only true God, and
of him whom you have sent, even Jesus Christ. (BBE)”
The questioner followed up with the words: “We see
that God's character is who He is, that is His name. His character is how we
identify Him. Many descriptive names have been given to this God of ours but
they all are just that, descriptive. To us humans these descriptions don't seem
personal but they describe His character and his character is who He is! God is
not a Rick or a Bob, He is our God.”
[A point was made elsewhere] “saying that God is
our Father. This is true, Jesus equated the title Father with His name. We only
need know that He is the reason that we exist and that we should seek his
guidance through the one He sent to be our saviour and reconcile us back to
Him. Our whole point of being is to love Him and to belong to Him. Just look at
His plan of salvation that He thinks so highly of us that are sinners to want
us to be with Him. He sent his first born son to die for us so this may happen.
Imagine us in Yahoshua's place, dying for guards in
Nazi concentration camps so they may receive forgiveness and eternal life.
Would we? This is our God before us, His plan revealed. I feel so unworthy of
this yet I know He has called me and I accept His call.”
Another person not of CCG made a point as follows:
“His name and his character are both important. Why would you suggest that his
name be any less important than his character? God told us his name, jehovah. He told us for a reason. He gave himself a name
among men. now ask yourself... after having received this name from him would
you not use it? how much more personal is a relationship than being on a first
name basis. Rather than calling him by a "Title" God, I believe it
more personable and right to call him by the name he choose for himself;
Jehovah.”
Now this is a position we would expect a Jehovah
Witness to make and it is false for many reasons and gives a much confused
position to the view of the names and nature of God and the plan of Salvation.
The questioner followed up with a comment as
follows:
“He also claimed to be Eloah
and Yah. His character is His name and identity. We as humans want to put an
identifier to things to make it easy to understand. My God is so far beyond
what I can begin to imagine yet I see what his son has revealed to me about
Him. This God shown to me by the son is who I must know, the more I think of
what he said. Father is a perfectly acceptable identifier for my God.”
Another member of CCG said: “Did Jesus ever call
him by this name "Jehovah"? When speaking directly to God, what did
Jesus call him?
Matthew 27:46 And about the ninth hour Jesus cried
with a loud voice, saying, Eli, Eli, lama sabachthani?
That is to say, My God, my God,
why hast thou forsaken me?
Or here
Mark 15:34 And at the ninth hour Jesus cried with a
loud voice, saying, Eloi, Eloi,
lama sabachthani? Which is, being
interpreted, My God, my God, why hast thou forsaken me?
This is the most personal it gets between he and
his Father, the moment before his death. Why does he not call on his Father by
name (Jehovah)?”
The fact is that Christ was fulfilling Scripture
when posing this question and more importantly he shows that the prophecies
referred to himself, and Yahovah was not a name he
used. The reason we will see is it
cannot be used as a direct reference to God but is an indirect honorific.
Another point was made that is of importance in
using the name of God: “When he shows us how to pray (intimately) he tells us
to call him Father. Keeping His commands is how we get to know Him intimately.
Not the use of a specific name. Jesus clearly says that he will deny people who
claim to have done works in his name, would it not be the same for our Father?
If we call Him what we think is His name and then deny Sabbath keeping would
that not be the same as using His name in vain?”
Also the questioner posed: “If we call our God
Jehovah but think he is a committee of three equal gods what good does the name
mean?”
One of our people also stated in agreement: “To
understand Him we must understand and keep His law and His holy days. Also, we
must understand that he gave His son to save us.”
It was then advanced by a non CCG person as we
might expect from a JW that: “Jesus and Jehovah are only ONE by Unity. They are
two different persons. Although Jesus calls Jehovah father in the lord’s
prayer, He also says hallowed be thy name (holy be your name). If his name is
not important, why would he not only say this but also say in scripture ‘I have
made your name known to the men who you have given me out of the world.’
Now this response shows a complete misunderstanding
and a misapplication of the name Yahovah and was a
misspelling of the word which was an error made by Trinitarians in the UK at
the Reformation in the KJV and other works.
The quasi JW qualified this with the comments:
“Jesus made it clear he was not and is not equal to [God]. In fact he said ‘I
go my way to the father who is greater than I.’ Scripture also says ‘the head
of every women is man, the head of man is Christ, and the head of Christ is
God’ Jehovah is greater than, not equal to Jesus.”
Once again he displays a complete misapprehension
of the meaning and use of Yahovah.
The CCG member said: “[The questioner] understands
that. What makes you feel she doesn't?
My question is: if His name is that important to use, then when did Christ say
His name?”
The questioner then replied to the quasi JW: “I am
not sure why you continue. When I used the analogy of a Trinitarian god with a
usable name, the point wasn't to argue about the Trinity. It was to show which
is more important, the name or the character.”
I then decided to explain the biblical position so
that the readers could understand the names and nature of God and the Plan of
Salvation all of which can be deduced from the names applied to God.
I said: “I am afraid that some here do not
understand the functions of the names of God. God's name is not Jehovah. “J”
does not exist in Hebrew and the “e” is actually rendered as an “a.” All
messengers of God were called Yahovah and the name
only referred to the One True God when it was rendered as Yahovah
of Hosts. When it is used of the One True God as Ha Elohim
it is rendered as Yahovih which is SHD 3069 and is
always spoken or read by Jews as Elohim. Yahovah is read as Adonai so as not to confuse the entities.
Yahovah and Yahovih are both third person forms of the verb meaning
"He causes to be". It is an honorific: referring to the function of 'eyeh 'asher 'eyeh or I will be what I will become (of Ex.
3:14).
The Name of the One True God in the Bible in Hebrew
is Eloah. In the Biblical Chaldean it is Elahh.
To understand the extension of God as a body of elohim we need to understand that Eloah
became the head of the Elohim. The extension of the
One True God as a body of elohim is as Ha Elohim in the Hebrew or The God in the extended sense as
the Father. Elohim is the collective name for the
body of the Sons of God of which Christ is one.
It was stated that there were no vowels in ancient
Hebrew either; it would have been YHWH.
It was written as consonants but the vowels were
used and the MT has the vowels all intact and the LXX translates the text using
the vowels.
The sound of Yaho in English is just that and in Hebrew yot is pronounced in the same
way.
The Eastern Aramaic developed from the Chaldean and
the Western Aramaic developed from the Hebrew. Elahh
and Eloah both mean the power and Allah' is
the Arabic derivation from the singular Elahh of the
Chaldean (via Eastern Aramaic).
When the Aramaic letters were written from the
Temple at Elephantine the root form was Yaho both
used in Egypt and at Jerusalem by the entire priesthood. Ginsberg's
translations make that very clear. The Temple of the God Yaho
at Elephantine is recorded as contributing to the restoration of the Temple at
Jerusalem in the reign of Darius II the Persian. The satrap in Egypt was named Arsames. We also have the Passover decree referred to in
the time of the Reconstruction in the OT in its Aramaic form as issued by Arsames as part of the general proclamation. It is Yaho in the short form and Yahovah
in the long form. Yahovah was used to refer to three
messengers or Angels in Genesis 18 and 19. The text refers also to another Yahovah in heaven who rained fire down on Sodom and Gomorrah
at the request of the two Yahovah who were with Lot
while the third remained with Abraham. This aspect is explained in the text of
the paper The Angel of YHVH (No. 024).
The test question shows that Eloah
is the name of the One True God from the question in Proverbs 30:4 and answered
in verse 5 as Eloah. The answer to the name of his
son in verses 6-9 shows it is the Yahovah of Israel
appointed in Deut. 32:8ff. His name is also supplied in the OT.
If you do not understand the correct name of the
One True God and Jesus Christ whom He sent and do not understand their natures
you do not have eternal life and will not be in the First Resurrection (cf. Jn.
17:3).
The use of the term Yahovah
(incorrectly Jehovah) to refer to the One True God is an error that confuses
the title when referring to He Causes to be in
a generic sense. It can only be used of the One True God when it is rendered as
Yahovah of Hosts and Yahovih
(SHD 3069). Strong explains this matter in his notes to the Concordance at SHD
3068 and SHD 3069.
It was then incorrectly asserted that in Greek they
called him JAH, which allegedly might have something to do with them using the
J in English. The Greek in the
Septuagint and in the NT uses the form in explanation of the short form of Yahh (SHD 3050) in examining the LXX of Psalm 68:4 (cf. Ex.
15:2). The Psalm was originally written
for the going up of the Ark to Zion (ca 1005 BCE). The LXX uses the Greek Ho Theos
instead of Yahh.
Ho Theos refers to the One True God or The Theos. The text says that the Lord (Kurios)
is his name. Elsewhere the text for Yah
is actually Yaho as the text begins with aspirant Iota
then Alpha and ends with Omega as does the NT Greek.
It was then asserted by the quasi JW that
“Hallelujah means praise [G]od. Notice the jah at the end.”
No person who knows anything about English would
ever pronounce this word as it is written in the English Bibles or any songs.
It is always pronounced Yah. The understanding in the Reformation was wrong. To
continue in the error is simple indolence.
A new student said: “I wonder what we are going to
call him when he gives us all a new language.”
To which I replied: “We will be told if a change is
needed. All we can do is follow what we have been given to understand in the
texts.”
The new student replied: “I imagine it will not
change at all since his name never changes.”
To which I replied: “The name of the God of the
Temple and the object of worship Eloah is given in
the book of Ezra from Ezra 4:23-7:26 and in the book of Job and also at Deuteronomy
32 as the being who allocated the nations to the Sons of God. Israel was
allocated to Yahovah of Israel and in that sense Yahovah is used of Jesus Christ. Yahovah
is an honorific and is not the name of the One True God except as a third
person reference carried by one of His officers.”
Eloah became Ha Elohim and in that sense it changed and He became Ha Elohim as the head of the sons of God as their Father. So
in that sense it changed but He was still the One True God as Eloah as the object of worship at the Temple.
The member then said: “I am curious if anyone
answered the original question:
"Is it the name of our God that we must know
or is it His character."
The Jehovah advocate agreed they are both important in a relationship with God.
The member then said: “If they are both important then we must follow His
commandments seeing as though they stem from His character and He does not
change. Right?”
I replied: “The name of God is important in
understanding His Nature and the Plan of Salvation. To not understand the use
of Yahovah and Yahovih for
example does not enable the understanding of the creation and people make
errors in thinking that there is a primary creator other than the Father.
Eloah is singular and
tells us that there is only One True God and the name admits of no plurality
whatsoever.
The text in Exodus 3:14 shows us that God is
becoming something when Christ said that the name is 'eyeh
'asher 'eyeh or I will be what I will become. It shows
that Ha Elohim is derived from the actions of Eloah in creating the elohim both
Christ and the Host as sons of God.
When Christ used this text in the Aramaic he was
declaring to them that he was the Memra (divine oracle or logos)
that gave the Law to Moses at Sinai and they killed him. He did not say I Am as the KJV translates it. The
Aramaic text has it correctly. That was why they killed him.
Zechariah 2:1-8 shows clearly that the angel who
had charge of Israel spoke and said that he was sent to protect Israel by Yahovah of Hosts the One True God. We know that this angel
was the elohim in charge of Israel and he had
partners. He and they had an elohim above them and
that Ha Elohim anointed the Elohim
in charge of Israel above his partners. David tells us that in Psalm 45:6-7 and
Hebrews 1:8-9 tells us that being was Christ.
The names tell us the plan and the powers and
nature of God. That is why the demons have worked so hard to misuse the names
of God and confuse people who are not of the true faith. For example anyone
that thinks the name of God is simply Yahovah (SHD
3068) does not understand how that name is used, nor that the name Yahovih (SHD 3069) is of a superior being except when the
full term Yahovah of Hosts is used. The use of the
term Jehovah shows they know even less.”
Christ
said to the priests at the Temple: “Is it not written in your law: I said ye
are Gods (Ps. 82:6). If He called them gods unto whom the word of God came, and
the scripture cannot be broken; say ye of him whom the Father has sanctified
and sent into the world, Thou blasphemest because I
said I am the son of God?” (Jn. 10:34-36).
The
Greek uses the terms Theoi in the plural and the term of God the
Father is tou Theou derived
from the accusative Ton Theon, the Ho Theos or the One True God. In the Koine Greek
the definite article is only ever used of the Father as is Ha Elohim in the MT. Our destiny is to become elohim (gods) as coheirs with Christ.
See also the papers The Names of God (No.
116) and The Name of God in
Islam (No. 054).
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