Yahweh: The Divine Name in the Bible

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Wilfrid Laurier Univ. Press, 2006 M01 1 - 144 páginas

Biblical tradition asserts that the revelation of God to Moses in the burning bush involved also a declaration of the divine name, the Tet (represented by the letters Y, H, W, H), and its meaning. There are indications that the divine name was known prior to the time of Moses, although ultimate questions of origin and precise meaning are shrouded in obscurity. IN fact, even the exact pronunciation of the name (usually pronounced YAHWEH) is by no means certain.

The author of The Divine Name in the Bible surveys the immense literature on this subject, and traces the use of various names for deity in Israel from patriarchal times onwards, with special attention to the significance of the Tetragrammaton, which in course of time, became the name by which the God of Israel was known. Various aspects of the theological meaning of the name in the Old Testament writings are explored. The Dead Sea Scrolls, the Jewish Talmudic literature, and later mystical writings are also examined. The translators of the Old Testament into Greek used Kyrios as the equivalent for YHWH—with implications for the New Testament understanding of the person of Jesus Christ, reflected also in subsequent Christological formulations.

 

Contenido

THE NAME OF GOD
1
THE TETRAGRAMMATON BEFORE MOSES
18
THE GOD OF THE FATHERS
32
THE GOD OF MOSES
46
THE TETRAGRAMMATON IN THE OLD TESTAMENT
63
THE TETRAGRAMMATON WITHIN JUDAISM
79

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