5

What's The Fathers Name?

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

This is a document describing how to say the Fathers name.

Citation preview

Page 1: What's The Fathers Name?
Page 2: What's The Fathers Name?

What is the Fathers Name?

1. Does knowing the Father’s correct, proper Name really even matter? Can’t

we just keep on calling the Creator of the Universe by any name we choose?

• “Oh, He doesn’t mind, He knows our HEARTS”.

• “He made languages; He knows what we’re calling Him, in

WHATEVER language we’re speaking”.

2. He does have a specific name, יהוח and we need to call out ‘in’ it. We can

see by these verses that He intends for us to use and speak His Name.

• Genesis 4:26 “then began men to (call in the name of יהוח).”

• Genesis 12:8 “…And there he built an altar to יהוח and (called in the

Name of יהוח).

• Joel 2:32 “At that time, whoever (calls in the name of יהוח)” will be

saved.

• 1 Kings 18:24 “Then you call on the name of your Alahym, and I will

call (in the name of יהוח), and the Alahym who answers by fire, He is

the Alahym”.

• Psalm 118:26 “Blessed is he who comes (in the Name of יהוח”).

To start with, let me say that there is truly only one way to

write the Fathers Name, and that is in Ancient Hebrew. This is

the Fathers Name in Ancient Pictograph Hebrew: efei efei efei efei

in Paleo Hebrew like this: hwhyhwhyhwhyhwhy and in modern Hebrew like

this: יהוח.

Page 3: What's The Fathers Name?

3. How can we call in His Name if we don’t know it? He wants us to know

His true Name.

• Ezek 39:7 “And I shall make My set-apart Name known in the midst

of My people Isra’el, and not let My set-apart Name be profaned any

more. And the gentiles shall know that I am יהוח, the Set-apart One

in Isra’el.”

• Exodus 3:15 “Alahym said further to Moshe, ‘Say this to the people of

Isra'el: (יהוח) Alahym of your fathers, … This is My Name forever;

this is how I am to be remembered generation after generation.

4. What is His Name?

• Hebrew letters are written and read from right to left. From left to right

the letters spell out His name as: Hey Waw Hey Yod, and from right to

left it would read: Yod Hey Waw Hey.

A. The Y, Yod, י.

• The first letter in Hebrew in His Name is the Y, the Yod, or the י. The

Yod makes the Ya sound and this gives us the first syllable of His

Name (YA).

B. The H, Ha, ה.

• The next letter is called the Ha, the H, or the ה. When this is the first

letter of a word it’s pronounced Ha. When it is not the first letter in a

word it ah sound. This is the second syllable of His Name.

C. We now have YAH.

• This YAH is Strong’s 3050. You need to only look at the Hebrew at the

top and you will see the Yod and the He, saying YAH. (The J was

improperly mistranslated there).

• This Yah is actually a shortened version of His name as seen here: יהוח

• Psalms 68:4 “Sing to Adonai, sing praises to His Name; extol Him who

rides on the clouds by His Name, Yah; and be glad in his presence”.

Page 4: What's The Fathers Name?

D. The Waw, (The ו ) with its OO sound.

• In Ancient Pictograph Hebrew, when the language first started, there

were no V’s or W’s and the Waw was used as an OO vowel and was

pronounced OO as in pool.

• The only reason that this letter, Waw, (The ו), makes the W and V

sound is because of vowel pointing. Vowel pointing only came about

around the 7th century A.D. This is what changes the OO sounding

Waw ו and makes it sound like a W or V.

• The Hebrew Aleph Bet uses four consonants as vowels. These are the

Aleph, He, Waw, and Yod. The vowel pointing system was not needed

then, and really, is not needed now. They use them to create different

sounds with these consonants, and these different sounds change the

sound of a word and also the meaning of a word. It was not like this,

when the Aleph Bet was first created.

• If the Waw, (The ו) was meant to be pronounced as a W or a V, then

lets take a look at a couple of names and how they would be

pronounced.

o Ruth would be RWth or RVth

o Judah would be YahVdah or YahWdah

E. Now for the final letter, the second H, Ha, ה.

• An H at the beginning of a word sounds like ha sound, and at the end of

the word it’s an ah sound.

F. Conclusion: Sounding it out.

• Yod (Y) with the Ya sound Ya

• Ha (H) with the aH sound Ya aH

• Waw with the OO (pool) sound Ya aH OO

• Ha with the aH sound (YAH-OO-

AH)

~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ Yahuah ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~

Page 5: What's The Fathers Name?

Please see red box on chart below to see confirmation of the Waw OO

sound in the Ancient Hebrew.