dybmh
ויהי מבדיל בין מים למים
Wouldn't resurrection require an immortal soul?but they did have belief in a resurrection
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Wouldn't resurrection require an immortal soul?but they did have belief in a resurrection
Just trying to understand. What I have learned is that transliteration is the taking of the sound of a word from one language and representing it in the alphabet of another language. Translation is the expressing of meaning or sense of a word or phrase in one language through the vocabulary of another language.Use of the name "Jehovah" is the English translation of the Tetragrammaton. Since it is a translation rather than a transliteration, we did not try to retain the sound of the name in Hebrew because we are not Hebrew speakers,
Wouldn't resurrection require an immortal soul?
a immortal soul could not be killedWouldn't resurrection require an immortal soul?
Just trying to understand. What I have learned is that transliteration is the taking of the sound of a word from one language and representing it in the alphabet of another language. Translation is the expressing of meaning or sense of a word or phrase in one language through the vocabulary of another language.
How does "Jehovah" express a meaning or sense of the four letters from the Hebrew alphabet? Thanks.
Interesting: You have resorted to a personal comment--one that presumes rip know my thought process--instead of, and failing to dry again, provide the requested definition.
And, by the way, I don't have this issue with other Christians here.
"A translation tells you the meaning of words in another language. A transliteration doesn't tell you the meaning of the words, but it helps you pronounce them. Transliteration changes the letters from one alphabet or language into the corresponding, similar-sounding characters of another alphabet" (first result on Google)"Jehovah" is the Anglicized form of the divine name. "Yahweh" is the transliteration and we have no problem with that, but prefer a translation rather than to just assume how it was said in the original Hebrew.
i like" Do you folks even know what God's name means?
So why use two transliterations instead?i like
“He Causes to Become”
yes there is the lake of fire Rev.20 :10Maybe God could extinguish it ( for lack of a better term )? But as @Deeje correctly pointed out... I don't know my own scripture as well as I should. So this is just a guess.
Doesn't the Christian scripture also teach of a baptism in fire? Could this not be a purifying fire?yes there is the lake of fire Rev.20 :10
fire indicates destruction. in other words, gone not coming back ever.
“Jehovah” or “Yahweh” ?So why use two transliterations instead?
Luke 3:16 ?Doesn't the Christian scripture also teach of a baptism in fire? Could this not be a purifying fire?
I have no dog in this race, so I'm just asking.
Yes, that.Luke 3:16 ?
Doesn't the Christian scripture also teach of a baptism in fire? Could this not be a purifying fire?
I have no dog in this race, so I'm just asking.
Sir, symbolic or not, it's still cannibalism. It's horrific. Listen to yourself talk. You are saying that God condones symbolic cannibalism!!! If that isn't strange, I don't know what is. when you think about it, doesn't it bother you just a tiny little bit?
"A translation tells you the meaning of words in another language. A transliteration doesn't tell you the meaning of the words, but it helps you pronounce them. Transliteration changes the letters from one alphabet or language into the corresponding, similar-sounding characters of another alphabet" (first result on Google)
Both the words you use for the tetragram are variations of transliterations of the name and not translations. Do you folks even know what God's name means?
So why use two transliterations instead?
Doesn't the Christian scripture also teach of a baptism in fire? Could this not be a purifying fire?
I have no dog in this race, so I'm just asking.