NamesOfGodWikipediaManyReligions
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"Holy Name" redirects here. For other uses, see Holy Name (disambiguation).
The Name of God,
or Holy Name is the name in Eastern or Western spiritual traditions or
religions that is used in practice or prayer.[1] Conceptions of God can vary widely, but the word
God
in English and its counterparts in cognate languages are normally used for all
or many of them. Other languages have similar generic names or concepts, and a
common experience is for the word for "God" in one language to be
perceived by speakers of other languages as the name of a specific deity
worshipped by speakers of that one language. However some names refer almost
exclusively to the supreme being of a single religion, while others are shared
among many traditions.
A "diagram" of the names of God in Athanasius Kircher's Oedipus Aegyptiacus (1652–54). The style
and form are typical of the mystical tradition, as early theologians
began to fuse emerging pre-Enlightenment concepts of classification
and organization with religion and alchemy, to shape an artful and perhaps more conceptual
view of God.
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[edit] African religions
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This article or section
may contain original research or unverified claims. |
The belief systems of Africa are varied
and complicated and therefore the following can only provide a basic reference
for the monotheistic religions of Africa, whereby Islam, Judaism and Christianity
are not dealt with specifically.[citation needed]
As it is with many
translations by early missionaries, the existing names of God existing in many African languages
were employed in the Christian Bible such as Olodumare in the Yoruba version.[citation needed]
[edit] Ethiopian tribes
This is a brief list of Ethiopian
tribes and their respective names for the Supreme
Being.[citation needed]
[edit] Chinese religions
Main article: Chinese terms for God
[edit] Indian religions
[edit] Hinduism
See also: Sahasranama,
Kirtana, and
Japa
For an example refer to: Hare
Krishna
Within Hinduism, there
are a number of names of God which are generally in Sanskrit, each
supported by different traditions within the religion. Brahman, Bhagavan,
Ishvara, and Paramatma are among the most commonly used terms for God in the scriptures
of Hinduism.
Radha and Krishna -
Venerated within several traditions of Hinduism as the Supreme God, svayam
bhagavan and his shakti, or as manifestations therof
[edit] Sikhism
Main article: God in
Sikhism
There are multiple names
for God in Sikhism. Some of the popular names for God in Sikhism are:
God according to Guru Nanak
is beyond full comprehension by humans; has endless number of virtues; takes on innumerable
forms; and can be called by an infinite number of names thus "Your
Names are so many, and Your Forms are endless. No one can tell how many
Glorious Virtues You have."[5]
[edit] Jainism
There are no direct names
of God in Jainism.
However, Mahavir
and other 'prophets' or 'perfected beings' are known as Tirthankar
(literally 'Fordmaker', meaning one who becomes enlightened) or Jina.
[edit] Buddhism
Buddhism of the
Theravada
tradition is nontheistic
and doesn't see the Buddha as divine, however in many Mahayana
schools Adibuddha
is conceived as the eternal, imperishable essence of all phenomena.
The Pure Land
schools of Buddhism in China and Japan revere the Nembutsu, the
formulaic name of Amida Buddha (Namu Amida Butsu), as the sole method in
this latter age of "degenerate Dharma" (mappo) for birth in
the Pure Land after earthly death. Shinran, the
founder of the Japanese Pure Land sect of Jodo
Shinshu, went so far as to declare the Name as the same as Amida and his
characteristics (Infinite
Light and Infinite Life).
[edit] Religions in
classical antiquity
[edit] Pharaonic Egypt
[edit] Roman religion
While some of the older
deities have names long pre-dating the Latin people the Romans
belong to, and even more were adopted with their autochthonous
names (or Latinized in a recognizable way), many minor divinities were named
simply as personifications of various minor aspects of daily life. Latin also
prominently used an abstract word for god, deus (hence deity and, from
its adjective divinus, divinity), from Proto-Indo-European root deiwos,
also the root of words for "sky" and "day" – the god-sense
is originally "shining," but "whether as originally sun-god or
as lightener" is not now clear; the epithet Deus
Optimus Maximus,
[edit] Mithras
The name of this Persian god of
light, one of the earliest Indic words we possess, being found in clay tablets
from Anatolia
dating to about 1500 B.C, reported in English only since 1551, is from Latin,
derived from the Greek Mithras. This was in turn derived from Avestan Mithra-,
possibly from an Indo-Iranian root mitram
"contract," whence mitras "contractual partner,
friend," conceptualized as a god, or, according to Kent, first the epithet of a
divinity and eventually his name; from proto-Indo-European root base mei-
"to bind"; related to Sanskrit Mitra,
a Vedic deity associated with Varuna.
[edit] Semitic religions
[edit] Judaism
Main article: Names of God in Judaism
In the Hebrew scriptures
(i.e. the Law Torah,
plus the Prophets [Nevi-im] and the Holy Writings /Hagiographa [ Kethuvim] the Jewish name of
God is considered sacred and, out of deep respect for the name, Jews do not say
it.(See Exodus 20:7) The tetragrammaton (Hebrew:
יהוה, English:
YHVH or YHWH, these Hebrew consonants named, reading right to
left: "yod...heh...vahv...heh.") is the name for the group of four
Hebrew symbols which represent the name of God. The Tetragrammaton occurs 6,828
times in the Hebrew text printed in Biblia Hebraica and Biblia Hebraica
Stuttgartensia. Neither vowels nor vowel points were used in ancient Hebrew
writings, but are usually taken to be "a", "e",
"i", "o" or "u." From the Hebrew tetragrammaton
modern Christians have adopted pronunciations such as "Yahweh",
"Yahveh"
and "Jehovah".
Some claim the
pronunciation of YHWH has been lost, other authorities say it has not and that
it is pronounced Yahweh.
References, such as The New Encyclopædia Britannica, validate the
above by offering additional specifics:
Early Christian writers,
such as Clement
of Alexandria in the 2nd century, had used a form like Yahweh, and claim that this pronunciation of the tetragrammaton was never really
lost. Other Greek transcriptions also indicated that YHWH should be pronounced Yahweh.[6]
Clement of Alexandria
transliterated the tetragrammaton as Ιαου. The above claims
were founded upon the understanding that Clement of Alexandria had
transliterated YHWH as Ιαουε in Greek, which is
pronounced "Yahweh" in English. However, the final -e in the latter
form has been shown as having been a later addition. For a more in-depth
discussion of this, see the article Yahweh.
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“Strictly speaking Yahweh is the only ‘Name’ of
God”. |
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—( New Bible Dictionary J.D Douglas ) , |
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[edit] Christianity
Yahweh is a common
vocalization[citation needed] of God's
personal name based on the Hebrew tetragrammaton (above). Opinions
differ as to the most appropriate vowels to be used with the four-letter tetragrammaton.
Because of Jewish concerns for avoiding blasphemy, the name was often avoided
and replaced with "LORD"
(equivalent to the Hebrew Adonai). Also some other names for God used by
Christians are Father, Lord, Heavenly Father, or the Holy Trinity.
'Iehovah', an English
rendering of the tetragrammaton, the four Hebrew letters used by
Bible writers to represent the personal name of the supreme deity, is found in
Tyndale's Bible, in the King James Bible, and in many other translations from
that time period onward. (See Jehovah for more details and examples of usage of this form.)
Some claim that the form Yahweh is an uncertain pronunciation, (in ancient Hebrew, the
earliest forms of the tetragrammaton were written without vowels), but the
article on Yahweh
details why the traditionally used English word Jehovah also cannot be
'correct'.
Some avoid using either Yahweh or Jehovah altogether on the basis that the
actual pronunciation of the tetragrammaton has been lost in antiquity. Instead
they refer to him simply as God, or The Lord.
Jesus (Iesus, Yeshua,
Joshua, or Yehoshûa)
is a Hebraic personal name meaning "Yahweh saves/helps/is salvation",[7]. Christ means "the anointed" in Greek.
Khristos is the Greek equivalent of the Hebrew word Messiah; while in
English the old Anglo-Saxon Messiah-rendering hæland 'healer' was
practically annihilated by the Latin Christ, some cognates such as heiland
in Dutch survive.
In Messianic
Judaism, generally regarded as a form of Christianity, YHWH (pre-incarnate)
and Yeshua (incarnate) are one and the same, the second Person, with the Father
and Ruach haQodesh (the Holy Spirit) being the first and third Persons,
respectively, of ha'Elohiym (the Godhead). YHWH is expressed as
"haShem," which means 'the Name.'
The less evangelical
branch of the Quakers often refers to God as The Light.
Another term used is 'King of Kings' or 'Lord of Lords' and Lord of the Hosts. Other names used by
Christians include Ancient of Days, Father/Abba,
'Most High' and the Hebrew names Elohim, El-Shaddai, and Adonai. Principle, Mind, Soul, Life, Truth,
Love, and Spirit are names for God in Christian
Science. These names are considered synonymous and indicative of God's
wholeness. The name, "Abba/Father" is the most common term used for
the creator within Christianity, because it was the name Jesus Christ (Yeshua
Messiah) himself used to refer to God.
In the Russian Orthodox
movement Imiaslavie
("Name glorification"), the name of God is God Himself and can
be used to evoke miracles.
The Assemblies of Yahweh is currently the only
Christian group to use the name Yahweh exclusively and consistently.
See also: Names and titles of
Jesus in the New Testament.
[edit] Islam
Main article: 99 Names of God in the Qur'an
Allah is the most
frequently used name of God in Islam. Allah is an Arabic word meaning "the supreme
creator" and is most often used in reference to God. It originally simply
meant "the god" in Arabic, and was used in pre-Islamic times to refer
to a divinity worshiped in Mecca.[citation needed] The word is a linguistic
cognate of the
Hebrew
word Eloah and a
translation of the English word "God", although there
are some Christian
sects which claim
that there is a distinction between their deity and the deity or deities
worshiped in either Judaism or Islam. Nevertheless, Allah is the same
word in Arabic
used by Arab
Jews, Druze
and Christians when speaking of God.
A well established
Islamic tradition enumerates 99 names of God, each representing an
attribute.
Besides those names of Qur'anic
origin, Muslims of non-Arabic peoples may also sometimes use some other names
in their own language which refers to God, such as the Ottoman
anachronism Tanrı
(originally the pagan Turks' celestial chief god, corresponding to the Ancient
Turkish Tengri),
or Khoda in Persian
language which has the same Indo-European root as god.
[edit] Bahá'í Faith
Bahá'ís refer to God using the local word for God
in whatever language is being spoken. Bahá'ís often, in prayers, refer to God
by titles and attributes, such as the Mighty, the All-Powerful, the Merciful,
the Ever-Forgiving, the Most Generous, the All-Wise, the Incomparable, the
Gracious, the Helper, the All-Glorious, the Omniscient. Since the languages in
which the Bahá'í Faith was first authored were Arabic and Persian, the term Allah and other
"names" are used in some specific contexts, even by non-Arabic
speakers. The above-mentioned attributes are sometimes referred to in their
Arabic form - for instance Bahá'ís refer to "Bahá" (meaning Glory or
Splendour) or any derivation thereof (ex. Al-Abhá, or The Most Glorious) as the
Greatest Name of God.
[edit] Rastafari
[edit] Other traditions
[edit] Zoroastrianism
[edit] Deism and Pantheism
In Deism and Pantheism,
and in variations of these like Pandeism and Panentheism,
God is sometimes referred to as Deus (pronounced Day-us), the Latin word for god,
which gave rise to the word Deism. Believers in Pantheistic or Pandeistic
systems equate God with the Universe, and may refer to God by that term
(sometimes using the definite article and referring to God as "the
Deus").
[edit] Taboos
Several religions advance
taboos related to
names of their gods. In some cases, the name may never be spoken, or only
spoken by inner-circle initiates, or only spoken at prescribed moments during
certain rituals.
In other cases, the name may be never freely spoken, but when written, taboos
apply. It is common to regard the written name of one's god as deserving of respect; it ought
not, for instance, be stepped upon or dirtied, or made common slang in such a way
as to show disrespect. It may be permissible to burn the written name when
there is no longer a use for it.
[edit] Judaism
Most observant Jews forbid discarding
holy objects, including any document with a name of God written on it. Once
written, the name must be preserved indefinitely. This leads to several
noteworthy practices:
[edit] Islam
[edit] Christianity
[edit] Phrases and
alternatives
Tabuism or
glorification are usually reasons not to refer to a deity directly by name.
In addition to
capitalized pronouns
(e.g. He, Him), this can be split into two types: Phrases (such as King of
Kings) and alternatives (such as G*d or HaShem). Generally, phrases are used to extol, and
alternatives are more direct replacements for words.
[edit] Literature and fiction
[edit] References
[edit] See also
[edit] External links
Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Names_of_God"
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Lists of names
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