The Father’s Name

God is not the Father’s Name. Let’s look at a summary of C.J. Kosters “Come Out of Her, My People” Pages 53-57. Gad is a Syrian or Canaanite deity of good luck or fortune. In Hebrew, it is written GD, but with Massoretic vowel-pointing, it gives us “Gad.” Other Scriptural references to a similar deity, also written GD, have a vowel-pointing giving us “Gawd” or “God.” Gad is identified with Jupiter, the Sky-deity or the Sun-deity. The word “God (or god)” is a title, translating the Hebrew Elohim (or elohim), El (or el), and Eloah.

Satan has replaced the Title “Elohim” with a pagan entity “God”. Elohim means “Strong One or Mighty One”. In Indo-Germanic dictionaries, only one word resembles “god.” It is ghodh and is pronounced the same. This word means union, also sexual union or mating. According to Luneburger Wörterbuch, the following are the same word: Gott, got, gode, gade, god and guth (gud).

Elohim has two names mentioned in Exodus 3:14-15. One is “I Am” (Hebrew “Ehyeh”. Ehyeh is seldomly used as the other name is termed “The Father’s Forever Name For All Generations”. In the majority of Bible Translations this Hebrew name “YHWH” is translated as the pagan sourced “LORD”. LORD can be sourced to pagan identities (1) Larth who was an Estruscan house deity. (2) Loride who was a Teutonic war deity (3) The third potential source is Lordo or Lordon who was another deity.

The Father even predicted his name would be substituted by a pagan entity.

Jeremiah 23:26-27 (KJV) How long shall this be in the heart of the prophets that prophesy lies? Yea, they are prophets of the deceit of their own heart; Which think to cause my people to forget my name by their dreams which they tell every man to his neighbor, as their fathers have forgotten my name for Baal.

Wikipedia shows us how LORD has a connection to Baal. The Northwest Semitic languages—Ugaritic, Phoenician, Hebrew, Amorite, and Aramaic—were all abjads, typically written without vowels. As such, the word baʿal was usually written as BʿL (bet-ayin-lamedh); its vowels have been reconstructed. In these languages, baʿal signified “owner” and, by extension, “lord”, a “master”, or “husband”. It also appears as Baʿali or Baʿaly, “my Lord”.

The underlying Hebrew scroll has “YHWH” instead of “LORD”. This is known as the Tetragrammaton name, יהוה. There is great debate on what vowels to use between the consonants. Modern Hebrew is written without the vowels thus all of the speculation between Yahwey, Yahway, Yahuwah, Yehwey, Yahowah and others leads down a path of indecision and conflict. YHWH is also known as the unpronounceable name.

The four Hebrew letters are Yod, He, Waw, He. I will substitute “YHWH” for “LORD” in any verses used in this book.

In a previous publication of this Book I put forth IEUE  as the Fathers Name. This was determined as a translation from the Ancient Hebrew Pictograph. While I think it’s possible, I did not find any other sources of the information to corroborate the information. There had been three sources but two of them left the internet.

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