The ancient Hebrew language that the Old Testament was written in did
not have vowels in its alphabet. In written form, ancient Hebrew was a
consonant-only language. In the original Hebrew, God’s name
transliterates to YHWH (sometimes written in the older style as YHVH).
This is known as the tetragrammaton (meaning “four letters”). Because
of the lack of vowels, Bible scholars debate how the tetragrammaton YHWH was pronounced.
The tetragrammaton consists of four Hebrew letters: yodh, he, waw, and then he repeated. Some versions of the Bible translate the tetragrammaton as “Yahweh” or “Jehovah”; most translate it as “LORD” (all capital letters).
Contrary to what some Christians believe (and at least one cult), Jehovah is not the Divine Name revealed to Israel. The name Jehovah
is a product of mixing different words and different alphabets of
different languages. Due to a fear of accidentally taking God’s name in
vain (Leviticus 24:16),
the Jews basically quit saying it out loud altogether. Instead, when
reading Scripture aloud, the Jews substituted the tetragrammaton YHWH with the word Adonai (“Lord”). Even in the Septuagint (the Greek translation of the Old Testament), the translators substituted Kurios (“Lord”) for the Divine Name. Eventually, the vowels from Adonai (“Lord”) or Elohim (“God”) found their way in between the consonants of YHWH, thus forming YaHWeH.
But this interpolation of vowels does not mean that was how God’s name
was originally pronounced. In fact, we aren’t entirely sure if YHWH should have two syllables or three.
Any number of vowel sounds can be inserted within YHWH, and Jewish scholars are as uncertain of the real pronunciation as Christian scholars are. Jehovah is actually a much later (probably 16th-century) variant. The word Jehovah comes from a three-syllable version of YHWH, YeHoWeH. The Y was replaced with a J (although Hebrew does not even have a J sound) and the W with a V, plus the extra vowel in the middle, resulting in JeHoVaH.
These vowels are the abbreviated forms of the imperfect tense, the
participial form, and the perfect tense of the Hebrew being verb
(English is)—thus the meaning of Jehovah could be understood as “He who will be, is, and has been.”
So, what is God’s Name, and what does it mean? The most likely choice
for how the tetragrammaton was pronounced is “YAH-way,” “YAH-weh,” or
something similar. The name Yahweh refers to God’s self-existence. Yahweh is linked to how God described Himself in Exodus 3:14,
“God said to Moses, ‘I AM WHO I AM. This is what you are to say to the
Israelites: “I AM has sent me to you.”’” God’s name is a reflection of
His being. God is the only self-existent or self-sufficient Being. Only
God has life in and of Himself. That is the essential meaning of the
tetragrammaton, YHWH.
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