In hopes of resolving some of our disputes, I wrote a letter to Nehemia Gordon with several morphological issues related to the Tetragrammaton as it is found in the manuscripts. Mr. Gordon returned my mail with his intentions of having no contact with me because I suggested on CARM that, given the obviousness of the problems with his position, I am driven to conclude that he maintains his positions because of the following that he has amassed (he’s married to the position now) and that he depends on the income from the books and speaking engagements that he sells those who have started to follow him. Because of this, I will not have any chance to engage Mr. Gordon and sway him from this Yehovah nonsense.
Wednesday, May 9, 2018
Cholam: Missing in Action
The vast majority of Hebrew scholars are in agreement that the name יהוה is an instance of kri perpetuum. The vowels that are written on the name belong to the word אדני and not to the letters of the name יהוה. Nehemia Gordon disagrees, though, and here is why he’s wrong.
Sunday, May 6, 2018
Hebrew Orthography
Thursday, May 3, 2018
Jehovah Rants and Me
This blog is a reaction to Nehemia Gordon’s claim that the Tetragrammaton should be pronounced Yehovah and that the Masoretes were actually preserving the correct vowels of the name all along. Those who added vowels to the Bible wrote the Name with the vowels יְהוָֹה, which would be read mark-for-mark as Yehovah (in academic transcription, Yɘhōvâ), and Gordon claims that this is how the name should be pronounced. By means of this blog, I want to highlight the many problems that exist in Gordon’s arguments and to defend the scholarly reconstruction יַהְוֶה (Yahveh) as the best guess we have at how the name was originally pronounced.
What about ΙΑΩ in Greek?
Greek texts of the New Testament universally render the Tetragrammaton in verse quotations as κύριος , reflecting the Jewish tradition of re...
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More than seven years since my last post on this blog and in a surprising twist, I came across someone on Facebook’s Nerdy Biblical Languag...
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Introduction The vast majority of Hebrew scholars are in agreement that the name יהוה is an instance of kri perpetuum . The vowels that ...
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In hopes of resolving some of our disputes, I wrote a letter to Nehemia Gordon with several morphological issues related to the Tetragrammat...