Annihilation of Mankind in 3 Stages




Mankind will be almost totally wiped out at the time of the end, according to veiled prophecies in both the Old and New Testaments of the Bible

Mankind represented by the prophet’s hair.
In the book of Ezekiel, the LORD told the prophet to shave his head and beard. “And thou, son of man, take thee a sharp knife, take thee a barber's rasor, and cause it to pass upon thine head and upon thy beard: then take thee balances to weight, and divide the hair” (Ezekiel 5:1).
Ezekiel was instructed to divide the hair into three parts, with each part representing a third of mankind, and illustrate what will happen to each group. “Thou shalt burn with fire a third part in the midst of the city, when the days of the siege are fulfilled: and thou shalt take a third part, and smite about it with a knife: and a third part thou shalt scatter in the wind; and I will draw out a sword after them” (Ezekiel 5:2).
Let us now endeavor to analyze the meanings of the three parts of the prophecy, step by step. These are repeated in somewhat more direct and simpler terms a few verses later.

First 33% will die of pestilence and famine.
“Thou shalt burn with fire a third part in the midst of the city, when the days of the siege are fulfilled…” (Ezekiel 5:2a).
“A third part of thee shall die with the pestilence, and with famine shall they be consumed in the midst of thee” (Ezekiel 5:12a)  
This seems to be linked to the appearance of the fourth horseman of the Apocalypse, who will usher in a world war (“siege”) and the much-dreaded Great Tribulation that the apostle John wrote about in the last book of the Bible:
 “And I looked, and behold a pale horse: and his name that sat on him was Death, and Hell followed with him. And power was given unto them over the fourth part of the earth, to kill with sword, and with hunger, and with death, and with the beasts of the earth” (Revelation 6:8).
They will hold sway over a quarter of the world. And, as the names of the horseman (Death) and his retinue (“hell” – Hades, region of the dead) denote, they will bring about widespread death through war (“sword”), famine (“hunger”), pandemics (“death”), and hunger-maddened animals (“beasts of the earth”).
The “pale horse” in the original Greek text is hippos chloros (“green horse”). As green is the traditional color of the Arabs and Islam, “green horse” probably refers to Islamic jihadists. Moreover, Muslims now make up about one-fourth of the world population.

Second 33% will perish on the day of the LORD.
“…and thou shalt take a third part, and smite about it with a knife…” (Ezekiel 5:2b).
“…and a third part shall fall by the sword round about thee…” (Ezekiel 5:12b).
An army of destroying angels will arrive on the day of the LORD to kill wicked people. “I have commanded my sanctified ones, I have also called my mighty ones for mine anger, even them that rejoice in my highness. The noise of a multitude in the mountains, like as of a great people; a tumultuous noise of the kingdoms of nations gathered together: the LORD of hosts mustereth the host of the battle. They come from a far country, from the end of heaven, even the LORD, and the weapons of his indignation, to destroy the whole land. Howl ye; for the day of the LORD is at hand; it shall come as a destruction from the Almighty(Isaiah 13:3-6).
”A fire devoureth before them; and behind them a flame burneth: the land is as the garden of Eden before them, and behind them a desolate wilderness; yea, and nothing shall escape them. The appearance of them is as the appearance of horses; and as horsemen, so shall they run. Like the noise of chariots on the tops of mountains shall they leap, like the noise of a flame of fire that devoureth the stubble, as a strong people set in battle array. Before their face the people shall be much pained: all faces shall gather blackness” (Joel 2:3-6).
“And the number of the army of the horsemen were two hundred thousand thousand: and I heard the number of them. And thus I saw the horses in the vision, and them that sat on them, having breastplates of fire, and of jacinth, and brimstone: and the heads of the horses were as the heads of lions; and out of their mouths issued fire and smoke and brimstone. By these three was the third part of men killed, by the fire, and by the smoke, and by the brimstone, which issued out of their mouths” (Revelation 9:16-18).

Last 33% will remain.
The prophet Zechariah made a running tally of the casualties. “And it shall come to pass, that in all the land, saith the LORD, two parts therein shall be cut off and die; but the third shall be left therein” (Zechariah 13:8).

Last 33% will be scattered in the air.
“…and a third part thou shalt scatter in the wind; and I will draw out a sword after them” (Ezekiel 5:2c).
“…and I will scatter a third part into all the winds, and I will draw out a sword after them” (Ezekiel 5:12c).
How will the remaining people be scattered in the air? Planet Earth will overturn! “Behold, the LORD maketh the earth empty, and maketh it waste, and turneth it upside down, and scattereth abroad the inhabitants thereof” (Isaiah 24:1).

Last 33% will go through fire.
The worst, however, is yet to come. “And I will bring the third part through the fire, and will refine them as silver is refined, and will try them as gold is tried: they shall call on my name, and I will hear them: I will say, It is my people: and they shall say, The LORD is my God” (Zechariah 13:9).
Those who will call on the true name of the LORD will be physically delivered.

A few will be divinely protected.
“But take a few strands of hair and tuck them away in the folds of your garment(Ezekiel 5:3).
Mercifully, a blessed few will survive through the ordeals. “For in the time of trouble he shall hide me in his pavilion: in the secret of his tabernacle shall he hide me; he shall set me up upon a rock” (Psalm 27:5).
“Seek ye the LORD, all ye meek of the earth, which have wrought his judgment; seek righteousness, seek meekness: it may be ye shall be hid in the day of the LORD's anger” (Zephaniah 2:3).
“Come, my people, enter thou into thy chambers, and shut thy doors about thee: hide thyself as it were for a little moment, until the indignation be overpast. For, behold, the LORD cometh out of his place to punish the inhabitants of the earth for their iniquity: the earth also shall disclose her blood, and shall no more cover her slain” (Isaiah 26:20-21).

The rest will go through fire.
“Then take of them again, and cast them into the midst of the fire, and burn them in the fire; for thereof shall a fire come forth into all the house of Israel” (Ezekiel 5:4).

The elect will be taken before fire engulfs the earth.
“Likewise also as it was in the days of Lot; they did eat, they drank, they bought, they sold, they planted, they builded; But the same day that Lot went out of Sodom it rained fire and brimstone from heaven, and destroyed them all” (Luke 17:28-29).
            Lot personifies the “elect”. They will be taken up in the first resurrection of the dead and “rapture” of the living elect saints before the fire from heaven burns up the earth.

Earth will burst into flames.
“And the angel took the censer, and filled it with fire of the altar, and cast it into the earth: and there were voices, and thunderings, and lightnings, and an earthquake” (Revelation 8:5).
“But the day of the Lord will come as a thief in the night; in the which the heavens shall pass away with a great noise, and the elements shall melt with fervent heat, the earth also and the works that are therein shall be burned up” (2 Peter 3:10) .

Hardly any survivors.
“Therefore hath the curse devoured the earth, and they that dwell therein are desolate: therefore the inhabitants of the earth are burned, and few men left(Isaiah 24:6).
“I will make a man more precious than fine gold; even a man than the golden wedge of Ophir” (Isaiah 13:12).
After the earth shall have been burned, it will be easier to find gold than a living man.
 Amen.

(Excerpted from, END TIME Decoded, by M.M. Tauson, Amazon.com)


God, the Omnipresent




The Holy Scriptures tell us that God is in all places at the same time. Quite unexpectedly, recent discoveries in a relatively new field of science seem to provide evidence that God is truly present everywhere all at once. We refer to the young branch of physics called quantum mechanics (QM).

Quantum mechanics.
Quantum mechanics, or quantum physics, which developed in the 1920s, is the study of the smallest parts that make up matter and energy – such as protons, neutrons, electrons, positrons, quarks, photons, neutrinos, and a host of other minuscule entities. As a theoretical science, QM provides precise mathematical rules that describe how the universe works on the smallest scales. It has proven so successful in predicting results that entire industries have been built on QM -- microelectronics, computers, lasers. Nonetheless, QM is still oftentimes referred to as “weird science.”
Many phenomena uncovered and predicted by quantum mechanics are so mind-boggling they leave physicists flabbergasted. Danish physicist Niels Bohr, winner of the 1922 Nobel Prize, said: “Anyone who isn’t shocked by quantum physics has not understood it.”30
As his fellow Nobel Laureate Richard Feynman wrote, “it is often stated that of all the theories proposed in this century, the silliest is quantum theory. Some say that the only thing that quantum theory has going for it, in fact, is that it is unquestionably correct.”31
Cosmologist Andreas Albrecht of the University of California at Davis claims QM is "the fundamental language that Nature speaks. Nature doesn't answer questions for certain; it answers questions by giving probabilities... There’s a possibility that almost anything happens… It comes out of the mathematics. It's forced down our throats."32

“Nonlocality.”
Quantum physicists have observed that subatomic particles perform magical or, more appropriately, sci-fi-like acts. Fred Alan Wolf wrote in Space-Time and Beyond: “Particles don’t behave as we might expect them to. For example, they vanish and reappear in unexpected places in violation of energy conservation rules.” Particles make quantum jumps -- that is, they go from one place to another without traveling across the space between the two locations!33 How are they able to do that?
In the 1940s American-born British physicist David Bohm, a friend and protégé of Einstein, observed in his work in plasma (gases of high density electrons and positive ions) that, on the subatomic level, location ceases to exist! Any point in space is equal to all other points in space. They are conjoined, no matter how distantly separated they may appear to be. In other words, any one quantum particle is present everywhere in the universe. Physicists have since accepted the phenomenon and call it “nonlocality.” Paul Davis of the University of Newcastle upon Tyne has concluded that “the nonlocal aspects of quantum systems is therefore a general property of nature.”34
According to the Encarta Encyclopedia: “The strong correlations observed in these experiments suggest to many that we inhabit a nonlocal reality, meaning that what happens here and now could depend upon something far away in space, time, or both.”35 Nonlocality demonstrates how God can be present in all points of the universe at the same time.
David wondered: “Whither shall I go from thy spirit? or whither shall I flee from thy presence? If I ascend up into heaven, thou art there: if I make my bed in hell, behold, thou art there. If I take the wings of the morning, and dwell in the uttermost parts of the sea; Even there shall thy hand lead me, and thy right hand shall hold me” (Ps 139:7-10).
Quantum mechanics proves God is omnipresent.
_______
30Niels Bohr, quoted by Chuck Missler, Cosmic Codes, Revised 2004, p. 337
31Richard Feynman, quoted by Missler, op. cit., p. 338
32Andreas Albrecht, quoted by Andrew Chaikin, “Are There Other Universes?”, Science Tuesday, 05 Feb. 2002, Internet
33Fred Alan Wolf, Space-Time and Beyond, 1987, p. 133
34Paul Davis, Superforce, 1948, p. 48; quoted by Missler, op. cit., p. 340
35Bell’s Inequality, Microsoft Encarta Encyclopedia Deluxe 2004

(Excerpted from Chapter 1, Mysteries of Our Maker, THE DEEP THINGS OF GOD: A Primer on the Secrets of Heaven and Earth by M.M. Tauson, Amazon.com)


God, the Immutable



The most striking characteristic of nature, from Aristotle’s point of view, was “change.”29 Intellectuals who are of a like mind in our modern age have even coined a clever maxim: “Change is the only constant.”
It is an established principle in physics that all things change. The second law of thermodynamics, entropy, states that spontaneous change in isolated systems proceeds from a state of order to one of disorder. In simple terms, all things break down, deteriorate, or decay through time. The general rule in the universe is change. Everything changes.
The only exception to that rule is God.

Outside time.
God declared through the prophet Malachi that He is immutable – He does not change. “For I am the LORD, I change not…” (Mal 3:6). David repeats that truth in a psalm: “They shall perish, but thou shalt endure: yea, all of them shall wax old like a garment; as a vesture shalt thou change them, and they shall be changed: But thou art the same, and thy years shall have no end” (Ps 102:26-27). God has passed on this immutability to His Son, who has the same nature. “Jesus Christ the same yesterday, and to day, and for ever” (Heb 13:8).
There are at least two reasons, both backed by modern scientific principles, why God does not change.
First, as we have already seen, God, as the Ein Sof or “Infinite Nothingness” is outside space-time. Changes take place only in time. Since God is not subject to the passage of time, He is timeless. And, being timeless, He cannot change. God is immutable.

God is light.
The clue to the second reason is in James’s reiteration of God’s unchanging nature. “Every good and perfect gift is from above, coming down from the Father of the heavenly lights, who does not change like shifting shadows” (James 1:17-18, NIV). An additional element, though, appears in the passage: “Father of the heavenly lights.” As such, God must also be light, which is precisely what John says: “This then is the message which we have heard of him, and declare unto you, that God is light, and in him is no darkness at all” (John 1:5).
What is light? It is pure radiant energy -- a form of electromagnetic radiation consisting of photons, the fastest moving things in the universe. Having no mass, photons travel through space at some 186,000 miles per second (about 300,000 km/sec.) without any loss of energy. Nothing travels faster than light, whose velocity is the cosmic speed limit. At the speed of light, time stops. Light therefore, is also timeless and cannot change. Naturally no less is its Creator, God, who is light as well. Yes, God is truly immutable.

29Aristotle, World Book 2005 (Deluxe)

(Excerpted from Chapter 1, The Mysteries of Our Maker, THE DEEP THINGS OF GOD: A Primer on the Secrets of Heaven and Earth by M.M. Tauson)

God, the Immanent



Solar and galactic systems are held together by the gravitational force of the mass (matter) and energy they contain. The matter primarily comprises hydrogen and helium, while the energy consists mainly of electromagnetic radiation in many forms.22

Missing mass?
The Big Bang Theory of the birth of the universe assumes the presence of enough mass in the rapidly expanding universe for matter to come together and form stars and galaxies. However, estimates of the universe’s actual mass consistently fall far short of the minimum amount necessary to hold the stars and galaxies together.
“In 1933 the late Fritz Zwicky pointed out that the galaxies of the Coma cluster are moving too fast: there is not enough visible mass in the galaxies to bind the cluster together by gravity. Subsequent observations verified this ‘missing’ mass in other clusters.”23
Considering the observed velocities and apparent masses of the galaxies in the clusters, they should have broken up a long, long time ago. Something unseen is keeping them together. On a smaller scale, in the 1970s spiral galaxies were found spinning just as fast at the outer edges as they do at the center. It is a mystery how they have been doing this for countless eons without flying apart.

“Dark matter.”
Author Walt Brown writes that “in almost every case the velocities of the individual galaxies are high enough to allow them to escape from the cluster. In effect, the clusters are ‘boiling.’ This statement is certainly true if we assume that the only gravitational force present is that exerted by visible matter, but it is true even if we assume that every galaxy in the cluster, like the Milky Way, is surrounded by a halo of dark matter that contains 90 percent of the mass of the galaxy.”24
The missing mass, which does not emit, reflect, or absorb light or any kind of radiation, is called “dark matter,” because no one can see or even detect it. Paul spoke about this to the Hebrews: “By faith we understand that the universe was formed at God's command, so that what is seen was not made out of what was visible” (Heb 11:3, NIV). The visible universe has been created from invisible things.
The World Book points out that the combined mass of all the stars, planets, and cosmic dust and gases accounts for only about 4% of the energy needed to hold the universe together. Of the remaining 96% that astronomers cannot detect, dark matter accounts for approximately 23%.25 Would the scientists have believed Paul if he had spoken to them? “He is before all things, and in him all things hold together” (Col 1:17-18, NIV).

“Dark energy.”
Big Bang theorists assume that the expansion of the universe should be slowing, in the same way that a ball thrown upward into the air must slow as it moves away from the earth’s gravity. Cosmologists have taken measurements of this cosmic deceleration for decades. Their findings, rechecked many times, always show the same perplexing result: The universe’s expansion is not decelerating, but is instead accelerating!26,27
To preserve the viability of the Big Bang theory, an explanation had to be found. There must be an unknown energy actively counteracting gravity and causing stars and galaxies to accelerate away from each other. That unknown, undetectable energy must be, what else -- dark energy. It is said to represent the last 73% missing in the equation.28

The Spirit of God?
God, 2,600 years ago, said through the prophet Jeremiah: “Can any hide himself in secret places that I shall not see him? saith the LORD. Do not I fill heaven and earth? saith the LORD” (Jer 23:24). God said He fills the entire universe. But is not the Ein Sof or “Infinite Nothingness” outside the universe?
“God is a spirit” (John 4:24), and as many of us know “the Spirit of God moved upon the face of the waters” (Gen 1:2b) in the emerging universe. It appears that, although the Ein Sof remains outside of creation, His Spirit, which is energy, entered the physical world. Paradoxically, God is both apart from and a part of the universe!
Are the unseen and undetectable “dark matter” and “dark energy,” as well as all observable matter and energy in the cosmos, God? Paul hints at the answer. “While we look not at the things which are seen, but at the things which are not seen: for the things which are seen are temporal; but the things which are not seen are eternal” (2 Cor 4:18). The unseen, eternal God is immanent in the universe.
______________________

22.Cosmos, Encyclopaedia Britannica 2009 Student and Home Edition
23.M. Mitchell Waldrop, “The Large-Scale Structure of the Universe,” Science, Vol. 219, 4 March 1983, p. 1050
24.Trefil, p. 93; cited by Walt Brown, Astrophysical Sciences, creationscience.com
25.Universe, World Book 2005 (Deluxe)
26.Trefil, loc. cit.
27.Waldrop, loc. cit.
28.Universe, op. cit.

(Excerpted from Chapter 1, Mysteries of Our Maker, THE DEEP THINGS OF GOD: A Primer on the Secrets of Heaven and Earth by M.M. Tauson, Amazon.com)



God, the Cosmic Intelligence

Did the universe, including man, come about simply by accident as most scientists would have us believe? Paul Davies, a known atheist, notes: “A long list of additional ‘lucky accidents’ and ‘coincidences’ has been compiled… impressive evidence that life as we know it depends very sensitively on the form of the laws of physics, and on some seemingly fortuitous accidents in the actual values that nature has chosen for various particle masses, force strengths, and so on…”14
Scientists are awed and at the same time baffled by the incredible “natural” order and amazing “accidental” precision of forces in the cosmos. The balance and harmony of the laws of physics are so perfect, it is difficult to believe they all happened by chance.
Four fundamental forces.
Scientists have identified the four fundamental forces at work in the universe.
1. The strong nuclear force, which bonds the quarks that make up the protons and neutrons in an atom, and holds those protons and neutrons together to form the atomic nucleus in matter.
2. The electromagnetic force that keeps electrons orbiting around the atomic nucleus, and fastens together the molecules that make up all living organisms, as well as the planets and the stars.
3. Gravitation, the attraction between all forms of matter produced by their masses (amounts of matter), keeping objects and organisms on the ground, and regulating the motions of planets, stars, galaxies.
4. The weak nuclear force that causes radioactive decay in atoms and generates nuclear reactions that enable the Sun and the stars to produce light and heat.
Consider. All matter is mostly space. Quantum particles such as protons, neutrons, and electrons that form atoms are separated by vast distances. For instance, the nucleus of a hydrogen atom is about 10-13 cm, while the radius of its electron’s orbit is some 10-8 cm. If the nucleus were as big as a pinhead, the electron would be a football field away!15 If any of the four fundamental forces fails to function, or be altered even one small fraction, all atomic components would fly apart and disintegrate. All matter would cease to exist, and all energy would disappear without a trace.
Something must have brought these forces into play. Or, should we say, Someone? Says Nehemiah, “You alone are the LORD; You have made heaven, The heaven of heavens, with all their host, The earth and everything on it, The seas and all that is in them, And You preserve them all” (Neh 9:6, NKJV).
The “laws of heaven.”
The laws of physics do not seem to have evolved. They appear to have been present from the very beginning as matter formed almost instantly. Prof. Keith Ward of King’s College, London University, wrote: “The universe began to expand in a very precisely ordered manner, in accordance with a set of basic mathematical constants and laws which govern its subsequent development into a universe of the sort we see today. There already existed a very complex array of quantum laws describing possible interactions of elementary particles, and the universe, according to one main theory, originated by the operation of fluctuations in a quantum field in accordance with those laws.”16
The ancients knew that the universe has laws governing its existence and operation. Job asks quizzically: “Do you know the laws of the heavens? Can you set up [God's] dominion over the earth?” (Job 38:33, NIV). If the universe has laws, there must have been a “lawgiver.” Albert Einstein said, “Everyone who is seriously involved in the pursuit of science becomes convinced that a spirit is manifest in the laws of the Universe – a spirit vastly superior to that of man.”17
Jeremiah suggests who had set up the physical laws of the universe: “This is what the LORD says: `If I have not established my covenant with day and night and the fixed laws of heaven and earth,…" (Jer 33:25, NIV).
An “intelligent designer.”
Wernher von Braun, who was also the first director of the U.S. National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA), remarked: “One cannot be exposed to the law and order of the universe without concluding that there must be purpose and design behind it all. In the world around us, we can behold the obvious manifestation of an ordered, structured plan or design…”18 He concluded: “The better we understand the intricacies of the universe… the more (we) marvel at the inherent design upon which it is based… the admission of a design… ultimately raises the question of a Designer…”19
British astrophysicist Sir Fred Hoyle marveled: “A common sense interpretation of the facts suggests that a super-intellect has monkeyed with the physics, as well as with the chemistry and biology, and that there are no blind forces worth speaking about in nature. The numbers one calculates from the facts seem to me so overwhelming as to put this conclusion almost beyond question.”20
“Roger Penrose, professor of mathematics at Oxford University, has among his areas of expertise the study of the universe after its creation. He was awarded the Wolf Prize for his analytic description of the Big Bang, which forms the basis of all Big Bang models. Penrose finds the laws of nature tuned for life. This balance of nature’s laws is so perfect and so unlikely to have occurred by chance that he avers an intelligent ‘Creator’ must have chosen them.”21
Solomon said God introduced wisdom, or intelligence, before the Creation. "I, wisdom, dwell together with prudence; I possess knowledge and discretion… The LORD brought me forth as the first of his works, before his deeds of old; I was appointed from eternity, from the beginning, before the world began” (Prov 8:12, 22-23, NIV). God had, even before His very first creative act, set into motion the physical laws that would govern all creation.
The psalmist intones: “O LORD, how manifold are thy works! in wisdom hast thou made them all…” (Ps 104:24; also 136:5; Prov 3:19;8:12,22-23; Jer 10:12, 51:15).
______________________
14Paul Davies, The Mind of God: The Scientific Basis for a Rational World, 1992, pp. 199-200
15“Whence Our ‘Reality’?”, Personal Update, December 2003, p. 3
16Keith Ward, God, Chance & Necessity, 1996, p. 17
17The Quotable Einstein, p. 152; quoted in “The Beginning of the Universe,” Does God Exist?, 2000, p. 12
18von Braun, op. cit.
19Ibid.
20Quoted by Fred Heeren, Show Me God: What the Message from Space Is Telling Us About God, 1997, frontispiece; cited in “Evidence in Plain Sight,” Does God Exist?, 2000, p. 5
21Roger Penrose, The Emperor’s New Mind, 1991; cited by Gerald Schroeder, The Science of God, 1997, p. 22

(Excerpted from Chapter 1, Mysteries of Our Maker, THE DEEP THINGS OF GOD: A Primer on the Secrets of Heaven and Earth by M.M. Tauson, Amazon.com)


What is God?


Is God real? Did He create man, or did man, fearfully conscious of his weakness and mortality, create God in his mind? If God is real, what is He like? Author Paul Johnson (A Quest for God, 1996) wrote: “The existence or non-existence of God is the most important question we humans are ever asked to answer.”3

Before the creation.
The 13th century Sefer HaZohar (“Book of Splendor”) describes God before the creation of the universe: "Before He gave any shape to the world, before He produced any form, He was alone, without form and without resemblance to anything else. Who then can comprehend how He was before the Creation? Hence it is forbidden to lend Him any form or similitude, or even to call Him by His sacred name, or to indicate Him by a single letter or a single point…”4 God was all there was -- neither inside nor outside anything – having no spatial dimension whatsoever or frame of reference conceivable by the human mind.

Proof of His existence.
Today, the Scriptures tell us that the proof of God’s existence is apparent in the created universe: “For the invisible things of him from the creation of the world are clearly seen, being understood by the things that are made, even his eternal power and Godhead; so that they are without excuse” (Rom 1:20).
Indeed, the breathtaking beauty of nature on earth and the awe-inspiring majesty of the heavens point to the hand of a Creator. But these are oftentimes subjective thoughts engendered by surges of human emotions.
Wernher von Braun, the German rocket scientist who became the father of the U.S. space program, wrote: “My experiences with science led me to God… Prove the existence of God? Must we really light a candle to see the sun?”5 In today’s world, we have been conditioned to demand rational and objective explanations for nearly everything. Surprisingly enough, modern science supplies many of the answers we seek – beginning with a number of the traditionally acknowledged characteristics of God taught by the Scriptures.

God the Eternal
The Bible repeatedly avers that God has no beginning and will have no end. For instance, Moses exulted: “Before the mountains were brought forth, or ever thou hadst formed the earth and the world, even from everlasting to everlasting, thou art God” (Ps 90:2). John calls God “him which is, and which was, and which is to come…” (Rev 1:4b).
Jewish mystics refer to God as the Ein Sof (“Infinite Nothingness”), literally, “Without End,” eternal, infinite. Without a past and a future, God is pure consciousness in timeless eternity. Yet, “Without End,” according to some, implies a beginning, so it would perhaps be more appropriate to call God the Ein Techila – “Without Beginning.” (But does that not imply an end?) Others insist that no name would be appropriate for the Creator, because the letters and sounds of names came only after the Creation.6

Beginning of time?
The very first words of the Scriptures relate that time had a starting point. “In the beginning…” (Gen 1:1a).
The apostle Paul repeated the idea no less than three times nearly 2,000 years ago: “No, we speak of God's secret wisdom, a wisdom that has been hidden and that God destined for our glory before time began (1 Cor 2:7-8, NIV). “Paul, a servant of God and an apostle of Jesus Christ for the faith of God's elect and the knowledge of the truth that leads to godliness -- a faith and knowledge resting on the hope of eternal life, which God, who does not lie, promised before the beginning of time (Titus 1:1-2, NIV). And… “This grace was given us in Christ Jesus before the beginning of time (2 Tim 1:9-10, NIV).
If time had a beginning, “when” and how did it begin?

When time began.
Time must have begun with the Creation. “In the beginning God created the heaven…” (Gen 1:1a).
What is “heaven”? The word, in the ordinary sense, is synonymous with “sky” -- the expanse above the surface of the earth where the birds fly, where the clouds drift by and, farther out, where the sun, moon, and stars shine. In short, “heaven” is the space above, surrounding, and beyond our planet Earth in all directions. Space, science teaches, is a vacuum (“emptiness”).
So, God created “heaven” or empty space to put His creation in. As the Jewish mystics tell it, the Ein Sof caused a part of His “Infinite Nothingness” to contract in order to make room for the emergence of the physical universe. Thus, empty "space" appeared. The "contraction" or "constriction" is called Tzimtzum, a term first used in his teachings by the Kabbalist master Isaac Luria (1534-72).7 Critics, however, argue that “contraction” is an inaccurate and misleading term as it implies previously existing dimensions. The Ein Sof has no spatial dimension of any sort.
In any case, time came into existence when God created space (“heaven”). How? We measure space (or any object occupying space) by means of the three physical dimensions of length, width, and height. We measure a fourth, more subtle dimension – time -- through the movement of an object in space. The 12th century Jewish philosopher Maimonides noted: “Time is an accident consequent upon motion and is necessarily attached to it. Neither of them exists without the other. Motion does not exist except in time, and time cannot be conceived by the intellect except together with motion.”8 For example, a ball thrown from point A may take two seconds to reach point B. Without the dimensions of space as a frame of reference, there can be no movement and, therefore, no time.
As the Encarta Encyclopedia points out: “In Einstein’s general theory of relativity, which was introduced in 1916, the very existence of time depends on the presence of space.”9 The editors speculate that “the big bang theory (of the birth of the universe) does not explain what existed before the big bang. It may be that time itself began at the big bang, so that it makes no sense to discuss what happened ‘before’ the big bang.”10

Time will end.
Physicist Paul Davies, of the University of Adelaide, Australia, wrote: “Modern scientific cosmology is the most ambitious enterprise of all to emerge from Einstein’s work. When scientists began to explore the implications of Einstein’s time for the universe as a whole, they made one of the most important discoveries in the history of human thought: that time, and hence all of physical reality, must have had a definite origin in the past. If time is flexible and mutable, as Einstein demonstrated, then it is possible for time to come into existence – and also to pass away again; there can be a beginning and an end to time.”11
Truly, the Scriptures also tell us that time will ultimately come to an end: “But as for you, Daniel, conceal these words and seal up the book until the end of time…” (Dan 12:4, NASU).
“Space-time” inseparable.
Space and time are so inseparably tied together that scientists refer to the continuum of space and time as simply one entity: “space-time.”
The Jews had a 16th century saying: "HaMakom V'HaZman Echad Hu." ("Space and time, they are one.”)12 Author Gerald Schroeder, commenting on Albert Einstein’s special theory of relativity, observes that “space and time are linked together and are interchangeable. The connection between space and time, however, is not apparent unless you are dealing with vast distances, very short times, or things moving very near to the speed of light.”13

God outside space-time.
If God created space and time, then He obviously pre-existed and must be outside space-time. As the whole cannot be contained in any of its parts, infinite God cannot be confined in the finite universe He merely created. King Solomon asks: “But will God indeed dwell on the earth? behold, the heaven and heaven of heavens cannot contain thee; how much less this house that I have builded?” (1 Kings 8:27).
Moreover, everything in the universe functions according to the laws of physics. Would God subject Himself to the physical laws He Himself had established? If He did, He would no longer be infinite.
Space and time had a beginning, and their Creator existed before time began. He is therefore before, above, and beyond time, which has no effects on Him. Thus, God is timeless. Science confirms Scripture: God is eternal -- with no beginning and no end.

(Excerpted from Chapter 1, The Mysteries of Our Maker, THE DEEP THINGS OF GOD: A Primer on the Secrets of Heaven and Earth by M.M. Tauson)

3Paul Johnson, A Quest for God, 1996, p. 1
4Ein Sof, Wikipedia, Internet
5Wernher von Braun, letter to the California State Board of Education, September 14, 1972
6Ein Sof, op. cit.
7Tzimtzum, op. cit.
8Moses Maimonides, The Guide for the Perplexed, 1190
9Time, Microsoft Encarta Encyclopedia Deluxe 2004
10Big Bang Theory, op. cit.
11Paul Davies, It’s About Time, 1995, p. 17
12Study of the Book of Revelation, “Spiritual Time, Space, Mass, Light and Energy,” updated 8/20/00, Internet
13Fred Alan Wolf, Space-Time and Beyond, 1987, p. 140


The original Name of G-d


 “And God spoke to Moses and said to him: "I am the LORD. I appeared to Abraham, to Isaac, and to Jacob, as God Almighty, but by My name, LORD, I was not known to them” (Ex 6:2-3, NKJV). “God Almighty” is English for El Shaddai, which is actually a title. 
In a Hebrew Union College Annual article in 1961, Sigmund Mowinchel analyzed the passage: “It is generally recognized that (Exodus) 6:2-3 states that the name (YHWH) was not known till it was revealed to Moses, and that to the patriarchs God had appeared as El Shaddai.”62

A pre-Mosaic Name?
After Eve gave birth to Cain, she referred to G-d as “the LORD.” “And Adam knew Eve his wife; and she conceived, and bare Cain, and said, I have gotten a man from the LORD” (Gen 4:1). As we know, the term “the LORD” has been placed as a substitute in nearly all the verses where the Tetragrammaton (Four-Lettered Name) had originally been written. 
After Adam’s grandson Enos by Seth was born, men began to invoke the Name of “the L-RD.” “And to Seth, to him also there was born a son; and he called his name Enos: then began men to call upon the name of the LORD” (Gen 4:25-26).
Abraham, who lived some 500 years before G-d revealed His Four-Lettered Name to Moses, also called on the Name of “the L-RD.” “And the LORD appeared unto Abram, and said, Unto thy seed will I give this land: and there builded he an altar unto the LORD, who appeared unto him. And he removed from thence unto a mountain on the east of Bethel, and pitched his tent, having Bethel on the west, and Hai on the east: and there he builded an altar unto the LORD, and called upon the name of the LORD” (Gen 12:7-8).
We can see that the first men, long before Moses was born, called on the Name of “the L-RD.” What was that Name? Did the patriarchs know a primeval sacred Name that was different from YHWH?

A deeper meaning?
The Encyclopedia Judaica notes the differing opinions: “According to the documentary hypothesis, the literary sources in the Pentateuch known as the Elohist and the Priestly Document never use the name (YHWH) for God until it is revealed to Moses (Ex. 3:13; 6:2-3); but the Yahwist source uses it from Genesis 2:4 on and puts the name in Eve’s declaration, ‘I along with (YHWH) have made a man,’ thus implying that it was known to the first human generation (Gen. 4:1; cf 4:26).”63
Mowinchel believes the Name YHWH was known to the first men. “The earliest Israelite historian J uses the name Yahweh in the patriarchal stories without any reservation, and in his opinion it was known already by the third generation of mankind; at the time of Enosh, the son of Seth, (men) – or as the Vulgate says: he – began to call upon the name of Yahweh… the tribes that under the leadership of Moses – became the people of Israel, already knew and worshiped… Yahweh… What Exod. 3:16 tells us is that the deeper meaning of the name was revealed to Moses by Yahweh himself… When the elders of the people hear that he knows even the mysterious meaning of the name, then they must believe that he is telling the truth.
“In J’s opinion it was not the name of Yahweh, which was revealed to Moses here – that was known already by Enosh centuries before – but the deeper meaning, which according to Yahwistic tradition and the theology of the ‘school’ of J, was hidden in the name.”64
The meaning of His Name that the L-RD gave to Moses in Exodus 3:14 is “I AM THAT I AM.” On the other hand, Mowinchel fails to say if J (Jahwistic or Yahwistic source) gives the least bit of a hint as to what the deeper, hidden meaning of G-d’s Sacred Name is supposed to be.

Another, earlier Name.
If G-d revealed the Tetragrammaton for the first time only to Moses, then the Name of G-d that Adam and Eve, Seth, Enos, Abraham, and others knew and called upon was not YHWH. Clearly, it was another, earlier Name. But why does “the L-RD,” which was used to replace YHWH in Scriptures, occur as early as in the book of Genesis?
Could it be that Moses, who wrote the first five books of the Bible, in his great zeal and esteem for the sacred Name revealed to him, began using the Tetragrammaton in the Scriptural text right from the account of the creation of Adam (Gen 2:4)?

Alternative suffixal form
We have seen that in Israelite theoporic names, the suffix -iah or -jah is actually the abbreviated or Two-Lettered Name of G-d, Yah. The Encyclopaedia Judaica, however, informs us that the suffix has yet another form. “This is confirmed, at least for the vowel of the first syllable of the name, by the shorter form Yah, which is sometimes used in poetry (e.g., Ex. 15:2) and the -yahu or -yah that serves as the final syllable in many Hebrew names.”65 The alternative form is -yahu.
The Jewish Encyclopedia corroborates this, saying that the two short forms of the Name appear as “Yahu or Yah in the second part of such names.”66 Seow gives an example: “In the final position it appears as -yahu (-iah) or -yah (-iah) as in the alternate spellings for ‘Azariah,’ Azaryahu and Azaryah.”67 In this vein, throughout the Hebrew Scriptures the name of the prophet Elijah, except on four or five occasions, is spelled Eliyahu, with a waw in the end. Is there much difference between the two? They are probably as different as two kingdoms were from one another.

2 kingdoms, 2 suffixes.
After King Solomon died around 975 B.C., the Israelite monarchy broke up into two -- the ten-tribe kingdom of Israel in the north and the two-tribe kingdom of Judah in the south. The separation led to a distinction between the suffix of theoporic names in the north and of that in the south. Biblical Archaelogy Review editor Hershel Shanks said in the magazine’s May-June 1994 issue: “-yahu (was) the common suffix in Judah... (in the northern kingdom of Israel the suffix was yah).”68 
Writer P. Kyle McCarter concurs: “The expected form of the divine name… when it appears as the final part of a Judahite personal name in this period (late 7th to the early 6th centuries B.C.), is yhw, pronounced yahu (long a and u)…”69  

Archeological evidences.
The March-April 1996 issue of Biblical Archaelogy Review featured a limestone seal from the 7th century B.C. that reads, “Belonging to Asayahu, servant of the King” (actually a high royal official). The short form “Asaiah” is in 2 Chronicles 34:20 -- “And the king commanded Hilkiah... and Asaiah a servant of the king’s...”70   
The same issue of the magazine had a 7th-6th century B.C bulla (seal impression on clay) used by a scribe to seal a document, which reads, “Belonging to Berekyahu, son of Neriyahu, the Scribe.” The names have been abbreviated in the Bible: “Then Jeremiah called Baruch, the son of Neriah...” (Jer 36:4).71
In its May-June 1994 issue, Biblical Archaelogy Review showed an inscription above a rock-tomb in Silwan, Israel, that says: “This is (the sepulchre of ...) yahu, who is over the house.” The term “over the house” refers to the royal steward, who Bible scholars believe was Shebnayahu (short form, Shebna) in Isaiah 22:15. “Thus saith the Lord God of hosts, Go, get thee unto this treasurer, even unto Shebna, which is over the house...”72

Three-Lettered Name
Scholars have found that Yahu is more than just a suffix, it actually is another proper Name of G-d, spelled with only three letters of the Tetragrammaton! This third form became known to “scholars after the discovery of the independent form YHW in the Egyptian papyri of the 5th century B.C. from the Elephantine archives…”73 According to The New 20th Century Encyclopedia of Religious Knowledge, in the Old World the form YHW was used by the Jews in the Elephantine Island in Egypt.74 Last Day Ministries of Texas shares additional information: “There was evidently a Temple built to YHW in Elephantine, Egypt. Many documents from this place show that the sacred name was written YHW...”75
Seow suggests that this three-lettered Name is another short form of the Tetragrammaton. “The final H in YHWH is not a real consonant… the real consonants of the divine name are YHW… in several inscriptions from Kuntillet ‘Arjud in the Sinai… (a)mong the attestations of the name in the inscriptions from that site is one example of YHW… the final vowel not being indicated by the letter H in this instance.76

Presumed pronunciation.
In the Dead Sea Scrolls from Qumran, Professor Emeritus George Wesley Buchanan of the Wesley Theological Seminary in Washington D.C. found a similar three-lettered Name transliterated in Greek. He speculates: “Clement of Alexandria spelled the Tetragrammaton IAOAI (Ya-oo-ai), IAOE (Ya-oo-eh), and IAO (Ya-oh)… Among the caves of Qumran was a Greek text that included a few Greek word of Leviticus (4QLXX Lev), one of which was the Tetragrammaton. It was spelled (Ya-oh). This is apparently a two-syllable word, but the second syllable is only a vowel. There is no way that it could be rendered ‘Yah-weh.’ This was a transliteration of the Hebrew Ya-ho. It is the same spelling given in the fifth century B.C. Aramaic papyri. From the Aramaic alone this word could be pronounced either Ya-hoo or Ya-hoh… When the Tetragrammaton was pronounced in one syllable it was ‘Yah’ or ‘Yo.’ …If it was ever abbreviated to two syllables it would have been ‘Yahoo’…”77  
The Century Cyclopedia attests to it. “The early Gnostics, moreover, when they transcribed it in Greek characters, wrote Iao (that is, Yaho).”78
Ziony Zevit confirms the “oo” sound at the end of words: “…waw was used to indicate the final vowel ‘u’… By employing waw as a m.l. (matres lectionis or vowel indicator) for ‘o’ in word final positions, some potential ambiguities were eliminated… in this position there was small opportunity for confusion between waw as a m.l. for ‘o’ and as a m.l. for ‘u,’ because the first value would occur exclusively with substantives, while the second, most frequently with verbs.”79
Hence, YHW can be explained as follows: The first two letters YH are the two consonants of the first syllable “YaH,” while the third and last letter W is a matres lectionis indicating the vowel “U.” Therefore, YHW = YH (“YaH”) + W (“U”) = “YaHU.”

Pronunciation confirmed.
The Century Cyclopedia proves the pronunciation from ancient artifacts: “…we may gather from the contemporary Assyrian monuments that it was pronounced Yahu. Wherever an Israelitish name is met with in the cuneiform inscriptions which, like Jehu or Hezekiah, is compounded with the divine title, the latter appears as Yahu, Jehu being Yahua, and Hezekiah Khazaki-yahu.”80  
Rabbi Heiliczer says it is indeed the pronunciation in the vowel-pointed Hebrew Scriptures. “Moreover the first three letters, yud-hey-vuv (YHW), do appear by themselves in the Tenakh and always with vowels making the pronunciation ‘yahu’.”81
A curious thing, moreover, has been observed. If we try to vocalize YHW as vowels only, using the three consonants used at the end of words to indicate vowel sounds (yod, ee as in “see”; hey, ah as in “bah”; and waw, oo as in “pool”), the resulting sound is: ee-ah-oo = Yahu. It seems that, whether we read the Three-Lettered Name as Hebrew consonants only or pronounce the characters as vowels only, we get the same result -- “Yahu!”

Both a suffix and a prefix
Unlike the Two-Lettered Name “Yah,” which is used only as a suffix, the Three-Lettered Name “Yahu” is used as both a suffix and a prefix. The Jewish Encyclopedia notes the use of “the forms Jeho or Yeho, and Jo or Yo (wy, contracted from why), which the word assumes in combination in the first part of compound proper names, and Yahu or Yah (why, hy) in the second part of such names.”82
The Encyclopaedia Britannica adds that “the usual form is YH or Yhw, occurring in unvocalized texts of the 5th and 4th centuries B.C.E. These forms appear in the Old Testament sporadically as the independent Yah and regularly as Yah or Yahu at the end and Yeho or Yo at the beginning of proper names.”83  

From Yahu to Yeho.
The Century Cyclopedia informs us that the Three-Lettered Name YHW, when used as a prefix, “Even according to the Masoretes it must be read Yeho when it forms part of a proper name.”84  
Seow explains the change of Yahu to Yeho when used as a prefix in theoporic names as a linguistic peculiarity: “…the first vowel was further changed from a to e, in accordance with rules of Hebrew Grammar.“85 Rabbi Heiliczer thinks it was introduced on purpose. ”When a Hebrew name in the Masoretic Tenakh begins with a part of the divine name, the vowels are given as E-O (shortened form of Eh-O-ah from Eloah). Some examples are: Yehoshaphat (Jehoshaphat) YEHO-Shaphat; Yehoshua (Joshua) YEHO-Shua.”86

From Yeho- to Yo-, Jo-.
Yeho-, though, through syncope or word contraction was further abbreviated to Y’ho-, before eventually becoming Yo-, then Jo-. Author Garrison tells us that the form Yehoshua, “in its original Hebrew form it was Y’hoshua… frequently abbreviated to Joshua.87 Seow gives another example: “In personal names, what scholars call the ‘Yahwistic theoporic element’ appears in the initial position as Yeho- (Jeho-) or Yo- (Jo-), as in the two forms for ‘Jonathan,’ Yehonatan and Yonatan.”88
Yo- was written as Io- in Scriptures before the letter “J” became a consonant. As an Oil Derrick tract explains: “This short form of ‘Io’ as the sacred name can also be seen in the original 1611 King James Version where it is attached to such Biblical names as Ioshua, Iohn, Ioel, Ionathan, Ioshaphat, Iosedech, Iochebed, Ioram, Ioseph, Ionadab etc. Strong’s Exhaustive Concordance shows the fuller form of these names as Yehoshua, Yehochanan, Yehonathan, Yehoshaphat, Yehosedech, Yehoseph, Yehoram, Yehonadab.”89

Names prefixed with YHW.
Emeritus professor Buchanan cites more instances: “The Hebrew for the name ‘Jonathan’ is Yah-ho-na-than, ‘Yaho… has given.’ John was spelled ‘Yaho-cha-nan’, ‘Yaho… has been gracious.’ Elijah’s name was Eli-yahoo, ‘My God is Yahoo…’ Ancients often gave their children names that included the name of their deity.”90
One prominent theoporic name today is the surname of the Israeli prime minister: Netanyahu, which means “given by (netan) Yahu” (Nethaniah -- 2 Chron 17:8, Jer 36:14, etc.). It was adopted by his grandfather in Lithuania in 1920, following the Hebrew language revival that began among the Jews in 17th century Europe. When the sacred suffix is transposed to form the prefix, the name becomes Yahu-netan (“Yahu has given [netan]”), but is spelled Yeho-natan. In the course of time Yehonatan has been contracted to Yonatan. When the new letter “J” became part of the English alphabet, the name became “Jonathan.”
Incidentally, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s elder brother was redundantly named Jonathan (Yonatan) Netanyahu. A major in the Israel Defense Forces, he led IDF commandos in rescuing over 100 hostages held by terrorists in a jetliner at Entebbe Airport in Uganda in 1976. He died a hero’s death as the only IDF casualty in the daring raid.
Below is an illustration of how some Biblical names developed.

How “Yahu” Became “Jo” in Theoporic Names
Names w/ Yahu last*
Nethaniah/ Netanyahu
Isaiah/ Yeshayahu
Hananiah/ Chananyahu
Elijah/ Eliyahu
Abijah/ Abiyahu
Meaning
Given (by) Yahu
Salvation (is) Yahu
Gracious (has been) Yahu
My God (is) Yahu
My father (is) Yahu
Same names w/ Yahu first
Yahunatan
Yahushua
Yahuchanan
Yahuel
Yahuab
Meaning
Yahu (has) given
Yahu (is) salvation
Yahu (has been) gracious
Yahu (is) God
Yahu (is) father
First ‘a’ to ‘e,’ ‘u’ to ‘o’
Yehonatan
Yehoshua
Yehochanan
Yehoel
Yehoab
‘e’ lost thru syncope
Y’honatan
Y’hoshua
Y’hochanan
Y’hoel
Y’hoab
‘h’ dropped over time
Yonatan
Yoshua
Yohanan
Yoel
Yoab
I used for Y, MiddleAges
Ionathan
Iosua
Iohann, Iohn
Ioel
Ioab
New letter J replaced I
Jonathan
Joshua
Johan, John
Joel
Joab
*Modern English Biblical forms over Anglicized traditional Hebrew pronunciations

Old Testament proof
Proof exists in the Old Testament that Yahu was truly G-d's first and original Name that the ancients knew from the time of Adam – the name of Moses's mother. “And the name of Amram's wife was Jochebed, the daughter of Levi, whom her mother bare to Levi in Egypt: and she bare unto Amram Aaron and Moses, and Miriam their sister (Num 26:59).
Moses’s mother was Jochebed, a granddaughter of Jacob (Israel) by his son Levi. She married her brother Kohath’s son Amram, who became Moses’s father (Ex 6:16-18,20). Jochebed lived around 3,600 years ago in Egypt during the period of Israelite bondage.
Jochebed means “YHWH is glory”91chebed coming from the Hebrew root-word kabed, meaning “splendor, glory, honor.” The initial letter “J” in her name was anciently a “Y,” so Jochebed used to be Yochebed. Even earlier, it was Y’hochebed, from Yehochebed. And, long before that, its original form was Yahuchebed.
Since Jochebed was born and given her particular theoporic name by her parents before the Creator revealed a new Name to her future son, Moses, that leaves us with but one conclusion: The sacred Name of G-d that the Israelites knew before the time of Moses was YAHU.
“According to Albright (Assyrian Cuneiform scholar) and others the most ancient form of the sacred name (outside of Scripture) is ‘Yahu’. YHW or YHU are indicated by the same letter in Hebrew.”92 Researcher James Montgomery, in the Journal of Biblical Literature (1944), put the matter to rest: “The earliest form of the Name was doubtless Yahu.”93  

The meaning of Yahu. If the Four-Lettered Name YHWH means “I AM THAT I AM” and the Two-Lettered Name YH stands for “I AM,” what does the Three-Lettered Name YHW signify?
There are several Biblical names that similarly end in -hu, other than those ending in –yahu. Let us examine three of them.
1) Abihu, a son of Aaron, Moses’s brother (Ex 6:23, etc.). Abihu in Hebrew means “My father (Abi) is he (huw).”94
2) Elihu, David’s eldest brother, et al. (1 Chron 27:18, etc.). Elihu signifies “My G-d (Eli) is He (huw).”95
3) Jehu, a prophet of Israel, et al. (1 Kings 16:12, etc.). Jehu stands for “The L-RD (YHWH) is He (huw).”96 (Note that in all three instances the last letter “w” is lost in personal names. Huw is written hu in modern Hebrew.)
Based on the foregoing examples, it follows YAHU means “I AM (Yah) HE (huw).” (The original Hebrew wording Yah huw is never used in ordinary speech. In common usage, “I am he” is Ani hu.)
Obviously, Yahu is the abbreviation of Yah huw. Gesenius Hebrew Grammar explains how it happened: “Assimilation usually takes place when one consonant which closes a syllable passes over into another beginning the next syllable and forms with it a strengthened letter.”97 In other words, if the last consonant of a syllable is the same as the first consonant of the succeeding syllable, the two identical consonants are written as only one letter.
Accordingly, the two words Yah and huw together form Yahhuw, which becomes Yahuw in conformity with Hebrew grammar rules, and is further simplified to Yahu, as illustrated below: 

Yah
+
huw
=
Yahhuw
=
Yahuw
=
Yahu
(“I AM”)
+
(“HE”)
=




(“I AM HE”)

Allusion by the LORD.
The L-RD alluded to His Three-Lettered Name on many occasions: “See now that I, even I, am he…” (Deut 32:39).
“Who hath wrought and done it, calling the generations from the beginning? I the LORD, the first, and with the last; I am he” (Isa 41:4).
“Hearken unto me, O Jacob and Israel, my called; I am he; I am the first, I also am the last” (Isa 48:12; also 43:10,13,25; 46:4; 51:12).

New Testament Proof
YHW appears to have been spoken by Christ Himself, “Then Judas, having received a detachment of troops, and officers from the chief priests and Pharisees, came there with lanterns, torches, and weapons. Jesus therefore, knowing all things that would come upon Him, went forward and said to them, "Whom are you seeking?" They answered Him, "Jesus of Nazareth." Jesus said to them, "I am He." And Judas, who betrayed Him, also stood with them. Then -- when He said to them, "I am He,"-- they drew back and fell to the ground” (John 18:3-6, NKJV).
Why did Judas and the band of men fall to the ground? What power did the Three-Lettered Name of God have? We see why in Temple worship practices: “The High Priest spoke the name of God on the Day of Atonement in his recitation of Lev. xvi. 30 during the confessions of sins; and when the priests and the people in the great hall heard him utter the ‘Shem ha-Meforash (the Distinguished Name),’ they prostrated themselves and glorified God.”98
Translator H. Danby corroborates this in the Mishnah, a collection of Jewish legal traditions. “And when the priests and the people which stood in the Temple Court heard the Expressed Name come forth from the mouth of the High Priest, they used to kneel and bow themselves and fall down on their faces and say, ‘Blessed be the name of the glory of his kingdom for ever and ever!’ (Yoma 6:2).”99  
Many people get the impression that the men arresting Christ fell backwards. On the contrary, they fell forward on their faces in an act of worship! They were from the Temple, and, as our references relate, they customarily fell to the ground on their faces whenever they heard the Name of God. Apparently, when Christ said “I am He,” He used the sacred phrase Yah huw i.e., the Three-Lettered Name YHW (Yahu).

Disappearance.
Why is the form Yahu not found in the Bible? Allen says, “When the Jews were carried into Babylon in 606 B.C.E. many of the personal names had the element ‘yahu’…”100 Yet, Zevit found that when the Jews returned from Babylonian captivity 70 years later, the suffix had changed from -yahu to -yah. “An examination of the chronological distribution of the suffix in Judean inscriptions indicates that -yhw is characteristically pre-Exilic, and -yh post-Exilic… Japhet points out that in Ezra-Nehemiah all names with this element are written -yh with one exception…”101
After Babylon fell, the Jews began returning to Jerusalem to rebuild the city and the Temple under a decree King Cyrus of Persia issued in 536 B.C. By the time of the Jewish leaders Ezra and Nehemiah, the use of -yahu as a suffix in Hebrew theoporic names had ceased.
About 2,000 years later, in Europe, even the rare names which had the suffix -yahu in the Hebrew text, such as Eliyahu, were transliterated by Bible translators with the more familiar -iah and -jah suffixes

The 3 Personal Names of God
Below is a summary of the LORD’s three Personal Names:

Spelling
Pronunciation
Meaning
Passages
Notes
Y-H

“YaH”

“I AM”
Ex 3:14; John 8:58
As in Isaiah or Hallelujah
Y-H-W

“YaHU”

“I AM HE”
Isa 41:4, etc. John 18:5-6
As in Eliyahu
or Netanyahu
Y-H-W-H
God’s most sacred Name, known only to a few.*
“I AM THAT
I AM”
Ex 3:14; 6:3
The “Ineffable Name,” never spoken aloud
_________________________________
62.
Sigmund Mowinchel, “The Name of the Heavenly Father of Moses,” The Hebrew Union College Annual, 1961, p. 14
63.
God, Names of, op. cit., col. 679
64.
Mowinchel, loc. cit.
65.
God, Names of, op. cit., cols.. 679-680
66.
YHWH, Names of God, Jewish Encyclopedia, Internet
67.
Seow, loc. cit.
68.
Herschel Shanks, “The Tombs of Silwan,” Biblical Archaeology Review, May-June 1994, p. 48
69.
P. Kyle McCarter, “In Private Hands,” Queries & Comments, Biblical Archaeology Review, May-June 1996, p. 26
70.
Shanks, “Fingerprint of Jeremiah’s Scribe,” Biblical Archaeology Review, March-April 1996, p.38
71.
Shanks, op. cit., pp. 36-38
72.
Shanks, “Isaiah’s Ire,” Biblical Archaeology Review, May-June 1994, pp. 48-49
73.
The New 20th Century Encyclopedia of Religious Knowledge, 2nd edition, p. 886
74.
Ibid.
75.
“Comments,” Last Day Ministries, tract, undated
76.
Seow, op. cit., p. 49
77.
George Wesley Buchanan, “The Tetragrammaton,” Comments & Queries, Biblical Archaelogy Review, March-April 1995, pp. 30,31,100
78.
Sayce, Ancient Monuments, The Century Cyclopedia [1900], p. 75; excerpted by Allen in “How Long Halt Ye Between Two Opinions,” tract, undated
79.
Ziony Zevit, Matres Lectionis in Ancient Hebrew Epigraphs, American Schools of Oriental Research, 1980, p. 25
80.
Sayce, loc. cit.
81.
Heiliczer, op. cit., p. 20
82.
YHWH, Names of God, op. cit.
83.
Yahweh, Encyclopaedia Britannica, 11th Edition, Vol. 12
84.
Sayce, loc. cit.
85.
Seow, op. cit., p. 50).
86.
Heiliczer, loc. cit.
87.
Garrison, Strange Facts About The Bible, p. 81
88.
Seow, op. cit., p. 49
89.
“Ioua/Iona,” The Oil Derrick, tract, undated, p. 1
90.
Buchanan, loc. cit.
91.
Jochebed, International Standard Bible Encyclopaedia, 1996
92.
“The Mystic Symbol,” Indian Sabbath Trail, tract, undated
93.
James Montgomery, “The Hebrew Divine Name and the Personal Pronoun Hu, Critical Notes, Journal of Biblical Literature, Vol. lxiii, 1944, p. 162
94.
Abihu, International Standard Bible Encyclopaedia, 1996
95.
Elihu, The New Unger's Bible Dictionary, 1988
96.
Jehu, Nelson's Illustrated Bible Dictionary,1986
97.
Gesenius Hebrew Grammar, p. 68
98.
God, Names of, op. cit., col. 263
99.
The Mishnah, translated by H. Danby, 1954, p. xiv
100.
Allen, op. cit.,  p. 7
101.
Zevit, op. cit., pp. 12-13
102.
Jehucal, The New Unger's Bible Dictionary, 1988