The substitution of the title “the LORD”
for the Four-Lettered Name of G-d (YHWH / the Tetragrammaton) in the Scriptures
has resulted in a great cloud of uncertainty over its pronunciation. It has led
theologians to suggest various versions. In 1749, the German Biblical scholar
Teller mentioned several pronunciations of G-d’s Name that he had come across
in his readings: “Jao” (Diodorus of Sicily, Macrobius, Clement of Alexandria,
Saint Jerome and Origen); “Jahe” or “Jave” (Samaritans, Epiphanius, and
Theodoretus); “Javoh” (Ludwig Cappel); “Jahve” (Drusius); “Jehva” (Hottinger);
“Jehovah” (Mercerus); “Jovah” (Castellio); “Jawoh” or “Javoh” (LeClerc).
Over the centuries, however, two forms
have each gained sufficient favor and following to be accepted as the presumed
correct vocalization of the Tetragrammaton. Let us see what these are and how
it happened.
The first presumed Name
In the 1st century A.D., Jewish
historian Flavius Josephus supplied a hint on the lost pronunciation of the
Tetragrammaton in his book Wars of the
Jews. Writing in Koine (common)
Greek, the international language of the time, he described the garments of the
high priest at the Holy Temple in Jerusalem partly as follows: “A mitre also of
fine linen encompassed his head, which was tied with a blue riband, about which
there was another golden crown, in which was engraven the sacred name (of G-d);
it consists of four vowels.”1
Four Hebrew vowels?
Josephus was a Jew who surely knew that the
Tetragrammaton consisted of four Hebrew consonants. According to the editor of
the Loeb edition of Josephus’s Jewish
Wars, “He was perhaps thinking of a Greek form.”2
Researcher Voy Wilks agrees: “Josephus
spoke of four GREEK vowels in order to accommodate his Greek readers, and did
not in any way intend to leave the impression that the four Sacred Letters on
the priest’s garments were vowels from the Hebrew alphabet. After all, the
Hebrew alphabet contained no vowels.”3
Author B. Earl Allen notes: “The Greek
language does not… have a Y sound, nor an H sound in the middle of a word, nor
a W sound.”4 All of these three Hebrew consonants that make up the
Tetragrammaton were not part of the Greek writing system!
Hebrew names
Hellenized.
Josephus admitted in his other book Antiquities of the Jews: “With a view to
euphony and my readers’ pleasure these names have been Hellenized (made Greek). The form in which they
appear is not that used in our country, where their structure and termination
remain always the same.”5
We find in Adam Clarke’s Commentary that “neither Greeks nor Romans could
pronounce either the Hebrew or Persian names, and when engaged in the task of
transcribing, they did according to their manner of pronunciation.”6
The Jews followed suit. “Once the Jews
came under Greek influence, we note a tendency to replace or to translate
Jewish names by similar sounding Greek names.”7
Four Greek vowels.
Rabbi Yeshayahu Heiliczer explains that
“when the Greeks borrowed the Phoenician/ Paleo-Hebrew alphabet they used
leftover consonants that did not occur in their language and used them as
symbols for vowels.”8 He quoted writer Robert Whiting: ‘Therefore,
the Hebrew yud (Y) became the Greek
vowel iota (I); the Hebrew hey (H) became the Greek vowel epsilon (“E”); and the Hebrew vav (W/V) became the Greek vowel upsilon (“U”)’.”9
Vowel indicators
The
Israelites themselves, though, had developed a rudimentary system for
indicating vowels. Sacred Name researcher Choon-Leong Seow shares: “Beginning
in the monarchial period (10th to late 7th centuries
B.C.E.), certain letters [H], [W], [Y] were added at the end of words to
indicate various vowels…”10
Last Day Ministries of Texas concurs: “It
is true that the letters y, h, w can
function as vowel letters… the yod
acts as a vowel in the word ‘Eli’… ‘The h… at the end of a word is always a
mere vowel letter, unless marked by a Mappiq
as a strong consonant…’ The waw w…
carries the ‘o’ sound… Therefore the letters yod, he, and waw can be
vowel letters, they can also be consonants, depending on the usage.”11
The booklet The Mistaken J (YNCA) provides us with more specific pronunciations.
The three letters, called vowel-consonants or semivowels because they can be
used either as vowels or consonants (like Y) at the end of words, are
pronounced as follows:
Yod
|
/
|
Y
|
=
|
ee as in “see”
|
||
Hey
|
/
|
H
|
=
|
ah as in “bah”
|
||
Waw
|
/
|
W
|
=
|
oo as in “cool” 12
|
‘IEUE” or “IAUA.”
If the Greek vowel equivalents (Y=I, H=E,
W/V=U), as shown by Rabbi Heiliczer, were used, the sacred Name (YHWH) would be spelled IEUE in Greek.
However, if the four consonants are
transliterated with the three Hebrew semi-vowel sounds “ee,” “ah,” “oo,” we will get the four Greek vowels I-A-U-A (iota,
alpha, upsilon, alpha) forming the word “IAUA”.
Author B. Earl Allen concludes: “(YHWH) would be transliterated correctly
into Greek as Iaua…” The Seventh-Day
Adventist Dictionary confirms this from Sumerian inscriptions: “He (namely,
the God) (is) spelled Yaua in
cuneiform records.”13
“IAUE.”
The form “IAUA”, though, was not
linguistically proper in Greek. Brian Allen says: “For the Greek translators to
have preserved the true spelling in Greek (IAUA)
or (Iaua) would have caused a
language revolution.”14
“The sacred name… was transliterated into
the Greek IAUE, the Greeks changed the ‘a’ to ‘e’, just as they did with Noah,
Judah, Oshea, Korah, etc. The Greeks have it Noe, Jude, Osee, and Core, etc.”15
Other examples are: Nogah/Nagge, Joshah/Jose, Jehoshua/Iesoue,
Joshua/Josue, Gomorrah/Gomorrhe, Abishua/Abisue, Jeremiah/Ieremie, etc.
Feminine
“ah”?
Elder Jacob O. Meyer of Assemblies of Yahweh rationalized: “The ‘h’ (hay) has
the vowel sound of an A (aw or ah)… The ‘h’ (hay) standing at the end of a
masculine name has the vowel sound of short E. The Hebrew long A sound
(pronounced aw) is a feminine ending at the end of a name...”16
Therefore, the “hay, the last letter is pronounced ‘eh’ (short e) and not ‘ah’
(short a)…”17
“IAOUE.”
The Greek form “IAUE” was further
modified. The Missing J notes, “Early
Christian writers such as Clement of Alexandria transliterated it into Greek as
IAOUE.”18
Seow reports a number of “Greek
transliterations of the name in the early Christian period and in some magical
papyri in the early centuries of that era, including Iaoue, Iaouai, Iabe, Iabai, and
Iaue.”19
Clement of Alexandria, quoted by Prof. Anson
F. Rainey, said, ‘The mystic name which is called the tetragrammaton… is
pronounced Iaoue, which means, “Who
is, and who shall be”.’”20
“IABE.”
Another form of the Name surfaced after
about two centuries. “Later on, Theodoret (c. 390-455) and Epiphanius (c.
315-404) transliterated the sacred name as Iabe, but a couple of hundred years
had passed since Clement…”21 The
Jewish Encyclopedia says “Theodoret (‘Quaest.
15 in Exodum’) states the
Samaritans pronounced the name ‘Iabe’.”22
Different
pronunciation.
The Jews and the Samaritans, however, had religious differences. We read in The Good News magazine:“Professor
Eerdman’s article showed that it is not safe to follow the Samaritan
pronunciation advocated by Theodoret and Epiphanius, because the Samaritans were
opposed to the Jewish way. ‘They built their own Temple on Gerizim and had
their own priesthood. They thwarted the Jews whenever they could. On the
account of their attitude we may safely assume that the Samaritans had their
own (different) pronunciation of the holy name. For this reason the Samaritan
pronunciation should not have been regarded (by modern scholars) as evidence
for the Jewish pronunciation.’”23
Moreover, Christ told the Samaritan woman
at the well that her people did not truly know G-d. “Ye worship ye know not what: we know what we worship: for salvation is
of the Jews” (John 4:22).
“YAHWEH.”
Meyer told his readers, “Now, if we
combine these (Greek) letters we have the English word in the letters IAUE.
Pronounce them slowly and then rapidly. You will discover you are saying YAHWEH!”24
The Missing J suggests a similar
exercise: “When we pronounce the Tetragrammaton IAOUE we get the sound
‘ee-ah-ou-eh.’ Saying it rapidly we produce ‘Yah-way,’ which appears as Yahweh
in English.”25
The Encyclopedia
Judaica states: “The true pronunciation of the name YHWH was never lost.
Several early Greek writers of the Christian Church testify that the name was
pronounced ‘Yahweh’.”26
Many proponents of the name “Yahweh”
quote the preceding statement to support their contention. However, common
sense tells us: How could early Greek writers who Hellenized foreign names, including
Hebrew ones, have “testified” to the true pronunciation of the ancient Hebrew
Name of G-d?
Meaning of
“Yahweh”.
The advocates of the name “Yahweh” cannot
seem to agree on one single meaning. According to The New 20th Century Encyclopedia of Religious Knowledge:
“The divine name would thus go back to a verbal form meaning ‘he causes to come
into existence,’ or in effect, ‘he creates’.”27 The Assemblies of
Yahweh slightly rewords the meaning. “And in the imperfect form this means that
the Name of the Heavenly Father should be understood as He Who shall cause
things to exist or He Who shall cause to be.”28 The Ambassador
College in California, though, proposes other definitions: “But Yahweh is a
name meaning the Everliving, or the Eternal. There is no one word in the
English language that translates it exactly… Actually, Yahweh means the
Self-Existent, Everliving, Eternally Living Creating One.”29
Yet, we already know the meaning of the
Tetragrammaton from the Bible. The meanings proposed by the advocates of
“Yahweh” are different. The true pronunciation of the Four-Lettered Name of G-d
should carry the original meaning – “I AM THAT I AM”.
Doubts and
disagreements.
Wikipedia, the online
encyclopedia, states: “The name YHWH is often reconstructed as Yahweh, based on a range of
circumstantial historical and linguistic evidence. Most scholars do not view it
as an ‘accurate’ reconstruction in an absolute sense, but as the best possible guess.”30
The Aid to Bible Understanding also
says that “there is by no means unanimity among scholars on the subject (of the
form ‘Yahweh’), some favoring yet other pronunciations.”31
Gesenius’
Hebrew-Chaldee Lexicon tells us that “this same form (Yahweh) appears on the
gems of the Egyptian Gnostics as the name of God… (but these gems are not of
the most remote antiquity; they are the work of heretics of the second and
third centuries).”32
Even those who use the form “Yahweh”
maintain a certain amount of reservation. Meyer related that one of his Hebrew
professors once said: “We use Yahweh because it is the best representation of
the original letters of the Name, transliterated into English. Scholarship is
now quite positive of this form, although our minds are not closed should new
evidence be introduced.”33
Clement of Alexandria (A.D.
150-211/215?), Epiphanius (315-403), and Theodoret (393-458/466?) were among
the most prominent leaders of the early Christian Church. We can safely say
that Epiphanius and Theodoret had read the writings of their predecessor
Clement. If Clement’s pronunciation, “Yahweh” (Iaoue or Iaouai), was beyond the shadow of any doubt, why did Epiphanius
and Theodoret propose other pronunciations?
(Excerpted
from Chapter 11, “Two Substitutes, One Original”; THE DEEP THINGS OF GOD: A Primer on the Secrets of Heaven and Earth
by M.M. Tauson)
_______________________
1Flavius Josephus, Wars of the Jews, Book 5, ch. 5, sec. 7
2Jewish Wars, Loeb Classical Library, p. 273
3Voy Wilks, “The
Sacred Name YHWH Consists of Four Vowels?”, tract, 11\17\91
4B. Earl Allen, Publish the Name of Yahuwah, Revised
2009, p. 62
5Flavius Josephus, Antiquities of the Jews, Book 1, Ch. 6, Sec. 1
6Adam Clarke’s
Commentary, Vol. 3, pp. 393-394
7Iesous,
Theological Dictionary of the New Testament, pp. 284-293
8Yeshayahu
Heiliczer, “The Divine Name,” Messianic
Home, Summer 1999, p. 19
9Ibid.
10Choon-Leong Seow,
“The Ineffable Name of Israel’s God,” Glossary, Bible Review, December 1991, p. 49
11“Four Vowels,”
Last Day Ministries, tract, undated
12The Four Vowels, The Mistaken J, YNCA, 1996, p. 32
13Brian Allen, “Open
Letter to Tony Sukla,” undated
14Last Day
Ministries, tract, undated
15Ibid.
16Jacob O. Meyer, The Memorial Name – Yahweh, 1987, p. 83
17Meyer, Seven
Ancient Witnesses, 1973, p. 2
18The Missing J, Yahweh’s Assembly in Messiah, Revised
1996, p. 7
19Seow, op. cit., p. 50
20Anson F. Rainey, Biblical Archaelogy Review, Sept.-Oct.
1994
21B. Earl Allen, op. cit., p. 41
22The Names of God, Jewish Encylopedia, Vol. 9, p. 161
23The Good News, Nov.-Dec. 1972; quoted by B. Earl Allen,
op. cit., p. 64
24Meyer, The Memorial Name, loc. cit.
25The Missing J, loc. cit.
26God, Names of, Encyclopaedia Judaica, Vol. 7, col. 679
27The New 20th Century Encyclopedia of
Religious Knowledge,
2ND edition, p. 886
28Meyer, op. cit., p. 22
29Faculty Members of
Ambassador College, Padadena, California, “God Speaks Out on the New Morality”;
quoted by Meyer, op. cit., p. 8
30Names of God,
Kabbalah, Wikipedia, Internet
31Aid to Bible Understanding, Watchtower Tract
and Bible Society, p. 885
32Jehovah, Gesenius’ Hebrew-Chaldee Lexicon
33Meyer, op. cit., p. 87