Search results

  1. Rak

    Has Jewish tradition mentioned an interpretation for YHWH as an acronym based on its pictographs?

    David Cole makes a neat point in his book Understanding God's Message: He adds that...
  2. Rak

    Has Jewish tradition mentioned an interpretation for YHWH as an acronym based on its pictographs?

    This is actually a good question. I came across Jewish writings seeing inner meanings in other words too as derived from the letters. Two examples were Passover and Pharaoh, which both use the pictoral meaning of the letters. Here is one mention about Passover this way: ^The text has a...
  3. Rak

    Has Jewish tradition mentioned an interpretation for YHWH as an acronym based on its pictographs?

    Wil, That could depend on the word that the inner meaning was found in. In normal poetry one tactic is sometimes to use words with certain connotations. Like a poem that talks about waves could use words that "swoosh", based on the poet's intentional use. She sells seashells by the seashore...
  4. Rak

    Has Jewish tradition mentioned an interpretation for YHWH as an acronym based on its pictographs?

    I was not setting out the views in order to definitely advocate for one position or another, as my mind is not made up and I would like real insight into the topic. This is why I quoted from the Hebrew Resource Center page, not knowing the writer was Christian. I have not been trying to advocate...
  5. Rak

    Has Jewish tradition mentioned an interpretation for YHWH as an acronym based on its pictographs?

    Thanks for writing. I am looking for cases when they used the meanings of the letters themselves to see inner meaning in YHWH. It seems like over the last 4000+ years some Jewish mystics would have done that, considering some of their practices of seeing inner meanings in letters of words (eg...
  6. Rak

    Has Jewish tradition mentioned an interpretation for YHWH as an acronym based on its pictographs?

    Paul considered Christians to be Jews in an "inner" way. (Romans 2:29) But that is not what you mean here when you talk about posing as Jews (I think).
  7. Rak

    Has Jewish tradition mentioned an interpretation for YHWH as an acronym based on its pictographs?

    To give an example of what I mean about the importance of the divine name in Judaism, the Judaism 101 website says:
  8. Rak

    Has Jewish tradition mentioned an interpretation for YHWH as an acronym based on its pictographs?

    Let me please add that my main thread question rests on three premises: 1. Ancient Hebrew writing in the time of the Torah and Psalms was based on a pictographic script or developed out of one. This means that the script letters had names and meanings. So for example, yod is a Hebrew word...
  9. Rak

    Has Jewish tradition mentioned an interpretation for YHWH as an acronym based on its pictographs?

    Hello, Dan0813 Thank you for mentioning about the website owner's religion, of which I was not aware.
  10. Rak

    Has Jewish tradition mentioned an interpretation for YHWH as an acronym based on its pictographs?

    In ancient civilizations like the Chinese, Sumerians, Babylonians, and Egyptians, the name for God has been written with pictograms, where the pictures not only meant God, but had a certain secondary meaning. Have Jews over the centuries seen a similar meaning in the letters making up God's...
  11. Rak

    Which were the gods of the Indus Valley civilization and did they teach concepts of God?

    Another interesting thing for me was the theory that Om goes back to at least the time of the Harappan civilization. In his essay "On the Primary Meaning and Etymology of the Sacred Syllable OM", Asko Parpola compares the root meanings of Om in Dravidian and the Sanskrit Vedas. He quotes from...
  12. Rak

    Which were the gods of the Indus Valley civilization and did they teach concepts of God?

    Yes. I would like to please ask what were the gods of the Indus Valley Civilization. I only found a couple in these articles, but I'm sure there were more.
  13. Rak

    Which were the gods of the Indus Valley civilization and did they teach concepts of God?

    Additional question: Could the god Mhasoba be related to the Shiva-like figure sitting down in the tablet as some scholars claim? D. Kosambi writes in Myth and Reality that the Indus seal with its image of a Shiva-like horned figure is a prototype of the later Hindu ideas and that this is...
  14. Rak

    Which were the gods of the Indus Valley civilization and did they teach concepts of God?

    Swami Nathan also writes about the Seven wives (pleiades)/ seven Krithikas, and a tablet he sees as depicting human sacrifice. He shows a picture of the Seven women tablet: https://tamilandvedas.com/2012/08/22/tiger-goddess-of-indus-valley/ Here is where he claims that this is connected with...
  15. Rak

    Which were the gods of the Indus Valley civilization and did they teach concepts of God?

    N.S. Rajaram writes about Harappan symbols, including the Swastika, featured below: He also claims that a version of the Hindu "Om" sign is found in Indus society. Here is the modern Om sign: And: He says that the Om sign is known also as pranavakshara and then proposes: So we can see from...
  16. Rak

    Which were the gods of the Indus Valley civilization and did they teach concepts of God?

    The Three major oldest civilizations in the world are Egypt, Sumer, and the Indus Valley. The latter lasted until 1500 BC. Scholars most usually say that the language was Dravidian and that the Aryans did not arrive until 2200-1500 BC, while its climax was in 2700-2400 BC. Until scholars do...
  17. Rak

    Shalom

    Shalom! No need to compare yourself to dirt! We have respect for people here. For centuries ancient Jewish culture was using Nitre for cleaning, including in ancient Judaism, which I respect: biblehub.com/topical/n/nitre.htm And ultimately it's your spirit that counts. Thank you for coming...
  18. Rak

    Greetings to you all.

    Basically, the Eastern Orthodox are following the path at least as far back as we can prove things one way or the other in Christianity. Consider infant baptism - no one can prove 100% what happened in the 1st century AD on that question, but in the 2nd century they were using infant baptism...
Back
Top