Added: 1 year ago
From: omedyashar
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  • I understood that Jewishness being from the mother was done deliberately by the scribes and doctors to exclude Ishmael, born from a non-Hebrew mother, from God's Covenant with Abraham!

  • @shirazkaleel Interesting thought, but the ancient rabbis taught this perspective because they understood it to be the Biblical teaching on the matter. AND although Yishmael's mother was not called a Hebrew, please tell me... Where is YisHaq's (Isaac's) mother called a Hebrew? NEITHER of them are called a Hebrew. The law that being an Israelite / a member of the Sinai Covenant, is a law that did not exist until the giving of Torah at Mt. Sinai. Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob were not Israelites.

  • I like your videos, they are very thought provoking. But you really need a better microphone.

  • I'm fasting and I am watching this video, you have food their and your not eating the food and its getting cold lol

  • Really great video, thank you so much for the upload.

  • im muslim man, nice explaining thanks .good knowlege

  • Darn it! now I want some of what you are eating!

  • from what I know after many generations, there was finally only one rabi that knew the real name of the Lord and he would pass it to another, little before he was going to die. And that was how it was done for a long time, until the last one who knew the name died unexpectedly, before he could pass it on, so the knowledge died with him

  • Would you explain the word translated rest in Bereshith 2:2,3 and it's relation to the word spelled the exact same in Shemoth 20:8 which is Shabbat or SBT. Thanks for your videos. May YHWH bless you.

  • The name, GOD chose for himself, was his unique personal name! To be used for eternity. He told Moses his name first on the two tablets. Because latin doesn't have vowels, the letters YHWH represent translations. But taking other names from latin translations, we find its pronounciation to be close to (Yee-Ho-Wa) or (Yee-Ho-Va). He will not punish you calling on his name for help. Only wicked men will, and they try to cover up his name at every chance they get. Call on his name, he will hear you

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  • Why waste your life with this religious nonsense? Just curious.

  • @godnotfound

    Maybe because for us it is not- nonsense.

  • @godnotfound

    Same reason your searching this specific subject.

  • YHWH is the hebrew name for god if not wrong, allah is the arabic name for god and it's used by many arab jew's and arab christian and it's also written in the arabic torah and the arabic bible. by they M.r Omedyashar did you know that we muslims have 99 names for god?? how maney names you have for god in jewdaism??

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  • @suavelyphe

    YHWH יהוה

    Al-Hayyu Al-Qayyum الحي القيوم

    الله لا إله إلا هو الحي القيوم

  • Aloah must mean ilahi.

  • Good lesson omed. You should expand on this explaining why the names of God, and the names of people are so significant. In the West, I think we are ignore the significance of names. We certainly are ignorant of their importance in Hebrew in general and the TaNaKh in particular.

    By the why, what do you have on your place besides rice and tomatoes? Looks delicious and healthy.

  • @bennoach I agree did you know the native Americans have over 50 names for clouds? while modern science only gives a dozen or so. The west usually condenses its terms to fit over many delicate terms to save time. But infact it looses its litteral translation. Think of the game telephone a word of phrase is spoken but in the end rarely dose it resemble the original word or phrase. On the more sinister side look at the movie 1984 and the reduction of language to control a People.

  • So do you refer to him as Yahweh or is the original name just lost? Also, what is Elohim? Is this God's proper name?

  • Also, rice and maize are not counted amoung the major grains as far as I know.

  • @otw38

    Correct. They are not.

  • @omedyashar #1: Is Judaism a proselytizing religion? If so, where did the myth that you had to have been born of a Jewish mother in order to be a Jew come from? #2: The word for Angel is Malaika. Please cite references for where it is Elohim.

  • @TomMarAlem1987 It's not a myth that you have to be born of a Jewish mother in order to be considered Jewish. It is Jewish law because it is possible to verify beyond a doubt the mother but not the father. (historically) "The name Elokim represents G-d as Ruler of creation, and thus, the same word is used for judges and angels." Handbook of Jewish Thought, by Aryeh Kaplan. 7:79 citing Ibn Ezra on Genesis 1:1 inter alia.

  • @ShamanSTK Is not the word for angel Malekh or Melekh? מַלְאַךְ Judges 6:11: 11 And the angel of the LORD came, and sat under the terebinth which was in Ophrah, that belonged unto Joash the Abiezrite; and his son Gideon was beating out wheat in the winepress, to hide it from the Midianites.[] Mechon-Mamre translation.

  • @TomMarAlem1987 The Hebrew word that you put in your comment spells it correctly -- mal'akh. Melekh means king.

  • @TomMarAlem1987 That myth is spread by people who are EXTREMELY ignorant of what traditional - historical Orthodox Jewish tradition teaches. There is no stream of Judaism which teaches this. All forms of Judaism accept converts.

  • @omedyashar Thank you in abundance. Can you please record a lecture on how the religion came to be called Judaism and what it was originally called? Is the word Judaism to be found in the Torah as a description of the religion propounded by Moses, 'Alayhis-salam? If not, then what is the proper name of the religion to which you are an adherent?

  • @omedyashar Allah the result of Ilah, which can be made plural becoming singular.[] The structure of the Arabic language is such that Ilahun=The Indefinite form for that which worship is directed to. Al=The definite article Al+Ilah=Allahu.[] In the video the Jew proclaims that the word Eloha is in the indefinite Hebrew form and so can be ascribed to anyone and anything. The Hebrews may not have a mechanism to make Aloha singluar and definite.

  • The pronunciation of the Tetragrammaton is known by some. We are currently rabbinicly forbidden to pronounce it out loud in public except in the area of the miqdash.

  • Last time I checked, rice that is basically cooked whole unground grains is blessed with bore phari ha'adhama. If it is ground into a flour and cooked, then it is bore mine mazonoth. Correct me if I'm wrong.

  • is the pronunciation of Gods name still known? it seems there are alot of "variants" out there.

  • Great vid. Dunno what exactly you were eating, but I was dying looking at it the whole time--haha!

  • Hey Yoseph. I was looking at blb.org's lexicon entries for hāwâ (הָוָה) and hāyâ (הָיָה), and in the entry for hāwâ, it mentions a meaning of "to breathe". I'm not sure if you're familiar with Jeff Benner (ancienthebreworg) and his videos. He talks about the concrete nature of the Hebrew language and how Hebrew words tie into ideas that can be perceived by the 5 senses. What are your thoughts on the idea of the root verb for YHWH relating to "breathing", with the application of existing/living?

  • About the term ʾĔlōhîm, how you would understand it in light of passages such as Psalm 82 and Genesis 30:8?

  • @SubZero7th In Psalms 82:6 (I believe thats what your referring to) the common interpretation is "angels" for elohim. In Genesis 30:8 its more of a personal term signifying divine struggles. Rachel is just using an expression signifying how bad her and her sister were fighting for Jacob's love.

  • @Yirmeyahu23 Hey. Thanks for the response. While I'm aware of the interpretation of angels, there are some that say Psalm 82 is in relation to the Canaanite religion since ʾĒl is the head of the ʾĔlōhîm. I'm sure that while Jews (and Christians) don't correlate the Biblical ʾĒl (YHWH) with the Canaanite deity ʾĒl, but the usage of those terms in the text is interesting. As for Genesis 30:8, would "wrestlings of powers" be a logical translation for nap̄tûlê ʾĕlōhîm (נַפְתּוּלֵי אֱלֹהִים)?

  • have you ever read Dr. Michael Hieser?? If not, he has some interesting studies on Elohim.

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