Actually, 'Elohim' is the Hebrew word that indicates a 'compound unity'. It does not indicate plurality - Echad would have been used if that was the case.
All this philosophy and none of you are right Elohim is the hebrew word for the plural form of the word God. So it means Gods. Since god created male and female it would mean the there is a Male God and a Female God. Since in marrage they become one flesh we always refer to them together as God singular. Peace out children.
Elohim commonly mistransliterated as the word God in English, and Yahowah/Jehovah [lit. "I am/ I will be"] as Lord. It is the plural form of Eloah; often used in the short form El (signifying strength). Lit. meaning, "Strength, and Power [of effect]." Lord God = Yahowah Elohim, lit. "I will be that which I will be/ I am that I am [your] Strength and Authority." It is not the plural of majesty or is there a Trinity; Deuteronomy 6:4.
@Darksphere101 I didn't state that it wasn't a name for a god. I stated information about the meaning of the word. However, I would agree on one thing you stated - many cultures have different names to give recognition to nature and its power of effect: Mithra (Persians) , Ahura Mazda (Ancient Iranian), Zeus (Greek), Jupiter (Roman), Amun (Egyptian) YHWH (Israeli), God (Christian), Allah (Islam), etc. etc.
This has been flagged as spam show
Actually, 'Elohim' is the Hebrew word that indicates a 'compound unity'. It does not indicate plurality - Echad would have been used if that was the case.
JenEssitBroughman 2 weeks ago
All this philosophy and none of you are right Elohim is the hebrew word for the plural form of the word God. So it means Gods. Since god created male and female it would mean the there is a Male God and a Female God. Since in marrage they become one flesh we always refer to them together as God singular. Peace out children.
OriginsWorm 2 weeks ago
a lot of cities are falling
pauljones2685 1 month ago
Amazing music! On my favourite! :)
ENDLESDECAYMUSIC 1 month ago
The pause at 1:05 made me go, "Awwww shiiiit! Here we go!"
TheJazzyBReal 2 months ago 2
Wonderful. The picture is pretty nice too.
JustAnotherSonicFan 2 months ago
Elohim commonly mistransliterated as the word God in English, and Yahowah/Jehovah [lit. "I am/ I will be"] as Lord. It is the plural form of Eloah; often used in the short form El (signifying strength). Lit. meaning, "Strength, and Power [of effect]." Lord God = Yahowah Elohim, lit. "I will be that which I will be/ I am that I am [your] Strength and Authority." It is not the plural of majesty or is there a Trinity; Deuteronomy 6:4.
receiptexpires 3 months ago
@receiptexpires Elohim is actually a name for God. God has many names. Allah. Yaweh. Ahura Mazda. No mistranslation. It is what it is.
Darksphere101 1 month ago
@Darksphere101 no elohim is the race of god my friend, just as lucifer
frenchhy 1 month ago
@frenchhy What's your source? Is that what Sitchin stated about the Babylonian deities?
receiptexpires 1 month ago
@receiptexpires pretty much. also the reptilian theory, luciferianism itself and various forms or paganism.
frenchhy 1 month ago
@frenchhy Elyon is God. The Elohim are he and his children. Allah is derivative of Elyon.
NeverAloneForever 3 weeks ago
@Darksphere101 I didn't state that it wasn't a name for a god. I stated information about the meaning of the word. However, I would agree on one thing you stated - many cultures have different names to give recognition to nature and its power of effect: Mithra (Persians) , Ahura Mazda (Ancient Iranian), Zeus (Greek), Jupiter (Roman), Amun (Egyptian) YHWH (Israeli), God (Christian), Allah (Islam), etc. etc.
receiptexpires 1 month ago
Seems like everything by City of the Fallen is totally epic!
volcanolover 4 months ago 15
@volcanolover In that case, try two steps from hell, too. XD
BittersweetRemix 2 months ago