50.9 F
Spokane
Monday, April 14, 2025
spot_img
HomeCommentaryAsk A Jew: What is God's Name?

Ask A Jew: What is God’s Name?

Date:

spot_img

Related stories

At St. Gertrude the Paschal flame ignites a deeper faith

At St. Gertrude, Holy Week and Benedictine vows mirror Christ’s love, sacrifice and resurrection through rich, symbolic rituals.

Let our better ‘ships’ rise with us

Greed sank great ships of bipartisan-ship, citizen-ship and others. With courage, we can raise them and sail toward something better and rise again!

Sociologist’s new book explains why organized religion has lost relevancy

Organized religion isn't just declining. It has become culturally obsolete. So says Christian Smith in his newest book, "Why Religion Went Obsolete: The Demise of Traditional Faith in America."

For Jews traumatized by Oct. 7, Passover Seder is a model for how to process it

Learn how Jews can use the Passover Seder as a way to reframe their Oct. 7 trauma through the ritual's ceremony, transforming its horror into a story of hope and renewal.

Protect public schools: Keep religious instruction — and its cover-ups — out.

This column communicates how church abuse scandals don’t belong in public schools. Religious instruction and its cover-ups need to stay out of classrooms.

Our Sponsors

spot_img

What questions do you have about Judaism? Submit them online, or fill out the form below.

By Neal Schindler

What is God’s name?

In accordance with Reform Judaism’s penchant for cheekiness, Rabbi Paul Kipnes has written that “God is a four-letter word” according to Torah. What he means is that God’s proper name consists of four Hebrew letters: Yod, Hey, Vav, and Hey (יהוה). Jews typically pronounce this combination of four letters, often called the tetragrammaton, as “Adonai,” which would normally be written as follows in Hebrew: אדוני. As Rabbi Kipnes notes, Adonai is a euphemism, since it means “Lord.” The fact is, we no longer know the correct pronunciation of the tetragrammaton. The rabbi explains that “the correct pronunciation was lost when the priesthood collapsed with the destruction of the Temple in 70 CE.”

God goes by quite a few names in the Hebrew Bible. Rabbi Bonnie Margulis, also from the Reform tradition, notes that El, Elohim, and El Shaddai are among these names. You may know that some Jews write “G-d” instead of “God.” Yet another Reform rabbi, Victor Appell, explains that the medieval French rabbi Rashi believed Jews “should not erase or destroy God’s name and should avoid writing it.” The idea that writing or destroying God’s name is a no-no likely derives from Deuteronomy 12:3-4, which not only urges destruction of pagan altars but also commands: “… wipe out their names from those places. You must not worship the Lord your God in their way” (NIV).

Religious Jews, whether mystically inclined or not, tend to see God as too holy and beyond comprehension to be summed up in a name. And for many Jews, even the euphemistic terms we use to describe God aren’t to be tossed around lightly. As Rabbi Appell indicates: “Some Jews will avoid discarding paper or books in which God’s name appears in Hebrew. Rather than being thrown out or destroyed, they may be stored in a genizah (a storage place) and buried in a Jewish cemetery.”

Neal Schindler
Neal Schindler
A native of Detroit, Neal Schindler has lived in the Pacific Northwest since 2002. He has held staff positions at Seattle Weekly and The Seattle Times and was a freelance writer for Jew-ish.com from 2007 to 2011. Schindler was raised in a Reconstructionist Jewish congregation and is now a member of Spokane's Reform congregation, Emanu-El. He is the director of Spokane Area Jewish Family Services. His interests include movies, Scrabble, and indie rock. He lives with his wife, son, and two cats in West Central Spokane.

Our Sponsors

spot_img
spot_img
spot_img
spot_img
0 0 votes
Article Rating
Subscribe
Notify of
guest


0 Comments
Oldest
Newest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
spot_img
0
Would love your thoughts, please comment.x
()
x