Various religions have different
names of
God.
Indian religions
Hinduism
Within
Hinduism, there are number of names
of God which are generally in
Sanskrit,
each supported by a different tradition within the religion.
Brahman, Bhagavan, Ishvara, and Paramatma are among the most
commonly used
terms for God in the
scriptures of Hinduism.
- Bhagwan (Bhagwan) means
"God".
- Ishvara (īśvara) means
"Cosmic Controller" or "Lord".
- Maheshvara
(mahā-īśvara) means "Great Lord", used as an attribute of god
Shiva.
- Parameshvara
(parama-īśvara) means "Supreme Lord".
- Paramatman
(parama-ātman) means "Supreme Soul".
- Para Brahman
(para-brahma), an ineffable entity, best translated as "The Absoute
Truth", Supreme Brahman, or Supreme Cosmic Spirit.
- Adi Purusha ( )
means "Timeless Being", "Primordial Lord", "First Person".
- Vishnu is seen as
Para Brahman within Vaishnava traditions, and the Vishnu Sahasranama enumerates 1000 names
of Vishnu, each name eulogizing one of His countless great
attributes. The names of Vishnu's Dasavatara in particular are considered divine
names.
- Krishna ( ) is
associated with Vishnu and certain Vaishnava traditions also regard Him as Para Brahman and Svayam Bhagavan (svayambhagavān) or the
Lord Himself. In Krishna-centered schools
of Vaishnavism, which includes the Nimbarka, Vallabha and
Caitanya schools Krishna is held as the Supreme Personality
of Godhead based on the descriptions of Him within the Bhagavata Purana and Mahabharata, with particular reference to the
Bhagavad-Gita.
- Rama (Rāma) is associated
with Vishnu and is especially venerated in
bhakti literature, such as that of
Kabir and Ravidas, and
more recently in the writings of Mohandas Gandhi.
Sikhism
There are multiple names for God in Sikhism. Some of the popular
names for God in Sikhism are:
- Waheguru, meaning
Wonderful Teacher bringing light to remove darkness, this
name is considered the greatest among Sikhs, and it is known as
"Gurmantar", the Guru's Word.
- Ek Onkar, ek
meaning "one", emphasizes the singularity of God. It is the
beginning of the Sikh Mool Mantra.
- Satnam meaning True
Name, some are of the opinion that this is a name for God in
itself, others believe that this is an adjective used to describe
the "Gurmantar", Waheguru (See below)
- Nirankar, meaning
formless One
God according to
Guru Nanak is beyond
full comprehension by
humans; has endless
number of virtues; takes on innumerable forms; and can be called by
an infinite number of names thus "
Your Names are so many, and
Your Forms are endless. No one can tell how many Glorious
Virtues You have."
Abrahamic religions
Judaism
In the
Hebrew scriptures the
Jewish name of God is considered sacred and, out of
deep respect for the name, Jews do not say the name of God and do
not erase it if it is written. (See
Exodus 20:7) The
tetragrammaton (
Hebrew: , ) is the name for the group of
four Hebrew letters which represent the name of God. The
Tetragrammaton occurs 6,828 times in the Hebrew text in the
Biblia Hebraica and the
Biblia Hebraica
Stuttgartensia. Neither vowels nor vowel points were used in
ancient Hebrew writings.
Some claim the pronunciation of YHWH has been lost, other
authorities say it has not and that it is pronounced
Yahweh. References, such as
The New Encyclopædia Britannica,
validate the above by offering additional specifics:
Early Christian writers, such as Clement of Alexandria in the 2nd
century, had used a form like Yahweh, and
claim that this pronunciation of the tetragrammaton was never really
lost.
Other Greek transcriptions also indicated that YHWH
should be pronounced Yahweh.
Clement of Alexandria transliterated the tetragrammaton as Ιαου.
The above claims were founded upon the understanding that Clement
of Alexandria had transliterated YHWH as Ιαουε in Greek, which is
pronounced "Yahweh" in English. However, the final -e in the latter
form has been shown as having been a later addition. For a more
in-depth discussion of this, see the article
Yahweh.
Instead of pronouncing YHWH during
prayer,
Jews say
Adonai ("Lord").
Halakha
requires that secondary rules be placed around the primary law, to
reduce the chance that the main law will be broken. As such, it is
common Jewish practice to restrict the use of the word
Adonai to
prayer only. In
conversation, many Jewish people, even when not speaking Hebrew,
will call God "
Hashem", השם, which is Hebrew for "the
Name" (this appears in
Leviticus
24:11).
A common title of God in the
Hebrew
Bible is
Elohim (Hebrew: אלהים);
as opposed to other titles of God in Judaism, this name also
describes gods of other religions, angels, or even humans of great
importance (John 10:34-36).
Christianity
Many Christians refer to the god simply as "
God".
The personal names
Yahweh and
Jehovah, based on the
tetragrammaton, are also used.
Jehovah appears in
Tyndale's
Bible, the
King James
Version, and other translations from that time period and
later. Many translations of the Bible translate the tetragrammaton
as
, following the
Jewish practice of substituting the spoken Hebrew
word '
Adonai'
(translated as 'Lord') for YHWH when read aloud.Some avoid using
either Yahweh or Jehovah altogether on the basis that the actual
pronunciation of the tetragrammaton has been lost in antiquity.
They use
God or
The Lord instead.Similarly, the
original Hebrew pronunciation of "Jesus" is unknown.
Jesus (
Iesus,
Yeshua,
Joshua, or
Yehoshûa) (Arabic: يسوع) is a Hebraic
personal name meaning "Yahweh saves/helps/is salvation",.
Christ means "the
anointed" in
Greek.
Khristos is the Greek
equivalent of the Hebrew word
Messiah
(Arabic: المسيح); while in English the old Anglo-Saxon
Messiah-rendering
hæland 'healer' was practically
annihilated by the Latin Christ, some cognates such as
heiland in Dutch survive.
In
Messianic Judaism, generally
regarded as a form of Christianity , YHWH (pre-incarnate) and
Yeshua (incarnate) are one and the same, the second Person, with
the Father and Ruach haQodesh (the Holy Spirit) being the first and
third Persons, respectively, of ha'Elohiym (the Godhead). YHWH is
expressed as "haShem," which means 'the Name.'
The less evangelical branch of the
Quakers often refers to God as
The Light. Another term used is '
King of Kings' or 'Lord of Lords' and
Lord of the
Hosts. Other names used by Christians include
Ancient of Days,
Father/
Abba, 'Most
High' and the
Hebrew names
Elohim,
El-Shaddai, and
Adonai. The name,
"Abba/Father" is the most commonterm used for the creator within
Christianity, because it was the name Jesus Christ (Yeshua Messiah)
himself used to refer to God.
In the movement
Imiaslavie ("Name
glorification") opposed by the Russian Orthodox Church, the name of
God is
God Himself and can be used to evoke
miracles.
The
Assemblies of Yahweh is
currently the only Christian group to use the name
Yahweh exclusively and consistently.
Shangdi 上帝 (
Hanyu Pinyin: shàng dì) (literally
King
Above) is also used to refer to the Christian god in the
Standard Mandarin Union Version of
the
Bible. Likewise, Korean Christians and
Vietnamese Christians also use cognates of this name, to refer to
the Biblical god.
Shen 神 (lit.
God,
spirit, or
deity) was adopted by
Protestant missionaries in China to refer to the
Christian god. In this context it is usually rendered with a space,
" 神", to demonstrate reverence. (An alternate explanation for
adding a space is that doing so simplified typesetting with two
versions carrying 神 or 上帝 made parallel.)
Zhu, Tian
Zhu 主,天主 (lit.
Lord or
Lord in
Heaven) is translated from the English word, "Lord", which is
a formal title of the Christian god in Mainland China's Christian
churches.
Some people refer to God as "
Yair".
See also:
Names and titles
of Jesus in the New Testament.
Islam
Allah is the most frequently used name of God
in
Islam. It is an Arabic word meaning "The
God" , thus rendering this name impossible to be attributed to any
number other than one, since "Al" or "the" is denoting of a certain
singularity, and therefore Muslims claim this the perfect name for
the Monotheist God. the name Allah was used in polytheistic
pre-Islamic Arabia to refer to the creator god, who was possibly
their supreme deity. The word Allah is a
cognate of the
Hebrew
word
Eloah.
A well established Islamic tradition enumerates
99 names of God, each
representing certain attributes or descriptions of God; in which
God is seen as being the source and maximum extent of each name's
meaning. The names
Ar-Rahman and
Ar-Raheem are the most frequently mentioned in the
Qur'an, both meaning the "Most Merciful", but with different
emphasis of meaning, either of which are also often translated as
the "Most Compassionate" or the "Most Beneficent".
Besides these Arabic names, Muslims of non-Arab origins may also
sometimes use other names in their own languages to God, such as
the
Ottoman anachronism
Tanrı (originally the pagan Turks' celestial
chief god, corresponding to the Ancient Turkish
Tengri), or
Khoda in
Persian language. The use of the word "God"
in English is also seen as acceptable to Muslims. GOD (ALLAH) IS
THE GREATEST
Bahá'í Faith
Shoghi Effendi refers to Baha'uallah
as the "incarnation of 'Everlasting Father'." and in another place
as the "complete incarnation of the names and attributes of
God".
Bahá'ís refer to God using
the local word for
God in whatever language is being
spoken.Bahá'ís often, in prayers, refer to God by titles and
attributes, such as the Mighty, the All-Powerful, the All-Wise, the
Incomparable, the Gracious, the Helper, the All-Glorious, the
Omniscient. The above-mentioned attributes are sometimes referred
to in their Arabic form - for instance Bahá'ís refer to "Bahá"
(meaning Glory or Splendour) or any derivation thereof (ex.
Al-Abhá, or The Most Glorious) as the
Greatest Name of God.
Traditional Chinese religion
- Shangdi 上帝 (Hanyu
Pinyin: shàng dì) (literally King Above) was a supreme
deity worshipped in ancient China
.
- Shen 神 (lit. God,
spirit, or deity) is commonly used to refer to
various spirits, including gods.
- Tian 天 (lit. sky
or heaven) is used to refer to the sky, but is not a
personification of the sky. Whether it possesses sentience in the
embodiment of an omnipotent, omniscient being is a difficult
question for linguists and philosophers.
Turkic religion: Tengriism
- Tengri, also used to
refer to the sky, is the one God of many Turkic ethnic groups in
China, Mongolia, and the Near East, a practice now called Tengriism. Tengriism is
built upon on the existence of one God. It was the official
religion of The Göktürks (Old
Turkic: Celestial Turks[1] or "Blue Turks")
Taboos
Several religions have
taboos related to names
of their gods. In some cases, the name may never be spoken, only
spoken by inner-circle
initiates, or only
spoken at prescribed moments during certain
rituals. In other cases, the name may be never freely
spoken, but when written, more limited taboos apply. To avoid
saying names of God, they are often modified, such as by
clipping and substitution of
phonetically similar words.It is common to regard the written name
of one's god as deserving of
respect ; it
ought not, for instance, be stepped upon or dirtied, or made common
slang in such a way as to show disrespect. It
may be permissible to burn the written name when there is no longer
a use for it.
Judaism
Most observant
Jews forbid discarding holy
objects, including any document with a name of God written on it.
Once written, the name must be preserved indefinitely. This leads
to several noteworthy practices:
- Commonplace materials are written with an intentionally
abbreviated form of the name. For instance, a Jewish letter-writer
may substitute "G-d" for the name God. Thus, the letter
may be discarded along with ordinary trash. (Note that not all Jews
agree that non-Hebrew words like God are covered under the
prohibition.)
- Since the Divine presence (or
possibly an appearance of God) can
supposedly be called simply by pronouncing His true name correctly, substitute names are
used.
- Copies of the Torah are, like most
scriptures, heavily used during worship services, and will eventually become worn
out. Since they may not be disposed of in any way, including by
burning, they are removed, traditionally to the synagogue attic. See
genizah. There they remain until they are
buried.
- All religious texts that include the name of God are
buried.
Zoroastrianism
Most
Zoroastrians believe that once a
product bears the name or image of
Zoroaster or
Ahura
Mazda it cannot be thrown away in the garbage. Yet, it does not
have to be kept indefinitely. There are several ways to dispose of
the item:
They can be thrown away if they mix back with the seven creations
:
- Placed in a river, lake or other body of
water
- Buried in the ground (earth)
Islam
- In Islam, the name (or any names) of God is generally treated
with the utmost respect. It is referred to in many verses of the
Qur'an that the real believers respect the name of God very deeply.
(e.g. stated in 33/35, 57/16, 59/21, 7/180, 17/107, 17/109, 2/45,
21/90, 23/2 ) On the other hand the condition is openly stressed by
prohibiting people from unnecessary swearing using the name of
Allah. (e.g. stated in 24/53, 68/, 63/2, 58/14, 58/16, 2/224) Thus
the mention of the name of God is expected to be done so
reverently. In Islam there are 100 different names of Allah, 99 of
which are known to mankind, and 1 which, in the Islamic religion,
is told to those who enter heaven.
Christianity
- In Christianity, God's name may not "be used in vain" (see the
Ten Commandments), which is
commonly interpreted to mean that it is wrong to curse while making reference to God (ex. "Oh my
God!" as an expression of frustration or anger). A more natural
interpretation of this passage is in relation to oath taking, where
the command is to hold true to those commands made 'in God's name'.
(The idea that Christians should hold to their word is reinforced
by certain statements by Jesus in the Gospels - cf Matthew 5:37) God's name being used in vain can
also be interpreted as trying to invoke the power of God, as a
means to impress, intimidate, punish, condemn, and/or control
others. This can also be used to refer to the idea of saying that
one acts "in God's behalf" when doing things that are clearly
personal actions.
- Some Christians capitalize all references to God in writing,
including pronouns. (ex. "The Lord, He is God, Holy is His
Name.")
- Different Christian cultures have different views on the
appropriateness of naming people after God. English speaking
Christians generally would not name a son "Jesus", but
"Jesús" is a common Spanish first name. This taboo does
not apply to more indirect names and titles like Emmanuel or Salvador. The word "Christian" is
sometimes used as a first name, and is currently the name of about
1 out of every 1500 males in the United States.
- Traditionally, when a copy of the Bible is worn out, the book
is burned, not simply thrown away .
Literature and fiction
- Names of God in
Old English poetry
- Aigonz is the word for God in the lingua ignota of Hildegard of Bingen
- Eru Ilúvatar, a name of
monotheistic God in Quenya, a fictional
language invented by J. R. R.
Tolkien.
- "The Nine Billion
Names of God", a short story by Arthur C. Clarke.
- Maleldil is the name of God (or, more
accurately, of the allegorical character associated with Jesus) in Old Solar, the true
language in the Space Trilogy books by
C. S.
Lewis
- In the movie Pi, the characters
are looking for the true name of god,
which is 216 letters long.
- In the movie Warlock the
main character seeks out the pages of the Grand Grimoire which can be commanded to
reveal the true lost name of God. If it can be spoken backwards,
the universe will end. Viewers are shown the letters forming, but
not the actual word, and the Warlock does not get beyond
pronouncing the first (last) syllable before he is killed.
- In Indiana Jones
and the Last Crusade, Indiana nearly gets killed trying to
spell the name of God (Jehovah) in an
ancient word puzzle. He had stepped on "J" and nearly fell to his
death, then remembered that in Latin Jehovah begins with an
"I".
- In the Cthulhu Mythos, speaking
the name of the deity Hastur aloud can bring
down a curse or other manner of divine retribution on the speaker.
Similarly, if a person even reads the name of the god Y'golonac, even if the name is not read aloud, it
can allow the Y'golonac to invade that person's mind and take over
their body.
See also
Notes
- p.36
- Krishna explained in the Srimad Bhagavatam
- B-Gita Chapter 10, texts 12-13
- Guru Granth Sahib p. 358
- The New Encyclopædia Britannica, Vol. 12, 1998,
Chicago, IL, article "Yahweh," p. 804.
- Bible
Dictionary by William Smith LLD 1948 p.307; An Expository Dictionary of
NT Words by W.E. Vine 1965 edition p.275, Websters English
Dictionary; etc.
- "Allah." Encyclopædia Britannica. 2007.
Encyclopædia Britannica
- L. Gardet, "Allah", Encyclopedia of Islam
- http://names.mongabay.com/male_names.htm
- Goofs for Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade
References
External links