| Blog results | Results 1 - 10 of about 1,813 for Catholic use of Tetragrammaton. (0.27 seconds) |
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| 15 Aug 2008 by John Recent official statements of the Catholic Church prohibit the pronunciation of the Tetragrammaton in the liturgy. To be sure, the use of “Yahweh” as needed in courses on the Old Testament and in scholarship generally is not thereby ... Ancient Hebrew Poetry - http://ancienthebrewpoetry.typepad.com/ancient_hebrew_poetry/ - References [ More results from Ancient Hebrew Poetry ] |
| 1 Feb 2010 by Matthew He piously denounced any superstitious or magical use of such practices, of course, unlike some of his Christian renaissance predecessors who were rather more impecunious in their magical dabblings. (Don't try any of this at home. ... Shrine of the Holy Whapping - http://holywhapping.blogspot.com/ |
| 5 Feb 2010 by PK a variety of speakers and share our faith with the broader Catholic community which makes up the Brisbane Archdiocese. Full details of the sessions are outlined in a booklet which may be obtained from the parish office for anyone ... St Mary's Catholic Parish Newsletter... - http://maryboroughatholicnewsletter.blogspot.com/ |
| 4 May 2006 by Steven I. Weiss “The Jewish tetragrammaton YHWH—the sacred name of God—in fact derived from Jehovah, an androgynous physical union between the masculine Jah and the pre-Hebraic name for Eve, Havah.” He makes stupid remarks regarding Islam as well ... Canonist - http://www.canonist.com/ - References |
| 17 Sep 2008 In a directive from the Vatican, the Catholic Church was advised that the use of the Tetragrammaton, the four letter sacred and personal name of God in Hebrew, was to be avoided in a liturgical setting, i.e. songs and prayers offered ... First Followers - http://firstfollowers.vision.org/public/blog/169992?ref=pom |
| 2 Sep 2008 I don't believe this is anything other than an attempt by Vatican bureaucrats to appease orthodox jews who do not use the word Yahweh. I don't believe there is any reason on the planet why the Catholic church should ban the use of this word .... First off, addressing God as "Yahweh" is not something that has deep roots in our Catholic faith. Secondly, we don't know for certain what the vowels sounds in the Tetragrammaton are (is it "Yahwheh?" what happened to "Jehovah?"). ... CNA Daily News - http://www.catholicnewsagency.com/ - References [ More results from CNA Daily News ] |
| 22 Nov 2009 by fromthesunrising So these are something to think and use for logical reasoning to prove that the tetragrammaton have existed in the original Septuagint. The fact that 5000 manuscripts of NT that have found with no tetragrammaton on it would only show that there .... As far as I have quickly scanned the Apocypha which is a non-canonical book in the Catholic Bible, I have notice that there is no divine intervention of Jehovah with the people and the writers of it because there was no direct ... Fromthesunrising's Blog - http://fromthesunrising.wordpress.com/ |
| 21 Apr 2006 by Reb Chaim HaQoton In fact, the Roman Catholic Church bans its members from saying “Alleluia” during Passiontide (the time between Lent and Easter) because that time is supposed to be a sad time and the phrase is too joyous, so even the gentiles agree to the .... According to the Arizal, every kosher animal (as defined by Leviticus Chapter 11) gets its lifeline from the first letters of the Tetragrammaton, while the lives of non-Kosher animals are sustained through the latter two letters of ... Reb Chaim HaQoton - http://rchaimqoton.blogspot.com/ - References |
| 32 minutes ago by Tribunus The tetragrammaton, written in Hebrew as YHVH, meaning "I am Who am", signified the ineffable name of God which, having been told to Moses directly by God, was so deeply sacred that Jews were forbidden to say it lest it sound like a claim to be .... Caesar Augustus was the ancient title of the Roman Emperor, adopted by the Roman Catholic Christian emperors after Constantine, and derived from Julius Caesar and from his nephew, Octavian, called Augustus, the first Emperor. ... Roman Christendom - http://romanchristendom.blogspot.com/ [ More results from Roman Christendom ] |
| 21 Jan 2010 by catholicsensibility Good use of a jazz-third over mostly chanted verses. My friend suggested I rework it in the Taize style, and it was easily the most popular of my liturgical pieces I wrote in the 80's. I frequently used it at Evening Prayer until a few ... Catholic Sensibility - http://catholicsensibility.wordpress.com/ - References |
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