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Is Elohim Proper or Pagan?
Our Bible is a translation
from Hebrew and Greek manuscripts. Out of both superstition and misguided
reverence, the Name of the Father, Yahweh, was hidden in subsequent
translations. The title “Elohim” and its shorter forms “El” and “Eloah” are
Biblical Hebrew terms meaning Mighty One(s), and from these terms translators
concocted the English title “God.”
One belief is that “El” and “Elohim” should
not be used by the True Worshiper because ancient Canaanites referred to their
pagan deities by these terms. The issue hinges on one pivotal question: who used
the title Elohim first, the Hebrews who spoke the heavenly language of Hebrew,
or the Canaanites who spoke a related Semitic tongue?
If we accept that Hebrew was the original
language of mankind, and can show that “Elohim” is found in the oldest Hebrew
texts available to us, then we can know that the word was inspired of Yahweh.
That means it was used first in the Hebrew and only later was usurped by the
Canaanites, not the other way around.
We can do exactly that by looking at the oldest Biblical manuscripts in
existence, which are the Dead Sea Scrolls. A leather scroll of the complete Book
of Isaiah was found dating back 1,000 years before the Masoretic text, the
oldest Hebrew transcript in existence up to that point.
Every book of the Bible is represented in the Dead Sea Scrolls, except for
the Book of Esther. All through these scrolls we see the terms El and Elohim in
the Hebrew. From the very first verse of the Scriptures, the oldest Hebrew copy
of Genesis refers to our Creator as “Elohim.”—“In the beginning Elohim created
the heavens and the earth.”
In his book, The Temple Scroll (vol. 2), Yigael Yadin reproduces the
Hebrew text of Deuteronomy in which Elohim is commonly used (for several
examples, see Column LIV, Deut. 13:3, p. 401).
If Yahweh refers to Himself as Elohim, who is any man to say it is wrong?
Would Moses, who was inspired to write the first five books of the Bible, ever
use a pagan term for our Creator? The terms El and Elohim could not have “crept
into” a later text of the Scriptures if they already appeared in the earliest
one!
Because no manuscripts have been found that are older than the Dead Sea
Scrolls, we conclude that Yahweh inspired the term Elohim. Moses wrote it and
Israel used it.
Different Sources of the Biblical Text?
One theory cited by the opponents of the term Elohim says that our Bible is an
editorial cut-and-paste job from several different manuscript sources. The older
manuscripts, called the “J” source, contain the Tetragrammaton, while later
ones, like the “E” source, employ the term “Elohim. From this they contend that
“Elohim” is a later designation borrowed from the likes of the Canaanites.
Opponents of the use of Elohim point to the “J” version as the oldest and more
accurate one, lacking the words El or Elohim. Their argument collapses, however,
in face of the following authority’s statement: “There is of course, nothing new
in J’s use of Elohim” (The Anchor Bible, Genesis, Vol. 1, p. 37.)
This theory of the “documentary” view of the Bible, also known as the
J-E-P-D hypothesis, was conceived by secular critics of the Bible
ostensibly to bring into question the
inspiration of the Scriptures. The Dead Sea Scrolls, as the oldest
existing manuscripts, reveal a different story.
This hypothesis is also being discounted by modern scholarship as increasing
numbers of Biblical scholars are acknowledging its fallacies.
In a 1959 interview in Christianity Today, distinguished Hebrew scholar
Cyrus H. Gordon rejected the notion that the use of “Elohim and “Yahweh” as
divergent names implies different literary sources (Higher Criticism and
Forbidden Fruit). Yahweh’s Word is handed down to us by direct inspiration,
according to 2Timothy 3:16, and is not the product of conflicting manuscripts
and an editor’s scissors and glue.
Further, if we adhere to this theory, then the authenticity of Scripture itself
is open to question. Is the Bible handed down by Yahweh, or given to us by way
of editorial whim? That is of utmost and fundamental concern to the Bible
believer. Inspiration of the Scriptures is the foundation on which our very
beliefs must rest. If the Bible cannot be trusted then the Truth we hold is
itself in question.
Cognate Languages, Similar Words
A key ingredient to understanding this issue is knowing that Middle East
languages are all cognate or related to one another. Just how similar they are
is explained in How the Hebrew Language Grew, by Edward Horowitz. He
makes this statement about Semitic languages, of which Hebrew and other
languages in the Mideast are a part:
“The sister languages of Hebrew are languages such as Assyrian, Babylonian,
Arabic, Syrian, Ethiopic, and also, as has been lately discovered, Egyptian.
With these, its own sister languages, and not with the Indo-European group,
Hebrew is intimately bound up. All the common Hebrew words are found with only
slight changes in all the other Semitic languages. A good Hebraist
knows literally hundreds of Arabic words without ever having studied Arabic,
because Arabic and Hebrew have such a large number of words in common. …All the
Semitic languages go back ultimately to an ancient parent Semitic language.”
That “ancient parent Semitic language” was Biblical Hebrew. We find that Israel
upon entering the Promised Land had no trouble communicating with the various
Canaanite peoples already there. That was because they spoke sister languages,
much as Germans can understand both High and Low German.
Is it therefore any wonder that the Canaanites, living in the Promised
Land, who spoke a Semitic tongue that derived from Hebrew, would use the same
word Elohim that the Hebrews used — only applying it to their deity
instead of to Yahweh?
We learn that the same thing likely occurred with the use of the sacred
Name “Yah” in Egypt. Notice the following from the Encyclopedia of Gods
by Michael Jordan: “Yah — moon god. Egyptian. Yah may have been an
import to Egypt brought by the Semitic immigrants…” (p. 291).
The practice of name borrowing was common in history. As people migrated they
took their beliefs, language, and names with them and spread them wherever they
went.
One argument says that the terms El and Elohim crept into the Hebrew
language years after the original Scriptures were written, citing Isaiah 19:18:
“In that day shall five cities in the land of Egypt speak the language of
Canaan, and swear to Yahweh of hosts; one shall be called, The city of
destruction” (“city of destruction” is a mistranslation, and properly should
have been “city of righteousness,” from the Hebrew ha-zedek).
This passage is a future prophecy concerning the conversion of Egypt in the
Kingdom, when all will speak Hebrew. The verse has nothing to do with bringing a
pagan Canaanite language to Israel. “Language of Canaan” is simply a poetic
reference to the Hebrew tongue because of all the Hebrew-speaking Israelites who
settled there (see Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical
Literature). Further, in the 8th century
B.C.E., when Isaiah was writing this, the language of Canaan was Hebrew, not
Canaanite.
As a footnote, in going from one language to another, the actual letters we
choose to replicate the sounds in a name are essentially inconsequential, so
long as those letters accurately express the sounds of the original word.
Some who think that “El” is wrong to use make peculiar substitutions, like
replacing the “el” with a “yl” in words like “Israyl.” This is an effort to make
it appear as if a perceived “problem” has been fixed. It is not much different
when churchianity capitalizes “god” in order to make a generic title into a
name.
But in this case, changing the “e” to a “y” amounts to changing the
inspired Hebrew word itself by substituting a yod for the aleph in
“el.” Does changing the “el” to “yl” return us to the proper, original word? If
so, where is the proof that “yl” is more correct? Where is the Hebrew word
“Israyl” found anywhere outside the private writings of a few detractors?
Moreover, one wonders how the substitution of “y” for “e” makes any difference
in the pronunciation of the word anyway.
We must never attempt to shore up our own private doctrines by changing the
Bible to make it fit our beliefs, either by taking from it or adding to it. We
have no authority to do so. It is Yahweh’s Book, not ours. The command in
Revelation 22:19 is clear and sobering: “And if any man shall take away from the
words of the book of this prophecy, Elohim shall take away his part out of the
book of life, and out of the holy city, and from the things which are written in
this book” (see also Deut. 4:2, Prov. 30:5-6).
It is clear that El, Eloah and Elohim are proper in reference to “Mighty
One(s)” in the Scriptures.
Biblical Examples of ‘El’
One can make a solid case that the original language on earth, handed down from
the very heavens, was Hebrew. It was the language of the heavenly messengers,
who always spoke to humankind in Hebrew and to those whose native tongue was
Hebrew. Yahshua spoke to His Father in Hebrew (Aramaic) while hanging on the
stake, Matthew 27:46. His words were not translated in the New Testament, which
is auspicious for us.
Notice what He said. “And about the ninth hour Yahshua cried with a loud
voice, saying, ‘Eli, Eli, lama sabachthani?’ that is to say, My El, my El, why
have you forsaken me?” “Eli” means “my El” in Hebrew (“i” stands for the
possessive “my”).
If El were a pagan term and condemned by Yahweh, our Savior certainly would
never have used it in calling out to His own Father.
If “El” were a pagan reference, why do so many patriarchs retain “el” in their
names? Elijah (EliYah), Elisha, Eliezer, Ezekiel,
Daniel, Joel and many more include the legitimate Hebrew word El.
If El is so wrong, why is it found in the names of the great archangels Michael
(a name meaning “Who Is Like El”) and Gabriel (“El Is Powerful”)? These
angelic beings existed long before the earth itself, certainly long before any
pagan languages or pagan deities.
After getting the promise of a great nation in the memorable dream about
the ladder, Jacob called the site where he had slept “Bethel,” a name
that means “House of El” (Gen. 28:19). Later, in Genesis 35, Jacob was told by
Yahweh to go to Beth-el and build an altar there. Jacob called the place of the
altar “El-Beth-el,” or “El of the House of Elohim.” In Genesis 33:20 he again
erected an altar, this time at Shalem, and called it “El-eloah-Israel,” or “El,
the Elohim of Israel.” Certainly the eminent patriarch would never have named
any place in honor of a pagan deity.
Even before this, Abram named his son Ishmael, meaning “El will
hear.” The angel in Matthew 1:23 said that Yahshua’s name would be Emmanuel,
meaning “El with Us.”
It is clear that
the titles El, Eloah, and Elohim are legitimate Hebrew terms that were inspired
of Yahweh and used by His people, including His own Son. To say they are from
paganism is to believe a delusion of one’s own making.
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