names and titles in the original biblical languages Posts RSS Comments RSS

Archive for April, 2008

Lord of lords

In Hebrew, with the vowels:

lordoflords2_hb_.jpg

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Lord of lords

In Hebrew, without the vowels:

lordoflords1_hb_.jpg

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King of kings and Lord of Lords = 777

In Revelation 19.11-21, Jesus is described as the Divine Warrior (rider of the white horse) who has inscribed on his thigh the title, “King of kings” and “Lord of lords” (v.16). When these two titles are transcribed back into Aramaic, as shown below, the numeric equivalent of the spelling adds up to 777 (the numeric equivalent of each letter is listed below the letter). He is the antidote of the hellish warrior in 13.1 on whose heads were “blasphemous names” and the beast whose name is hidden by the number 666 (13.18). In Aramaic, “King of kings” and “Lord of lords” is written like this:

kingofkingslordoflords.jpg

Here is an artist’s depiction:

image24.jpg

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Lord God (without the vowels)

lordgod2_hb_.jpg

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Lord God

Literally, “Lord (absolute), Yahweh,” in Hebrew:

lordgod1_hb_.jpg

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Lord (with the vowels)

Literally, “lord (absolute)”, with the vowels:

lord2_hb_.jpg

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Lord

The title is in Hebrew and written, as is typical, with the vowels:

lord1_hb_.jpg

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life

“Life” is a short and popular word, often used on necklaces. This is how “life” is written in Hebrew:

life_hb_.jpg

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Jonah

Jonah means “dove” in Hebrew and is written like this:

jonah_hb_.jpg

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Jochanan

Jochanan is the Hebrew form of John and means “God (Yahweh) is gracious”:

john-johanan_hb_.jpg

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