| author | Alan Dipert
<alan@tailrecursion.com> 2025-11-20 05:49:14 UTC |
| committer | Alan Dipert
<alan@tailrecursion.com> 2025-11-20 05:49:14 UTC |
| parent | 247bd1bc73edb9ef372d251f512710768d8ddeb1 |
| md/NamesOfGod.md | +1 | -1 |
diff --git a/md/NamesOfGod.md b/md/NamesOfGod.md index 93fcacb..c18f6de 100644 --- a/md/NamesOfGod.md +++ b/md/NamesOfGod.md @@ -2,7 +2,7 @@ - Added November 19th 2025 -When we speak of the names of God we are not dabbling in poetic ornaments, but standing on holy ground where the self-revealing Lord discloses His character and covenant. This table lists major divine names, showing their language, meaning, key biblical references, New Testament interpretation, and theological significance. +When we speak of the names of God we are not dabbling in poetic ornaments, but standing on holy ground where the self-revealing Lord discloses His character and covenant. This table lists major divine names, showing their language, meaning, key biblical references, New Testament interpretation, and theological significance. When older English sources say “Jehovah,” they refer to the same covenant name rendered here as YHWH. Old Testament passages link to the NIV for its clear contemporary diction, while New Testament passages point to the ESV to retain the formal tone many readers expect when tracing apostolic teaching. For covenant-compound titles such as YHWH Rapha and YHWH Shalom, see [CovenantNamesOfGod](./CovenantNamesOfGod.md).