This section will be devoted to Scriptural words and their meaning. We will not only establish the etymological roots of these words, but we will reveal how many English words are actually Hebrew words. Everything and anything you might want to know about the Hebrew language will be discussed and presented in this section.

E-mail us if you want to know what a particular word is and we will be happy to post it here for all to read. If you are interested in it, maybe many others are, too.


OMEN

Omen is a latin word from an Indo-European root meaning 'to believe as true'. The source of this word in Hebrew is aman, which is the root word for 'faithful', 'belief' and 'truth'. As the original word passed through various languages and translations, the meaning changed and so did the objects or persons connected with it. Aman begins as scriptural belief, faith, and truth as it testifies of YHVH. When this word left its home in Israel, it became amon, an Egyptian god, also known as Amon-Ra, or the sun god. This is where it begins to change and becomes the belief that invisible guardians were all around the 'faithful', whispering signs of future events. As the word changes, so does the object of the word. Aman, which used to be scriptural faith and truth, becomes omen, a word that loses its context of scriptural truth, and becomes an act of 'simply believing' that something is true.

One might carefully examine the process that the scriptural word Yahshua (YHVH is salvation) went through as well. What begins as a son's name that contains the name of His father, Yah, comes out the other end as Jesus, which means . . . what?

Shalom Alecheim!


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