Alter2Ego
Active Member
DavidTree:
Simply because three different entities are mentioned in the same sentence does not = they are the same god. That's like telling all those reading this thread that when DavidTree and DavidTree's biological father and a possession of DavidTree's biological father are mentioned in the same sentence, it = One single human being.
Hebrew word for God is 'Elohim' which is PLURAL and has nothing to do with Strong's as he was not born until roughly 5,000 years AFTER Moses wrote Genesis by the HOLY SPIRIT.
Can you understand this???
DavidTree:
Elohim in Hebrew refers to plural gods as well as to a singular god. If the accompanying verb is singular, then Elohim is with reference to a singular god, and the latter happens to be the case with the Abrahamic God, Jehovah.
"First, whenever Elohim is used in the Bible to refer to the Creator of everything (Genesis 1:1), the plural noun generally uses a singular verb. In this case, Elohim is translated as God rather than gods. When elohim refers to anything else one might think of as “god-ish”, it’s translated as gods and uses a plural verb (1 Samuel 28:13)."
The Grammar of Elohim - Biblical Missiology
I am the king of grammar at my house. I can smell a run-on sentence at fifty paces. I undangle dangling participles with the greatest of ease. The colon, semicolon, and demonstrative pronouns are my best friends. And we are certainly humble. Yes, I wrote, “we are certainly humble.” Obviously a...
biblicalmissiology.org
"Elohim is actually a plural noun (indicated by the /im/ as in cherubim and seraphim). Sometimes the referent is plural. At other times the referent is singular. Like most words in English, Elohim can mean several things. Sometimes Elohim refers to plural "gods," as in "You shall have no other gods before me" (Deuteronomy 5:7). At other times it refers to the singular "God," as in "In the beginning God created the heavens and the earth" (Genesis 1:1). It is clear in this latter example that even though the form of the word Elohim is plural, the referent is singular, because the verb with which Elohim is used ("created") is singular in Hebrew.
"Elohim (אֱלֹהִים) is plural, yet paired with singular verbs when referring to the Creator: bara (“created”), singular in form, communicates one supreme authority (Wenham, 1987). Hebrew allows plurals of majesty, intensity, or fullness, not just numerical plurality. This is why Moses can write, “In the beginning God (Elohim) created the heavens and the earth” (Gen 1:1) without implying polytheism."
So, to summarize, David Tree, the accompanying verb is the deciding factor. And as the sources above indicated, all three of whom cited Genesis 1:1, when Elohim is with reference to the Abrahamic God, it is accompanied by a singular verb.