Study in the Chapel
One small detail in Genesis changes the whole tone of the Bible: the moment God is first called “the LORD God” in Genesis 2:4. We’re still early in our Genesis Bible study, but this is where the picture starts sharpening, because God isn’t only telling us what He does. He’s telling us who He is, and He does it, in part, through names. We start with a question most people overlook: why do Biblical names matter so much? From ancient naming traditions to the way Scripture uses meaning-packed names, we walk through how a name can function like a summary of a story. Moses carries an Egyptian name tied to being “drawn out” of the water. Jacob literally means “heel catcher,” and the narrative shows how that label fits his birth, his choices, and even why God eventually renames him Israel. Then we slow down at the tetragrammaton, the four-letter divine name written without vowels in Hebrew. We explain why you’ll hear both “Jehovah” and “Yahweh,” why many Jewish readers treat the name as too holy to pronounce, and why many English language Bibles signal it with LORD in all caps. If you’ve ever wondered what your Bible translation is doing behind the scenes, this will make those pages feel newly alive. Subscribe, share this with a friend who loves Scripture, and leave a review so more people can find the study.
46 episodios
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