Study in the Chapel
God’s name “Jehovah” can sound like a label from a distant past, until you slow down and ask what it actually means and why Scripture repeats it thousands of times. We start in Genesis 2:4, where “Lord God” translates Jehovah Elohim, and we follow the thread the way the Bible Study was designed to be followed: word by word, name by name, meaning by meaning. We revisit Elohim first, because it frames everything. Elohim speaks to God’s strength as Creator and Sustainer, and it’s meant to steady us when life feels bigger than we are. From there we step into the sacred, debated territory of Jehovah and the tetragrammaton JHVH, why vowels were supplied later, and why so many readers treat this name with special reverence. We also explain how we handle controversial Bible topics without drifting into speculation: careful scholarship, clear claims, and room for you to do your own research. Then comes the surprising translation: Jehovah means “I Am.” The power is in how God uses it. Jehovah is paired with other words to show what God will be for His people, not just what He is in the abstract. We walk through Jehovah Jireh in the Abraham and Isaac story as the God who sees to it and provides, and we connect it to Jehovah Rophi in Exodus as the Lord who heals you personally. The takeaway is simple and demanding: this is not a distant deity. This is a personal God who relates, provides, protects, directs, and calls us to love and obey in return. If you’ve ever wondered why God’s names matter for prayer, trust, and daily life, hit play and stay with the text. Subscribe, share this with a friend who loves deep Bible study, and leave a review.
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