Nowhere in the New Testament use any name for the Creator, I want to stress that he never gave a name, Jehovah is an invention of the 12th century and the Tetragrammaton is a fraud
The unpronounceable name, unpronounceable name ever! gave no name! and never told any name Moises, unpronounceable, what he said is a expression of who he was, not a name
In the New Testament used the expression Theos, is the only expression that was used in the original writings and not mean Jehovah or tetragramaton
http://www.jehovahs-witness.net/watchtower/beliefs/235520/1/Who-is-Jehovah See first part
The Hebrew names of the great patriarchs and high priests of the Hebrews begin with vowels, which is proof that the old and real Hebrew if he vocal.
Adam, Eve, Abraam, Isaak, Iakob, Israel, Ishmael, Esau, Aaron, Iesous
Dr. Francesca Stavrakopoulou, made ??an amazing discovery, it is an inscription which appears Tetragrammaton, ???? with ancient characters related to wife Ashera ???? (Yahweh) ???? is an image with a penis and his male lover behind this of samaria
Who is this Jehovah (????)?
In the story of Exodus says: They told Aaron, 'Make us gods who will go before us, for this Moses who led us out of the land of Egypt, we wot not what is become of him. "(KJV) And he made ??a golden calf in honor of ???? Jehovah Aaron built an altar before it and proclaimed saying - Tomorrow shall be a feast to the Lord! "
(That was not the Almighty Jehovah was a god who learned to worship in Egypt and that even today is in excavations, archaeologists disorienting as Francesca)
Note that even before Moise down from the mountain, said Jehovah, Moses still had not told them anything about name, that Jehovah was the becerrro they did
That "Tetragrammaton" adulterating inserted text appears in Isaiah
The famous Dead Sea Scroll of Isaiah written in Babylonian Aramaic
and sample interpolation (insertion is clearly noted) the Tetragrammaton written in ancient paleo-Hebrew script in a blank in the original document.
This shows us that where there should have been a definition or as Creator and Lord in the ancient text, these gaps were created to insert the fake name. Inserting the Tetragrammaton in these gaps has been a mystery than 2,800 years. Who did it and on what authority? That is an insert that Isaias not originally put in the text is clearly inserted
Rightly said Iesous Xristo Woe unto you , scribes and Pharisees , hypocrites !
the tetragrammaton is a diabolical invention, the calf was Jehovah, the gave no name, what he said is a description, no names, but donkeys are blind, and analyzing original writings of the New Testament, not appears nowhere
Jehovah was invented by a Dominican monk in the 12th century, never before used that expression, therefore it can not appear anywhere, or 7,000 times, or 8,000 times
The nickname "Jehovah", a Catholic invention .. The first recorded use of this spelling was made ??by a Spanish Dominican monk, Raymundus Martini, in 1270.
The WT acknowledges that the pronunciation “Jehovah” was originally a “blunder”:
As to the Old Testament name of God, certainly the spelling and pronunciation “Jehovah” were originally a blunder (The Bible in Living English, 1972, p.7).
The WT acknowledges that the pronunciation “Jehovah” originated not until the thirteenth century A.D.:
The first recorded use of this form [Jehovah] dates from the thirteenth century C.E. Raymundus Martini, a Spanish [Roman Catholic] monk of the Dominican Order, used it in his book Pugeo Fidei of the year 1270 C.E. (Aid To Bible Understanding, 1971, p. 884-5).
The WT acknowledges that there is no NT Greek manuscript that contains “the divine name”:
One of the remarkable facts, not only about the extent manuscripts of the original Greek text, but
of many versions, ancient and modern, is the absence of the Divine name (NWT, 1950 ed., Foreword, p. 10; the same quote is found in the Awake magazine, 1957, January 8, 25).
No ancient Greek manuscript that we possess today of the books from Matthew to Revelation contains God’s name in full (The Divine Name That Will Endure Forever, 1984, p. 23).
This clear or repeat