Begin with the name "Jehovah" or "Yahweh"
Jesus AVOIDED using either name and so did the Apostle Paul!
Jesus keep calling God "our heavenly Father". Everytime he did,
he avoided calling him Jehovah.
Look at the Lord's Prayer - It says "our Father who art in heaven,
hallowed be thy name" - he didn't say "Jehovah, hallowed be thy
name".
When Jesus referred to God's name, he wasn't referring to the
name Jehovah. He was referring to God's power, authority or
reputation. In John, Jesus says "I have made your name manifest".
That simply means he made God manifest to his disciples thru
his miracles and teachings - IT DOESN'T MEAN HE TOLD THEM THAT
GOD'S NAME IS JEHOVAH! How do I know? Because they already,
had to know what the name Yahweh/Jehovah was since they were
Jews - with names like Elijah or Jehoshaphat.
At the most important event, his death, Jesus avoided using the
name "Jehovah". He quoted the Psalms where it says "My God,
My God, why have you forsaken me?". He could have quoted any
scripture that DIRECTLY mentioned the name BUT DIDN'T. He also
may have said "Father, forgive them for they know not what they
do."
In the Aid book, it admits that when the Bible refers to God's
name, it often doesn't mean "Jehovah" - as in Ezekiel, when it
says "they shall know my name".
Paul avoided using "Jehovah" or Yahweh because he said "there is
actually to us one God, THE FATHER, and one Lord, Jesus Christ"
There is no solid evidence from any manuscripts that early
Christians used the name "Jehovah" to any great extent. The
Society's claims to the contrary are just speculation and
guesswork - unlikely at that, as you can see from the above
quotations.
Jesus wanted to establish a universal faith, where all people
would simply address God as their Father, not a Jewish tribal
religion.
metatron