"IN THE NAME OF .....jesus??"
"WHAT'S IN A NAME???
SATAN AND HIS LIES

There’s No “J” in Hebrew, Greek or Latin!
The popular names "Jehovah" and "Jesus" were NOT in the original Scriptures, and therefore cannot be genuine. It is a fact, provable in part by the historical nonexistence of the letter "J".
The name "Jesus" is a combination of the Greek "Iesous" and the Latin version employing the letter J. This name commonly used in Catholic/Protestant Christianity did not exist until about 410 years ago. THE GREEK ALPHABET
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HEBREW ALPHABET

Hebrew Baby Alph-Bet Video in Colo "Nor is there salvation in any other, for there is no other NAME And whatever you do in word or deed, do all in the NAME of the MessiYah Yahoshua, giving thanks to Yahweh the Father through Him (Colossians 3:17).
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WHAT OUR MESSIYAH YAHOSHUA
MORE CLOSELY
RESEMBLED

under heaven given among men by which we must be saved."
Acts 4:12
The Gentiles shall see your righteousness, And all kings your glory.
You shall be called by a new NAME, Which the mouth of Yahweh
will NAME (Isaiah 62:2).
THESE GENTILES HAVE ALWAYS KNOWN FATHER YAHWEH'S NAME
AND OUR MESSIYAH YAHOSHUA
"THEY NEVER WANTED THE HEBREW TO FIND OUT!!!"

James 4:17 “Therefore to him that knoweth to do good,
and doeth it not, to him it is SIN.”
JOHN CALVIN NEVER CALLED
HIM JESUS

A major leader in the 16th-century Reformation of the Catholic Church,
John Calvin established a new religion (CALVINISM) with strict
codes of belief and behavior. ...
CALVINISITIC BELIEF SYSTEM IS PREDICATED ON ELECTION,
THAT YAHWEH HAS ALREADY PRE-ORDAINED WHOM HE SHALL SAVE.
HE'S RIGHT ON THAT ONE! "THE REMNANT"
____________________________

Hosea 4:6 “My people are destroyed for lack of knowledge:
because thou hast rejected knowledge,

I will also reject thee, that thou shalt be no priest to me:
seeing thou hast forgotten the law of Yahweh,
I will also forget thy children.”
References also abound that show that the Creator's name is not Jehovah. The name Jehovah is a mistake brought on by copyists, (SCRIBES) who deliberately added the vowels from "Adonai" to (the Heavenly Father's Name in Hebrew Scriptures) in an effort to warn the reader not to enunciate the name they believed was too sacred to voice.
The Third Commandment expressly forbids misusing the blessed Name and "bringing it to nought.
THE TEN COMMANDMENTS
The Ten Commandments given to Moses are these: 2. You shall not make a graven image. 3. You shall not take the name of YHWH in vain. 4. You shall not break the Sabbath. 5. You shall not dishonor your parents. 7. You shall not commit adultery 9. You shall not commit perjury. Ephesians 3:15.
""""""YAHWEH"""""""
1. You shall not worship any other god but YHWH.
“Of whom the whole family in heaven and earth is named,”
. . . for there is no other name under heaven given among
men by which we must be saved (Acts 4:12)
LET THE REMNANT OF YSRAYL CALL ON
THE NAME OF YAHWEH
AND OUR MESSIYAH YAHOSHUA

WATCH YAHYA'S MESSAGE TO
THE CITY OF NEW ORLEANS
_____________
________________
"PLEASE STUDY INFORMATION BELOW"
LET THE REMNANT PROCLAIM HIS
NAME
""""""YAHWEH"""""""
History
The 'J' Didn't Exist: From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
J is the tenth letter in the modern Latin alphabet; it was the last of the 26 letters to be added.
J was originally an alternative version of I. There was an emerging distinctive use in Middle High German.[3] Petrus Ramus (d. 1572) was the first to explicitly distinguish I and J as representing separate sounds.[4] Originally, both I and J represented /i/, /i?/, and /j/; but Romance languages developed new sounds (from former /j/ and /g/) that came to be represented as I and J; therefore, English J (from French J) has a sound value quite different from /i/.
One of the most obvious reasons that "Jesus" and "Jehovah" are incorrect is found in their common initial letter, J. Most comprehensive dictionaries and encyclopedias demonstrate that the letter J is of recent derivation. The Encyclopedia Americana contains the following on the J:
The form of J was unknown in any alphabet until the 14th century. Either symbol (J,I) used initially generally had the consonantal sound of Y as in year. Gradually, the two symbols (J,l) were differentiated, the J usually acquiring consonantal force and thus becoming regarded as a consonant, and the I becoming a vowel. It was not until 1630 that the differentiation became general in
The Semitic alphabet had no vowels, but it was essential for intelligibility that the Greek alphabet should have them. This it did by using Semitic letters which represented sounds unknown to the Greek. Semitic yod stood for the semivowel y, and it is easy to use it in Greek for the related vowel i.
The early history of the letter "J" is the same as the history of the letter "i "i is a descendant of the ancient Phoenician and Hebrew letter "yod" and the Greek letter "iota." The Phoenicians gave the yod a semiconsonant sound pronounced like the "Y" in yellow. While the lower case "J" of modern type was derived directly from medieval manuscripts, the capital "J" is virtually a printer's invention. The sound "J" as we know it in English today was derived when the "Y" sound eventually passed into a "dy" sound and later into the "J" sound as in juggle.
Eventually, all modern languages picked up the new sound from Latin. Under the topic "J," Collier's Encyclopedia shows how this happened:
The New American Encyclopedia: "Jehovah— (properly Yahweh) a name of the God of Israel, now widely regarded as a mis-pronunciation of the Hebrew YHWH
The Encyclopedia Britannica: "...the letters YHWH used in the original Hebrew Bible to represent the name of God."
The
American Heritage Dictionary: "Yahweh—A name for God assumed by modern scholars to be a rendering of the pronunciation of the Tetragrammaton. YHWH
Webster's
New Century Dictionary: "Jehovah—the common European rendering of Heb. JHVH (or YHWH), representing, without vowels, Heb. Jahweh (or Yahweh), a divine name . . . regarded by the Jews as too Sacred for utterance and hence replaced in the reading of the Scriptures by Adonai or Elohim; the form Jehovah being due to a mispronunciation of Heb. JHVH with the vowels of the associated Heb. Adonai.
A name of God in the Old Testament, being the Christian rendering the 'ineffable name,' JHVH in the Hebrew Scriptures.
A History of Christianity, Kenneth Scott Latourette (p. 11):
Israel regarded their god, Yahweh, a name mistakenly put into the English as Jehovah, as the God of the universe, the maker and ruler of heaven and earth. Other peoples had their gods, but Yahweh was regarded by these monotheists as far more powerful than they.
Encyclopedia Britannica (Micropedia, vol. 10):
Yahweh—the personal name of the God of the Israelites . . . The Masoretes, Jewish biblical scholars of the Middle Ages, replaced the vowel signs that had appeared above or beneath the consonants of YHWH with the vowel signs of Adonai or of Elohim. Thus, the artificial name Jehovah (YeHoWaH) came into being. Although Christian scholars
Religious Scholars
Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological, and Ecclesiastical Literature: "Jehovah — the imperfect of Jahve (Yahwe or Jehovah or Jahwe (Yahweh) ). He is self existing." Vol. 3, p. 901.
Jewish Encyclopedia: "Rabbinical Literature — The name Yahweh is considered the Name proper." Vol. 9, p. 162.
Seventh-Day Adventist Bible Commentary: "And the name above all others that was looked upon as the name, the personal name of God, was YAHWEH." Vol. 1, p. 172.
The International Bile Encyclopedia of King James Version: "Jehovah - It is believed that the correct pronunciation of this word is 'Yahweh.'"
New Standard Bible Dictionary: "Jehovah - Properly Yahweh . . the form 'Jehovah' is impossible, according to the strict principles of Hebrew vocalization."