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Is Allah Jehovah? or Is Jehovah Allah?
Is Allah Jehovah? or Is Jehovah Allah?
Is Allah Jehovah? or Is Jehovah Allah?
We need to address a topic that is sure to come up when using ArabBible. The textual foundation forArabBible is the venerable Van Dyck translation, completed in Lebanon in March of 1860. You are probably aware that the term used for God in the Van Dyck version is Allah. However, ArabBibledoes not use this word at all. Instead, the word al-ilaah has been employed (note: no other changes have been made to the Van Dyck text). Why the change? To answer this question we should look at several issues...
Whats in a Name?
Someones name is known as a proper noun; it refers to that person alone. A common noun, on the other hand, is a generic noun that can be applied to more than one. For example: I may call both Robert and Joseph a man. Since they are both men, I can call either one a man, and that is right and proper. So man is a common noun. However, I cannot call Robert by the name of Joseph or viceversa. Each one has a unique name to which he answers. And even if there happened to be two Roberts in the room, Robert #1 would not be the same person as Robert #2. If I talk about Robert, everyone would ask: Are you referring to, Robert #1 or Robert #2? They are distinct. That is why in virtually every culture of the world, people do not give their children identical names. Different persons having the same name would lead to terrible confusion. It seems simple enough to understand. When it comes to God, what do we call Him? Various languages have a number of ways to deal with this. In English, for example, it is understood that god (with a lower case g) can refer to one of any number of supposed deities, while God (with an upper case G) refers to the unique creator of the universe. The capitalization of that noun is simply our cultures way of dealing with it. However, it must be clearly understood that neither god nor God is a proper noun; rather they are both common nouns, referring to someone: in the case of god, to any deity; and in the case of God, to a specific deity. The common noun man is a way of referring to someone without using his name; likewise, using the common noun God is a way of referring to that unique One, without using His name. If someone called a person man they would be correct, but generic. And if someone called him Robert they would also be correct, but personal. Now lets talk about God. When we refer to God, the term is true and acceptable. However God is not His name, just as man is not my name. I have a name by which those who know me can call me. To others, I might be referred to as that man. Names are more intimate. The God of the Bible refers to Himself by a number of common nouns and by one
proper noun. Please dont misunderstand: the use of the term common noun when referring to God is not demeaning in any way, but is a linguistic term God is anything but common! Some of the common nouns He uses when referring to Himself are: God, Creator, Savior, Lord, Messiah, King, etc. However, there is also a single proper noun that He uses to refer to himself. So what is that unique name? The following conversation occurred between Moses and God sometime around the year 1400 BC:
Then Moses said to God, "Behold, I am going to the sons of Israel, and I will say to them, 'The God of your fathers has sent me to you.' Now they may say to me, 'What is His name?' What shall I say to them?" God said to Moses, "I AM WHO I AM"; and He said, "Thus you shall say to the sons of Israel, 'I AM has sent me to you.' God, furthermore, said to Moses, "Thus you shall say to the sons of Israel, 'The LORD(YHWH), the God of your fathers, the God of Abraham, the God of Isaac, and the God of Jacob, has sent me to you.' This is My name forever, and this is My memorial-name to all generations.
Exodus 3:13-15
The same passage in the original Hebrew is shown below. The red boxes correspond to the red text above, and the green shaded areas to the green text above, for those who do not know Hebrew.
God clearly tells Moses what his personal name is: His name is YHWH in Hebrew. And He clearly says that this is His name forever. Remember, were not even to the translation issue yet; we are just establishing what God calls Himself. To further clarify, lets look at the words in green: He identifies Himself as the God of Abraham, the God of Isaac, and the God of Jacob. Jesus himself quotes this verse
But concerning the dead, that they rise, have you not read in the book of Moses, in the burning bush passage, how God spoke to him, saying, 'I am the God of Abraham, the God of Isaac, and the God of Jacob'
Mark 12:26
The green shaded text again refers to the corresponding English text above, for those who do not know Greek.
So God identifies Himself as YHWH, and unmistakably clarifies things by identifying Himself as the God of Abraham, the God of Isaac, and the God of Jacob.
Jacob (Israel); and the other who unquestionably identifies Himself as the God of all three. Their personal names with which they identify themselves are clearly different (note that YHWH is never even mentioned in the Quran); and it is likewise obvious that even their character and actions are different, so why do we insist that they must be the same? Perhaps we are making more of this Abraham, Isaac and Jacob thing than we should? Perhaps Gods identifying Himself with all three of these men is not so important? But like it or not, this is what He calls Himself, and whether its in the Biblical Hebrew of the Old Testament or the Koine Greek of the New Testament, both clarifications makes sure that we do not mistake Him for the god of any other nation. It turns out that indeed this is a critical distinction, because in the Psalms, it tells us who the gods of all the other nations actually are:
For all the gods of the nations are (worthless) idols: but the LORD (YHWH) made the heavens.
Psalm 96:5
Its interesting that He contrasts His name, the proper noun YHWH, with the common noun gods. The God of Israel, in fact, utterly contrasts Himself with the gods of all other nations all of them. YHWH stands apart from them all, including Allah, who never once identifies himself as the God of Abraham, the God of Isaac, and the God of Jacob.
precedent for the New Testament writers by using an equivalent common noun in the Greek, theos. The word theos, like its English counterpart god, can refer either to any supposed god, or it can also refer to the one true God. Remember that this is perfectly acceptable, because He is ultimately identified by name, rather than just by title. It is critically important to notice that neither the Septuagints translators nor the New Testament writers used a proper noun to translate a common noun. None of them ever translated the common noun Elohim by a proper noun (e.g. Zeus, Baal, etc.), but rather by the equivalent, generic common noun theos. The principle is this: that when referring to God, you may use the generic cultural word for god, but not the proper name of a specific god from that culture (e.g. Baal, Zeus, Allah, Thor, etc.) for the Name belongs to the Holy One of Israel alone. So where does that leave us? We wish to follow this precedent as well. The word for Lord in Arabic is the common noun rabb. When referring to "the Lord" in New Testament passages, we can follow the New Testaments precedent in using the common noun with the definite article, al-rabb (pronounced ar-rabb: the Lord). And this is precisely what has been already done by the translators of the Arabic New Testament. Lets apply the same principle to the word for God. We want to translate the Greek generic common noun theos into Arabic (note: the word "theos" is never used as a proper noun, neither for a god nor for a human). So we can confidently use the equivalent Arabic generic common noun, ilaah. And just as the Septuagints translators did, and the New Testament writers also did, lets attach the definite article to it, to refer to the one creator God. Therefore, just as theos may refer to any god, and ho theos (the god) refers to the one God of Israel, so we can use ilaah to refer to any god, and al-ilaah (the God) to refer to the one God of Israel. What could be some consequences of using the common noun al-ilaah (the god) to refer to God? First, since the word ilaah is entirely Arabic, there is no introduction of some culturally confusing terminology. Every Arab knows this word can refer to a god. And when we add the definite article to it, it immediately narrows the field to a single god. But it will also cause Muslims to wonder why the Islamic term Allah is not used, while at the same time, help him to realize that alilaah is actually a perfectly acceptable Arabic word referring to God. This may indeed be an opportunity to share the fact that we worship different deities altogether. Certainly this is a radical idea for some, but just as certainly, there is a New Testament precedent for it. Paul, in Athens, told his listeners that he was about to tell them about the God (ho theos) who made the world (Acts 17:24). Remember, he did not use the actual name of a foreign god, and tell them that it was Zeus who made the world, even though it was Zeus whom Greek culture considered the creator and greatest god in the Greek Pantheon. In fact, he did not even bother mentioning Zeus (in case you were wondering, "theos" isnot etymologically related to Zeus. The Indo-European root of "theos" is most probably *dhes-. The same root becomes fes- in Latin and so appears in words like 'festival'). Likewise, Arabic-speaking people need to be told about the God (alilaah) who made the world, without even referring to Allah. Any Arabic speaker can immediately connect with al-ilaah. We just have to tell them the Good News of who this God is! Finally, what about our precious Christian brothers and sisters who have been using the term Allah for years? Does this change leave them out, or make them less in our eyes? Absolutely not! There are many fine believers who use the name of Allah. This change is not meant to question or denigrate their genuine love for the true Savior, Jesus Christ. There is no hint of condemnation for them. This change is being made with an eye to the future. There are now many Muslims discovering Jesus, and we believe this will only accelerate in the monumental days
to come. Following the Lamb of God and making a clean break with Islam will require a tremendous amount of painful sacrifice on the part of many believers. But there are some things worth suffering for.
and when they had called the apostles, and beaten them they commanded that they should not speak in the name of Jesus, and let them go. So they departed from the presence of the council, rejoicing that they were counted worthy to suffer shame for His name
Acts 5:40-41
In summary, ArabBible uses the definite, common noun, al-ilaah to refer to God, rather than the Islamic proper noun, Allah. We believe this is based on good Biblical and linguistic precedents. Though this will certainly cause some shock waves
Let us know, let us press on to know the LORD; His going forth is sure as the dawn; He will come to us as the showers, as the spring rains that water the earth.
Hosea 6:3