Names as Declarations
In the Hebrew tradition, a name is not a convenience. It is a declaration. It carries the nature, the identity, the function, and often the divine purpose of the one who bears it. To name something in Hebrew is to define its reality. To rename something is to redefine that reality.
This is not an abstract principle. It is demonstrated from the first pages of the Torah to its final chapters. When YHWH brought the animals to Adam, Adam named them, and that naming was an act of knowing, of defining, of establishing the nature of each creature in relation to the one who named it. When YHWH changed Abram’s name to Abraham, He was not updating a record. He was declaring a new reality into existence. When Jacob wrestled at the ford of the Jabbok and was given the name Israel, something fundamental shifted, not just a label but an identity, a calling, a destiny inscribed in sound.
Names in the Hebrew tradition locate a person within a story already in motion. They announce what someone is, what they will do, what covenant they belong to. They are theological statements compressed into a single word.
The Text Yeshua Pointed To
This is not a peripheral observation. It stands at the center of the interpretive framework that Yeshua himself established. When he was asked how to understand who he was, what sin meant, what righteousness meant, what judgment meant, he pointed to the Torah, the Psalms, and the Prophets. These are the scriptures, he said, that speak of him.
Those texts were written in Hebrew. Their names, the names of their authors, their subjects, their central figures, were Hebrew names. And Hebrew names mean something. Every one of them. Always.
Against this backdrop, the systematic removal of the divine name YHWH from personal names as those names passed from Hebrew into Greek, Latin, and English is not a minor translation detail. It is the removal of the most significant theological content those names carried.
To rename something in Hebrew is to redefine its reality. The names were changed. The reality was redefined.
What This Series Examines
This is the first document in a series of eight examining what was lost when names bearing the divine name YHWH were translated out of existence. Each document in the series stands alone and may be read independently. Together they form a complete account of one of the most consequential acts of erasure in the history of the written word.
Names meant everything in the Hebrew text. To change them is to change the understanding of the very text.
The Gospel Revolution • Mike Williams Ministries
William Ethan Massengill • Michael Lilborn Williams • Daniel Thomas Rouse
Published by Audrey Williams