tetragrammaton

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See also: Tetragrammaton

English[edit]

Noun[edit]

tetragrammaton (plural tetragrammata or tetragrammatons)

  1. Alternative letter-case form of Tetragrammaton.
    • 1874, M[atthew] R. Miller, The Luminous Unity, or Letters Addressed to the Rev. A. Guinzburg, a Rabbi of Boston, Mass., from the Rev. M. R. Miller, on the Question, Is Unitarianism, as Opposed to Trinitarianism, a Principle of Heathenism Rather than of Specific Judaism?, Philadelphia, Pa.: J[oshua] B[allinger] Lippincott & Co., page 73:
      One was to make Elohim the principal predicate,—Hear, O Israel: Jehovah is our God, Jehovah is one; the other was to give the two tetragrammatons different meanings, making one the proper name and the other the appellative, as if one should read, Hear, O Israel: Jehovah our God is the one Universe-Sustainer.
    • 1989, Isaiah Tishby, The Wisdom of the Zohar: An Anthology of Texts (The Littman Library of Jewish Civilization), volume I, Liverpool University Press, →ISBN, page 349:
      The fifty engravings were crowned with the forty-two sacred letters of the holy name433 with which heaven and earth were created, and eight gates were engraved with their engravings, and these are the eight letters of Mercy, as it is written “YHVH YHVH God, merciful and gracious” (Exodus 34: 6), which emerged from Atika Kadisha to Ze’ir and were united with these holy crowns, the supernal and exalted Ḥokhmah and Binah.434 [] 433 There are fifty engravings to match the fifty gates of Binah, namely, the forty-two-lettered name, which consists basically of the initial letters of the prayer ana ba-koaḥ, but which can also be represented by the first forty-two letters of Genesis, which form the name derived from the account of Creation, together with the eight letters of the two tetragrammata at the beginning of the thirteen attributes of Mercy.
    • 1991, Nigel Pennick, The Secret Lore of Runes and Other Ancient Alphabets, Rider, →ISBN, page 28:
      Written vertically from top to bottom, the JHVH tetragrammaton stands for the human body, the image of God. The other three tetragrammatons are secondary, being ‘by-names’ of God, three of the 72 ‘explicatory names’ known as ‘Shem ha-mephorash’ or ‘Shemaham-phorash’.
    • 2012, Simon P. Stocks, The Form and Function of the Tricolon in the Psalms of Ascents: Introducing a New Paradigm for Hebrew Poetic Line-form, Eugene, Ore.: Pickwick Publications, Wipf and Stock, →ISBN, page 79:
      Dahood, Psalms, 201, reads a tricolon based on reading עַל as a divine epithet paralleling the two tetragrammata.
    • 2015, Moshe Idel, ““Higher than Time”: Observations on Some Concepts of Time in Kabbalah and Hasidism”, in Brian Ogren, editor, Time and Eternity in Jewish Mysticism: That Which is Before and That Which is After (Studies in Jewish History and Culture →ISSN; 48), Leiden, Boston, Mass.: Brill, →ISBN, part 6 (Conclusion Beyond Time), page 193:
      In order to illustrate this, I shall address an interesting passage from Abulafia’s commentary on the Guide of the Perplexed, entitled H̲ayyei ha-Nefesh: / [a] But their issue46 is YHWH—in the world of the angels, which are the first Hawayah according to the secret of necessity47 YHWH—in the world of the spheres, which are the second Hawayah according to the secret of necessity, YHWH—in the lower world, which is the third Hawayah, the last according to the secret of necessity, in those according to their degree and in those according to their degree. [] 46 Namely of the three tetragrammata, which he mentions beforehand, where he refers to both the Talmud and to Maimonides’ Guide i, ch. 61.
    • 2018, Quentin Skinner, From Humanism to Hobbes: Studies in Rhetoric and Politics, Cambridge University Press, →ISBN, page 295:
      Triangles enclosing tetragrammatons can also be found in the frontispieces of many non-religious works from the same period.