From: [email protected]
Date: Wed, 9 Jan 2013 09:08:23 -0800


[...] I would think that the question, "What is his name?," that the Israelites 
would ask is necessary and would be duely required from ANY person claiming he 
had been sent by that "God." This is due to the fact of the last 429 years that 
the Israelites have been in Egypt. Every "god" or "goddess" had a name that 
also reflected the nature of the "god" or "goddess" that was worshipped. Exodus 
6:3 is quite clear that the Israelites would NEED to know this name (Abraham, 
Isaac, and Jacob as El-$aday NOT as YHWH). (NOTE: I think progressive 
revelation is also at play here). [...]
 

Dear Bryant,
 
According to Exod 3:13 Moses says how he will introduce his sender to the 
Israelites, namely as ‘the God of your fathers’. In the narrative of the call 
of Moses, this is in line with the self-introduction by his sender as ‘I am the 
God of your father, the god of Abraham, the God of Isaac, the God of Jacob’ (v. 
6). Therefore, in his imagined conversation Moses is not talking  about ‘God’ / 
Elohim without any specification. When the Israelites ask subsequently ‘What is 
his name?’, what does that suppose? Does it suppose that they do not know the 
name (or any name) of the ancestral God? Or are there other possibilities? And 
why exactly do they need the divine name in their particular situation? As I 
indicated, in my view we should not jump to the conclusion. Probably we will 
miss then the particularity of the narrative of Moses’ call and its context, 
and, more specifically, of these specific verses in it.
 
Cornelis den Hertog                                       
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