Isaac Fried:

I hope your post means that you agree with my central assertion.   I-F  the 
resh/R in the middle of the name "Abraham" is a generic theophoric, then the 
name )B R HM is self-explanatory, being  e-x-a-c-t-l-y  what Genesis 17: 5 says 
it means.

The frequent scholarly claim that the Biblical author of Genesis 17: 5 
allegedly didn't know what the name "Abraham" means should be rejected 
outright.  In fact, the Biblical author of Genesis 17: 5  c-r-e-a-t-e-d  the 
name "Abraham".  Such name is never attested historically, even though his 
birth name Abram, and slight variations thereon, are historically attested all 
over the place.

Jim Stinehart
Evanston, Illinois


-----Original Message-----
From: Isaac Fried <[email protected]>
To: jimstinehart <[email protected]>
Cc: Biblical Hebrew <[email protected]>
Sent: Sun, Mar 10, 2013 8:47 pm
Subject: Re: [b-hebrew] The Name Abraham


You are right, the only question being is what is "theophoric". It is 
reasonable to assume that R is thephoric, 
as well as H, which is but mild X, as in היה HAYAH versus חיה XAYAH, and which 
appears 
in the name revealed (and explained) to Moses in the desert. In other words, 
every consonant 
(a uniliteral root) is a theophoric name for this or that theos residing in the 
vast pantheon of the human mind.  


Isaac Fried, Boston University


On Mar 10, 2013, at 1:54 PM, [email protected] wrote:


Genesis 17: 5 is self-explanatory as to the meaning of )B R HM, once one 
realizes that the interior resh/R there is used as a generic theophoric. 


 
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