Hi Timothy (which name do you prefer to be addressed by, Timothy or Scott?)



Now this one is where I was less than clear.  When I referred to the
practice of substituting Adonai for Yahweh, I am really referring to two
distinct but related practices, neither of which caused changes in the
consonantal Hebrew text.  The first practice is simply that of not
pronouncing the divine name but pronouncing Adonai instead, and this
practice probably goes back several centuries BCE.  The second practice is
that of pointing the text in such a way as to direct the reader to say
Adonai (or shema, or Elohim) rather than Yahweh.  This second practice is
confirmatory of, and a continuation of, the first practice.  I'm not sure
when the vowel pointing was done, but I believe the usual understanding is
that it was begun around CE 600.



Blessings,


Jerry

Jerry Shepherd
Taylor Seminary
Edmonton, Alberta
[email protected]
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