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To: SJackson

To the original writer:

God. There, I said it. I think God wants us to say His name, and to write it. Why wouldn’t He? Anyway, if you’re going to substitute a - for the o, then you are just using a different character, but still writing His name.


2 posted on 11/04/2008 1:47:03 PM PST by webheart (All sarcasm contained in this post is intentional, and does not necessarily reflect a real opinion)
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To: webheart; SJackson
"if you’re going to substitute a - for the o, then you are just using a different character"

Shhh! This is a sophisticated encryption algorithm. Don't give anyone any hints on how to crack it.

5 posted on 11/04/2008 1:56:53 PM PST by who_would_fardels_bear (The cosmos is about the smallest hole a man can stick his head in. - Chesterton)
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To: webheart
It has nothing to do with writing, rather destruction. A simple explanation. In an internet context, while there's no direct prohibition in the minds of most, there is a concern that a reader might print out an article, then destroy it, thus many writers will use the hyphen. You'll note the prohibition against erasure is direct.

here

Writing the Name of God

Jews do not casually write any Name of God. This practice does not come from the commandment not to take the Lord's Name in vain, as many suppose. In Jewish thought, that commandment refers solely to oath-taking, and is a prohibition against swearing by God's Name falsely or frivolously (the word normally translated as "in vain" literally means "for falsehood").

Judaism does not prohibit writing the Name of God per se; it prohibits only erasing or defacing a Name of God. However, observant Jews avoid writing any Name of God casually because of the risk that the written Name might later be defaced, obliterated or destroyed accidentally or by one who does not know better.

The commandment not to erase or deface the name of God comes from Deut. 12:3. In that passage, the people are commanded that when they take over the promised land, they should destroy all things related to the idolatrous religions of that region, and should utterly destroy the names of the local deities. Immediately afterwards, we are commanded not to do the same to our God. From this, the rabbis inferred that we are commanded not to destroy any holy thing, and not to erase or deface a Name of God.

It is worth noting that this prohibition against erasing or defacing Names of God applies only to Names that are written in some kind of permanent form, and recent rabbinical decisions have held that writing on a computer is not a permanent form, thus it is not a violation to type God's Name into a computer and then backspace over it or cut and paste it, or copy and delete files with God's Name in them. However, once you print the document out, it becomes a permanent form. That is why observant Jews avoid writing a Name of God on web sites like this one or in newsgroup messages: because there is a risk that someone else will print it out and deface it.

Normally, we avoid writing the Name by substituting letters or syllables, for example, writing "G-d" instead of "God." In addition, the number 15, which would ordinarily be written in Hebrew as Yod-Hei (10-5), is normally written as Teit-Vav (9-6), because Yod-Hei is a Name. See Hebrew Alphabet for more information about using letters as numerals.


8 posted on 11/04/2008 4:02:06 PM PST by SJackson (I don't believe that people should be able to own guns, BH Obama to John Lott)
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