06-10-2011, 10:33 PM
Burning one Wrote:MUCH thanks for taking the time to break it down. i'm seeing it finally like never before; explaining it this way makes perfect sense. with those grammatical pieces missing before it just wasn't connecting as to what was going on, but what you laid forth really does make sense.
Jeremy (and all),
There is a similar thing in English. You have nouns that are ultimately derived from verbs, others are just plain nouns. Think of the patters you typically get for nouns that are verbal in origin:
creat-or (from "create")
orat-or (from "orate")
runn-er (from "run")
design-er (from "design")
teach-er (from "teach")
Then there are nouns that are just nouns.
House
Cat
Dog
King
Now imagine if someone wrote an article and said the emphatic of house ("the house") was "Hous-or". Or the emphatic of King ("the king") was "King-er". <!-- s:wow: --><img src="{SMILIES_PATH}/wow.gif" alt=":wow:" title="Wow" /><!-- s:wow: -->
That's precisely what the author of the "MarYah Deception" article is claiming when he says that "MarYah" is the emphatic of Mara. Silly, huh? He's either ignorant of Aramaic, or purposely titled the articled with "Deception"...as that was his intent.
The other misconception people have is that they are thrown off by the spelling, -YA, instead of -YH. But they fail to realize that's how all personal names or titles containing God's name are spelled in Aramaic. Jeremiah, Hekekiah, Obadiah, etc. Look them up.
MarYah is only used for God and Christ for a reason.
+Shamasha