Anonymous1977
(NOT AFFILIATED WITH GROUP CALLED, "ANONYMOUS")
The Hebrew word Elohim--is not a name for God-- it is a Hebrew word that carries various meanings of how applied. In many Hebrew words ending with IM = plurality--but in the case of Elohim--the Hebrew translating rule is--never plural when used for the true God. Yet the trinity teachers teach that Moses wrote Elohim in Genesis as gods---- the supposed scholars know the rule but let the lie continue to mislead. Mislead one into breaking Gods #1 commandment daily, because the God of Israel is a single being God named-YHWH(Jehovah) there is 0 doubt to that fact. There is no trinity god in existence.
Something else interesting that I read once is that "Elohim" in the Bible is a term that is used applying to pagan gods (or "Gods" of other nations) and just means beings/a being who is the most powerful.
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Elohim is just a Hebrew word--it carries various meanings--yes-gods for false trinity gods. Never for the true God.
Someone hacked and changed my last post, but I originally said that "Elohim" in the Bible is used in reference to pagan gods as well as the God of Israel.
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Yes for pagan trinity gods-Elohim= gods---But for the true God it is never plural. So why do the trinity religions decieve people and tell them Moses used it as gods in Genesis, when he did not?
I don't remember the source for that information but I think it was a non-religious encyclopedia.
Non-religious sources might say that the word just means "the most powerful" and is used in the Bible for pagan gods as well as the God of Israel.
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