Sacred Name Movement

Sacred Name Movement
This article is about the Adventist movement. See sacred name for the theological term.

The Sacred Name Movement (SNM) is a movement within Adventism in Christianity, propagated by Clarence Orvil Dodd from the 1930s, that claims to seek to conform Christianity to its "Hebrew Roots" in practice, belief and worship. The best known distinction of the SNM is its advocacy of the use of the "sacred name" Yahweh (יַהְוֶה), i.e. the reconstructed proper name of the God of Israel, and the use of the original Hebrew name of Jesus, often transcribed as Yahshua.[1] SNM believers also generally keep many of the Old Testament laws and ceremonies such as the Seventh-day Sabbath, Torah festivals and keeping kosher food laws.

Contents

History

The Sacred Name Movement arose in the early 20th century out of the Adventist movement.[2] C. O. Dodd, a member of the Church of God (Seventh Day), began keeping the Jewish festivals (including Passover) in 1928 and adopted sacred name doctrines in the late 1930s.[citation needed]

Dodd began publishing Assembly of Yahweh, the oldest of any still existing Sacred Name Assembly. American religious scholar J. Gordon Melton wrote that "No single force in spreading the Sacred Name movement was as important as The Faith magazine."[4]

The SNM is a movement consisting of several small and contrasting groups, unified by the use of the Name Yahweh and to the most part, Yahshua. Angelo Traina, a disciple of Dodd, undertook the writing of a Sacred Name edition of the Bible, publishing the Holy Name New Testament in 1950 (see Tetragrammaton in the New Testament) and the Holy Name Bible in 1962, both based upon the King James Version, but changing some names and words in the text to Hebrew based forms, such as "God" with "Elohim", "LORD" with "Yahweh" and "Jesus" with "Yahshua". Each group within the Sacred Name Movement uses a Sacred Name Bible, others having been produced since Traina's.

Sacred Name Family Tree

The Movement started with the formation of the Assembly of Yahweh in Holt, Michigan, USA in the early 1930s. The leaders of this group claim that a founding member was visited by two angels who explained that The Messiah's Name is properly Yahshua. This occurred around the time that interest in the subject was keen.

The Assemblies of Yahweh, Bethel, PA, was begun by Jacob O. Meyer, after ordination by members of the Assembly of Yahweh. Over time, The Bethel organization became independent of the Michigan group, and expanded their national outreach.

Donald Mansager and several Elders split from the Assemblies of Yahweh over autocratic issues and formed Yahweh's Assembly in Messiah in the early 1980s. Mansager left that organization in dispute over the handling of an adultery scandal, involving a prominent minister in that group. He then formed Yahweh's New Covenant Assembly in 1985 The name was changed to Yahweh's Assembly in Yahshua after an internal split in 2006. Alan Mansager (Donald Mansager's Son) parted ways in 1998 as Alan disagreed with his father on the scriptural qualifications for ordaining ministers. Alan formed Yahweh's Restoration Ministry. Robert Wirl split from the Assemblies of Yahweh, Bethel, and formed Yahweh's Philadelphia Truth Congregation in 2002. He has since joined with Yahweh's Restoration Ministry.

It can be argued that all the above groups are a "Sacred Name group", as they all have ties to the original "Assembly of Yahweh" and have almost identical doctrines. Because there is no formal enrollment to be a "Sacred Name group," the term is loosely defined. Many people include groups that use variations of "Yahweh" and "Yahshua", but teach very different doctrines than the above groups, to be "in the movement".

There are countless groups with no established ties to the Assembly of Yahweh, Holt Michigan. One of the better-known includes The Assembly of Yahweh 7th Day in Cisco, TX, which developed their liturgy under their own leadership. They have extensive dealings with the mainstream Sacred Name groups listed above, exemplified by the fact that they host the Unity Conference every year. Their doctrines differ from mainstream Sacred Name doctrines such as using the vernal equinox to calculate their calendar, rejecting the pre-existence of Yahshua (commonly called Jesus) and differing views on the application of Sabbath rest.

The Assemblies of Yahweh, Bethel, PA, and the House of Yahweh each maintain an exclusive flavor to their fellowship patterns, and have distanced themselves from the mainstream of the movement. It is rare for a member of either of these two organizations to personally have dealings with Sacred Namers on the outside. The Assemblies of Yahweh (Bethel) still has many beliefs and practices in common with the Movement, while the House of Yahweh has evolved a liturgy and a doctrinal system that is considered unorthodox.

Sacred Name Pentecostals

Since the 1970s, the Sacred Name Movement has penetrated many among the Pentecostal denomination (especially those with a Oneness Pentecostal background). The House of God, a seventh-day Pentecostal organization started back in 1919 by RAR Johnson, has become inundated with certain sacred name doctrines. An independent Pentecostal body that is exclusively sacred name is Apostolic Houses of Yahweh presided over by Apostle William Greggs.

There are other notable Pentecostal organizations that are adamant about using the sacred names such as Victorious Covenant Community, Straitway and Assemblies of Messiah in the Apostles' Doctrine.

Bibles

The use of the sacred names has led to the production of Sacred Name Bible translations. Most of these Bibles use modern translations like the KJV with the common titles "God, Lord," replaced with the Sacred Names. These include:

  • The Word of Yahweh
  • The Scriptures
  • Restoration of Original Sacred Name Bible
  • Angelo Traina's Holy Name Bible, Sacred Name King James Bible
  • Sacred Scriptures, Family of Yah Edition
  • Sacred Scriptures Bethel Edition
  • Restoration Study Bible (RSB) RSB online

Adherents

The Sacred Name Movement has few adherents and includes the following groups:

See also

References

  1. ^ Semitic philology reconstructs the Aramaic name of Jesus as Yeshua, Yehoshua or Yahshua (c.f. English "Joshua" Heb 4:8).
  2. ^ Melton, J. Gordon (1992), Encyclopedic Handbook of Cults in America, New York: Garland Publishing, p. 83, ISBN 9780815311409, OCLC 246783309, http://books.google.com/?id=KRTGzgpDvL4C&printsec=frontcover#PPA83,M1 
  3. ^ Hughey, Sam, A History of the True Church, The Reformed Reader web site, http://www.reformedreader.org/history/dugger/authors.htm, retrieved 2009-01-07 , archived by WebCite here.
  4. ^ Melton, J. Gordon (1978), The Encyclopedia of American Religions, Wilmington, North Carolina: McGrath Publishing Company, p. 476, ISBN 0787663841, OCLC 4854827 

External links


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