Every modern day Jew has been taught by his rabbi that the trinity is a goyisha (gentile) teaching. Let us investigate.
• Bereshis (Genesis) 19:24. Most English translations substitute Jehovah for LORD. If we read the verse correctly, it would read:
Then
Jehovah rained brimstone and fire on Sodom and Gomorrah from
Jehovah out of the heavens.
“Jehovah rained from Jehovah”? How many Jehovahs do we have? But my rabbi taught me that “echad” in the Shema means “one”! Actually “echad” is a united one.
“Yachid” means one.
• Isaiah 44:6 Again reading “Jehovah” as in the original Hebrew rather than substituting it with “LORD”.
Thus says
Jehovah, the King of Israel, and His Redeemer,
Jehovah of hosts, “I am the First and I am the Last; besides Me there is no God.”
Why do we have two Jehovahs?
• It was the 6th century B.C.E. The place was Babylon. Nebuchadnezzar was the King. He had three Jews cast into a furnace for refusing to worship a pagan idol. He sees a fourth person in the furnace with them who was not cast in and none of these four people are hurt in this extremely hot furnace. Nebuchadnezzar claims this fourth person looks like the
Son of God. Not only does a gentile king in Babylon know that God has a Son, he even knows what He looks like. Then Nebuchadnezzar calls the Jews “servants of the Most High God”, recognising who is God by the appearance of His Son! In such a bright and hot furnace, the Son of God must have shone very bright in His glory to outshine the furnace and be recognised across such a distance. No doubt the king’s throne was a good distance away. Daniel 3:25-26
• This one I love! The Siddur (Jewish Prayer Book), morning prayers, second paragraph of Donning The Tallis:
For the sake of the unification of the Holy One, Blessed is He, and His Presence, in fear and love to unify the Name…
This quote is taken from the English page of the Artscroll edition. Why does 2000 year old Jewish prayers make reference to unification of God? What did Judaism teach 2000+ years ago that we have not been told?
• And more, why does the only Hebrew letter chosen 2000+ years ago to symbolise HaShem (God), on the mazuza, have
3 branches joining into one?
The Hebrew letter shin ש
יהוה