English edit

Etymology edit

From Middle English gost of God, gaste of Godd.

Proper noun edit

Ghost of God

  1. (Christianity, rare) An epithet of the Holy Spirit.
    • 1809, Thomas Cranmer, The Life, Martyrdom, and Selections from the Writings of Thomas Cranmer, page 99:
      And we should not alter any word in the Scripture, which wholly is ministered unto us by the Ghost of God.
    • 2019, Derick Virgil, The Holy Ghost: He is the Blood of Jesus, page 122:
      It was the emergence of the Ghost of God, the Spirit of God that had now experienced the incarnation of Himself in the Flesh of His own Word, Jesus...and He (The Holy Ghost) speaks (Hebrews 12:24-29)!

See also edit