English

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Alternative forms

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Shem HaMeforash

Etymology

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From Hebrew הַשֵּׁם הַמְפוֹרָשׁ (haššēm hamp̄ōrāš, literally the explicit name).

Proper noun

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Shem HaMephorash

  1. (Judaism, mysticism) One of the esoteric names of God within Kabballah, corresponding to the Tetragrammaton, often referring to a 72-worded variant in particular.
    • 1865, Christian David Ginsburg, The Kabbalah: Its Doctrines, Development, and Literature, page 100:
      Neither the divine name composed of twelve letters, nor the one of forty-two letters, ever obtained the title of Shem HaMephorash—this being the designation of the particular name, or the Tetragrammaton, as we have already propounded.
    • 1963, George Horowitz, The Spirit of Jewish Law:
      The death penalty was inflicted only upon the blasphemer who used the Ineffable Name, the Shem HaMephorash, YHWH, or its equivalent Adonai (“Our Lord”).
    • 2014, Avram Davidson, The Avram Davidson Treasury, →ISBN:
      And one time only he disobeyed the Rabbi Low, and Rabbi Low erased the Shem HaMephorash from the golem's forehead and the golem fell down like a dead one.
    • 2017, Brian Pivik, Gematria and the Tanakh, →ISBN, page 244:
      Shaah - To lay waste, devastate; 28th name of Shem HaMephorash