God in Different Languages

As a young girl growing up in a Protestant Church, I had a hard time understanding The Bible. I was told God was a man. Jesus told me to love everybody, but some of the teachers would say the opposite. So I left the church when I was a teenager.

In college, I gravitated towards Buddhism, Hinduism, Confucianism, meditation, and yoga. I also studied the Middle East, Islam, and Arabic, and lived in The Middle East while in my 20s.

After graduate school, I had a spiritual awakening. God woke me up and I began the path towards The Kingdom of Heaven.

I moved to Peru and began plant medicines and spending time in nature to open my heart.

Later, I re-read the Bible, and it seemed to follow the Laws of Karma of Hinduism. I began studying Catholicism. You can read more about karma here, and there’s much more on my website that you can read about if you are interested in following the Path of God and Your Heart, and The Kingdom.

Along my journey, a Kabbalah teacher I had also informed me that the word for God in the Hebrew Bible is actually plural, feminine and masculine.

What a shock! I was infiltrated with the Latin assumption that God meant a man. However, the Hebrew reality is that God is plural, both feminine and masculine!

What would happen if little girls and boys know there is a Female God watching out for them?

Here are more translations from Google Translate for God:

In Hebrew:
אלוהים
Elohim, meaning plural female and male Gods

In Arabic:
الله
Allah

In Chinese:
上帝
Shàngdì

In Greek:
Θεοί (Theoí)
Θεολογία (Theología)
Gods
Theology

In Lakota:
Wakȟáŋ Tȟáŋka
(Great Spirit, Great Mystery)

I would say we can also refer to “God” as a pause, silence, space. Listening. Who should we be listening to now? The Lakota Sioux and most indigenous tribes allow the community elders and shamans to be heard (because they are the ones who can hear the children, animals, water, etc.). Then harmonious decisions can be made together with the correct wisdom for the entire community and environment.

The Oceti Sakowin Essential Understandings:

“That’s the way I try to live my life- in wolakotain peace, in balance, in harmony. It’s a philosophy, it’s a way of life…every day, when you walk on earth, you try to live in balance with whatever task you have at hand.” — Octet Sakowin Elder, Jace DeCory

In Swahili:
Mungu

In Quechua:
Taytacha

In Zulu (modern day South Africa):
Onkulunkulu

However, the Zulu also have this most beautiful of words:

Ubuntu

“Ubuntu can best be described as an African philosophy that places emphasis on ‘being self through others’. It is a form of humanism which can be expressed in the phrases ‘I am because of who we all are’ and ubuntu ngumuntu ngabantu in Zulu language.” — Jacob Mugumbate and Andrew Nyanguru


Also, I believe there is a correlation between numerology and languages. This book by Annick de Souzenelle is incredible.



I speak Arabic, Bambara, Malinke, Spanish and French. I’m now learning Hebrew, Chinese, Greek, Lakota, Quechua, among others. There are many incredible synchronicities.

The number systems of Hebrew and Arabic are aligned. Check out these graphics I found online:


All the languages relate back to the same syllables, vowels, and tones (to the beginning, emotionality, love, family). That is why many shamans can listen and hear the animals.

Also, this may touch your heart a bit. Be sure to click on the listening icon for the Hebrew translation. Harmony in English sounds the same in Hebrew. Is this a coincidence?

הַרמוֹנִיָה

=

Harmony

Feel free to email me if you would like to be part of my team working on decoding languages to the Word of God. You can comment below or write me at ashleyheacock@gmail.com

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