## /bin/באש --- > BASH (באש) > 1. (aramaic) to do evil > 2. (hebrew) to be bad, displeasing > 3. (biblical hebrew) to stink, have a foul smell > -Dictionary of the Standard Modern Dialect of Distributed Colloquial Vernacular. --- > _Within the ever-expanding world of biblical scholarship, who or what is J?_ > > -James B. Rosenberg, emeritus rabbi Temple Habonim --- > BASH (באש) > 1. A primitive root; to smell bad; figuratively, to be offensive morally; (make to) be abhorred (had in abomination, loathsome, odious), (cause a, make to) stink(-ing savour). > > -Strong's Exhaustive Concordance, entry H887 --- > _While traditionalists continue to hold to their belief that Moses, in receipt of God's direct words, wrote the entire Torah, non-traditional Jews – including most members of the Conservative, Reform and Reconstructionist movements – see our Torah as the composite work of four primary writers: J (Yahwist), E (Elohist), P (Priestly) and D (Deuteronomic)._ > > -!?Ja --- > BASH (באש) > - The KJV translates Strong's H887 in the following manner: stink (10x), abhor (3x), abomination (1x), loathsome (1x), stinking savour (1x), utterly 1 (inf. for emphasis). > > -!?S.\*Ex.\*dance --- > _Bloom's primary purpose in “The Book of J” is to expand on the character of the author J and on the character of Yahweh, whom J creates. One does not have to read more than the first four or five chapters of Genesis to discern that there are at least two different authors of the text and two very different versions of the so-called Biblical God._ > > -!?rabbi T --- > BE'ER. (בער) > 1. (verb) to burn > 2. (noun) fool, stupid person > -!?Dict --- > _\[Bloom\] dared to suggest that the author of the J narrative in our Torah was most likely a gifted aristocratic woman living in Jerusalem sometime between 950 and 900 B.C.E., as Solomon's kingdom was breaking apart under the misrule of his son Rehoboam._ > -!?B. Ro --- > _seneh is a dis legomenon, only appearing in two places, both of which describe the burning bush_ > > -!?ee E --- > _And an angel of YHWH appeared to him in a fire's flame from inside a bush. And he looked, and here: the bush was burning in the fire, and the bush was not consumed._ > -Exodus 3:2 --- > hapax legomenon (resp. dis legomenon) > 1. a word or an expression that occurs only once (resp. twice) within a context: either in the written record of an entire language, in the works of an author, or in a single text. > > -!?ee E --- > _Of all the extraordinary ironies concerning J, the most remarkable is that this fountainhead of Judaism, Christianity, and Islam simply was not a religious writer._ > > -Har. B. --- > & HNH HSNH > בער באש > & HSNH > איננו אכל > -J --- goto: [[sys/class/wakeup/wakeup0|/sys/class/wakeup/wakeup0]]