Names of God

אֱלֹהִיםYahweh vs Elohim

Elohim is the Hebrew word for “God” - a title, like “King.” Yahweh is his personal name. One tells you what he is; the other tells you who he is.

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Open the Bible’s first page and you meet Elohim: “In the beginning, God created the heavens and the earth” (Genesis 1:1). Turn one page and the text suddenly says Yahweh Elohim - “Yahweh God made the earth and the heavens” (Genesis 2:4). That shift is not sloppiness. It is the Bible’s way of introducing the Creator twice: first by his majesty, then by his name.

What Elohim Means

אֱלֹהִים (Elohim) is the ordinary Hebrew word for deity - used about 2,600 times. It is grammatically plural in form, yet when it names the true God it takes singular verbs: a plural of majesty, fullness, and intensity - all that deity is, gathered in one. The same word can describe false gods (Exodus 20:3), so Elohim by itself answers only the question “what?” - divine, mighty, Creator.

What Yahweh Means

יהוה (Yahweh) is not a category - it is a name, borne by no one else, revealed at the burning bush and tied to the verb “to be”: “I AM WHO I AM” (Exodus 3:14). It appears about 6,800 times - more than any other word for God - because the Bible is not a book about “a god.” It is the story of this God. “This is my name forever” (Exodus 3:15).

Yahweh vs Elohim at a glance
ElohimYahweh
What it isA title - “God / deity”A personal name
Hebrewאֱלֹהִיםיהוה (YHWH)
Occurrences≈ 2,600≈ 6,800
First appearsGenesis 1:1 - creationGenesis 2:4 - covenant & relationship
Answers“What is he?”“Who is he?”
In English Bibles“God”“the LORD” (small caps) or “Yahweh”

Why the Bible Uses Both Together

Yahweh Elohim” - Yahweh God - welds the two truths into one phrase: the infinite Creator of Genesis 1 is the personal covenant God who walks with Adam, calls Abraham, and speaks to Moses. The Shema binds them forever: “Hear, Israel: Yahweh is our Elohim; Yahweh is one” (Deuteronomy 6:4). Israel’s creed is precisely that the universal category and the personal name meet in a single Lord.

Know therefore today, and lay it to your heart, that Yahweh - he is Elohim in heaven above and on the earth beneath. There is no one else.Deuteronomy 4:39

Related Words You Will Meet

Frequently Asked Questions

Elohim is the Hebrew common noun for 'God' - a title that tells you what he is. Yahweh is his personal name, revealed in Exodus 3, that tells you who he is. English Bibles usually print Elohim as 'God' and Yahweh as 'the LORD' in small capitals.

Elohim has a plural ending (-im), but with the true God it always takes singular verbs. Most scholars understand it as a plural of majesty or fullness; Christians also see room for the tri-personal God later revealed as Father, Son and Spirit.

'Yahweh God' - the combined phrase first used in Genesis 2:4. It identifies the cosmic Creator of Genesis 1 (Elohim) as the personal, covenant-keeping God of Israel (Yahweh).

No. Deuteronomy 6:4 settles it: 'Yahweh is our Elohim; Yahweh is one.' Elohim is the office; Yahweh is the name of the one who fills it.