Etymology of the Name
God
Oddly, the exact history of the word God is unknown. The
word God is a relatively new European invention, which was
never used in any of the ancient Judaeo-Christian scripture
manuscripts that were written in Hebrew, Aramaic, Greek or
Latin.
According to the best efforts of linguists and researchers, the
root of the present word God is the Sanskrit word
hu which means to call upon, invoke, implore.
Nonetheless, it is also interesting to note the similarity to
the ancient Persian word for God which is Khoda.
The following is a survey of some of the efforts of those who
have been trying to decipher the ancient roots of the word
God:
Webster's 1913 Dictionary:
\God\ (g[o^]d), n. [AS. god; akin to OS. & D. god, OHG. got, G.
gott, Icel. gu[eth], go[eth], Sw. & Dan. gud, Goth. gup, prob.
orig. a p. p. from a root appearing in Skr. h[=u], p. p. h[=u]ta,
to call upon, invoke, implore. [root]30. Cf. {Goodbye}, {Gospel},
{Gossip}.]
http://www.hyperdictionary.com/dictionary/god
Catholic Encyclopedia:
Etymology of the Word "God"
(Anglo-Saxon God; German Gott; akin to Persian khoda; Hindu
khooda).
God can variously be defined as:
- the proper name of the one Supreme and Infinite Personal Being,
the Creator and Ruler of the universe, to whom man owes obedience
and worship;
- the common or generic name of the several supposed beings to
whom, in polytheistic religions, Divine attributes are ascribed and
Divine worship rendered;
- the name sometimes applied to an idol as the image or
dwelling-place of a god.
The root-meaning of the name (from Gothic root gheu; Sanskrit
hub or emu, "to invoke or to sacrifice to") is either "the one
invoked" or "the one sacrificed to." From different Indo-Germanic
roots (div, "to shine" or "give light"; thes in thessasthai "to
implore") come the Indo-Iranian deva, Sanskrit dyaus (gen. divas),
Latin deus, Greek theos, Irish and Gaelic dia, all of which are
generic names; also Greek Zeus (gen. Dios, Latin Jupiter
(jovpater), Old Teutonic Tiu or Tiw (surviving in Tuesday), Latin
Janus, Diana, and other proper names of pagan deities. The common
name most widely used in Semitic occurs as 'el in Hebrew, 'ilu in
Babylonian, 'ilah in Arabic, etc.; and though scholars are not
agreed on the point, the root-meaning most probably is "the strong
or mighty one."
http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/06608x.htm
Oxford English Dictionary:
"god (gρd). Also 3-4
godd. [Com. Teut.: OE. god (masc. in sing.; pl. godu,
godo neut., godas masc.) corresponds to OFris., OS.,
Du. god masc., OHG. got, cot (MHG. got,
mod.Ger. gott) masc., ON. goð, guð neut. and
masc., pl. goð, guð neut. (later Icel. pl.
guðir masc.; Sw., Da. gud), Goth. guÞ
(masc. in sing.; pl. guÞa, guda neut.). The Goth. and ON. words
always follow the neuter declension, though when used in the
Christian sense they are syntactically masc. The OTeut. type is
therefore *guđo
m
neut., the adoption of the masculine concord being presumably due
to the Christian use of the word. The neuter sb., in its original
heathen use, would answer rather to L. numen than to L.
deus. Another approximate equivalent of deus in
OTeut. was *ansu-z (Goth. in latinized pl. form
anses, ON.
ρss,
OE. Ós- in personal names, ésa genit. pl.); but this
seems to have been applied only to the higher deities of the native
pantheon, never to foreign gods; and it never came into Christian
use.
The ulterior etymology is disputed. Apart from the
unlikely hypothesis of adoption from some foreign tongue, the
OTeut. *gubo
m
implies as
its pre-Teut. type either *ghudho-m or *ghutó-m. The
former does not appear to admit of explanation; but the latter
would represent the neut. of the passive pple. of a root
*gheu-. There are two Aryan roots of the required form
(both *g
l
heu, with palatal
aspirate): one meaning ‘to invoke’ (Skr. hū), the other ‘to pour, to offer
sacrifice’ (Skr. hu, Gr.
χέειν
, OE. yéotan YETE v.). Hence *g
l
hutó-m has been variously interpreted as
‘what is invoked’ (cf. Skr. puru-hūta ‘much-invoked’, an epithet of
Indra) and as ‘what is worshipped by sacrifice’ (cf. Skr.
hutá, which occurs in the sense ‘sacrificed to’ as well as
in that of ‘offered in sacrifice’). Either of these conjectures is
fairly plausible, as they both yield a sense practically coincident
with the most obvious definition deducible from the actual use of
the word, ‘an object of worship’.
Some scholars, accepting the derivation from the root
*g
l
heu- to pour, have
supposed the etymological sense to be ‘molten image’ (= Gr.
χυγόν
), but the assumed
development of meaning seems very unlikely.
transcribed from The Oxford English
Dictionary
Webster's Revised Unabridged
Dictionary:
god
\God\ (g[o^]d), n. [AS. god; akin to OS. & D. god, OHG. got, G.
gott, Icel. gu[eth], go[eth], Sw. & Dan. gud, Goth. gup, prob.
orig. a p. p. from a root appearing in Skr. h[=u], p. p. h[=u]ta,
to call upon, invoke, implore. [root]30. Cf. Goodbye, Gospel,
Gossip.]
1. A being conceived of as possessing supernatural power, and to be
propitiated by sacrifice, worship, etc.; a divinity; a deity; an
object of worship; an idol.
He maketh a god, and worshipeth it. --Is. xliv. 15.
The race of Israel . . . bowing lowly down To bestial gods.
--Milton.
2. The Supreme Being; the eternal and infinite Spirit, the Creator,
and the Sovereign of the universe; Jehovah.
http://dictionary.reference.com/search?q=god
American Heritage
Dictionary:
GOD
NOUN: 1. God a. A being conceived as the perfect, omnipotent,
omniscient originator and ruler of the universe, the principal
object of faith and worship in monotheistic religions. b. The
force, effect, or a manifestation or aspect of this being. 2. A
being of supernatural powers or attributes, believed in and
worshiped by a people, especially a male deity thought to control
some part of nature or reality. 3. An image of a supernatural
being; an idol. 4. One that is worshiped, idealized, or followed:
Money was their god. 5. A very handsome man. 6. A powerful ruler or
despot.
ETYMOLOGY: Middle English, from Old English. See gheu(): in
APPENDIX I
APPENDIX I: ENTRY: gheu()-
DEFINITION: To call, invoke. Oldest form *heu()-, becoming *gheu()-
in centum languages. Suffixed zero-grade form *ghu-to-, “the
invoked,” god. a. god, from Old English god, god; b. giddy, from
Old English gydig, gidig, possessed, insane, from Germanic
*gud-iga-, possessed by a god; c. götterdämmerung, from Old High
German got, god. a–c all from Germanic *gudam, god. (Pokorny hau-
413.)
http://www.bartleby.com/61/21/G0172100.html
An Additional On-Line Reference:
Word origin: God - Our word god goes back via Germanic to
Indo-European, in which a corresponding ancestor form meant
“invoked one.” The word’s only surviving non-Germanic
relative is Sanskrit hu, invoke the gods, a form which appears in
the Rig Veda, most ancient of Hindu scriptures:
puru-hutas, “much invoked,” epithet of the rain-and-thunder
god Indra.
(From READER’S DIGEST, Family
Word Finder, page 351) (Originally published by The Reader’s Digest
Association, Inc., Pleasantville New York,
Montreal; Copyright 1975)
Now if the sources noted above are accurate, then the word that
we use for the Supreme Being, God, comes from a very pagan
origin. Thus the word god is used generically by many
different religions to refer to their deity or “invoked
one.”
Some may laugh at the notion, the very idea that the word “God”
has any origin or association with Hindu Sanskrit. To
illustrate how this is possible, we again quote from ‘Family Word
Finder’ on the historical development of our Modern English
language:
Page 7, ‘Word Origins’ - “English belongs to the Indo-European
family of languages, which consists of about 100 related tongues,
all descended from prehistoric language of a pastoral, bronze
working, horse breeding people, the Aryans, who inhabited the
steppes of Central Asia about 4500 B.C. Scholars refer to
their language at this stage as proto-Indo-European, or simply
Indo-European.
http://www.bibleanswerstand.org/God.htm