Yadda wrote on Feb 20
th, 2016 at 7:38am:
The Hebrew word pronounced 'alah', is the pronouncement of a curse.
'alah', was a curse, put upon mankind, but especially, put upon [all of Israel, and] the Jewish people [....as a 'reward' for, forgetting their God, for departing from his law, and for breaking their covenant with their holy God.].
.....
Do you deliberately try to be ignorant, or does it come naturally to you?
Vowels in both Hebrew and Arabic languages are very changeable, even in modern dialects. That's partly due to the fact that most vowels are inferred, although not in this case.
Allah has cognates in all other Semitic languages.
In Aramaic, the language of Jesus, the equivalent is Ela in the nominative and Elaha in the emphatic case. In the accusative case, it is Elohi.
In Hebrew, the usual term is the plural, Elohim (Gods) which confirms the polytheistic origins of Judaism, and by inference, Christianity. The singular form is Eloah.
The term in Arabic, is made up of the Definite article (The) or Al, and the word for God, which is ilah. The i is lost in the concatenation.
In crying out the phrase "Elohi, Elohi, lama sabachthani!" on the cross, was Jesus Christ uttering some kind of curse on humanity?
Is your version correct or are all biblical scholars correct?

I almost forgot, Christian Arabs also use the term Allah. The Maltese Christians use the term Alah.
In the Arabic Bible, we have:
Allāh al-ab (الله الأب) for God the Father, Allāh al-ibn (الله الابن) for God the Son, and Allāh al-rūḥ al-quds (الله الروح القدس) for God the Holy Spirit.
What do you think God is called in the Indonesian Bible (say by Christians in Northern Sulawesi where Christianity is the dominant religion?
What name is called out by Christians in Churches like the one attached?
I'll give you a clue:
Quote:Genesis 15:2 Abram menjawab: "Ya Tuhan ALLAH, apakah yang akan Engkau berikan kepadaku, karena aku akan meninggal dengan tidak mempunyai anak, dan yang akan mewarisi rumahku ialah Eliezer, orang Damsyik itu."