The Hebrew word for father (×ב) occurs, in various forms, 938 times in the Hebrew Bible.
Nowhere Yahweh is a Hebrew word for God, the covenant God of Israel. He is the God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob. It is Hebrew and The King James Version of the Bible is not written in Hebrew or Greek, it is written in English. So the Hebrew name Yahweh or most other Hebrew words will probably not be seen in an English written Bible. The English translations of Jahweh occurs well over 6000 times in the KJV Bible.
Father occurs 1512 times in the KJV Bible
The letter "J" is not in the Bible. This is because the letter "J" did not exist in the English language until around the 14th century. The Bible was primarily written in Hebrew, Aramaic, and Greek, none of which have a letter equivalent to "J".
1511 times in the KJV Bible
In the Hebrew Bible alone, this phrase occurs at least 180 times.
Nowhere Yahweh is a Hebrew word for God, the covenant God of Israel. He is the God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob. It is Hebrew and The King James Version of the Bible is not written in Hebrew or Greek, it is written in English. So the Hebrew name Yahweh or most other Hebrew words will probably not be seen in an English written Bible. The English translations of Jahweh occurs well over 6000 times in the KJV Bible.
The word "payam" is not in the Bible. The word "payam" is of Islamic origin, not Hebrew or Aramaic or Greek, in which the Bible was written.
My opinion, is that during Bible times, Hebrew peoples were considered as, Jews.
The word "father" appears in the King James Version of the Bible 1,126 times. It is in 970 verses. Please see the related link below.
Father occurs 1512 times in the KJV Bible
13 times
6,973 times
Nacham (× ×—×) occurs 100 times.
The letter "J" is not in the Bible. This is because the letter "J" did not exist in the English language until around the 14th century. The Bible was primarily written in Hebrew, Aramaic, and Greek, none of which have a letter equivalent to "J".
1511 times in the KJV Bible
In the Hebrew Bible alone, this phrase occurs at least 180 times.
The word Yeshua and its variants are the Hebrew equivalent to 'Jesus', and appears many times in the Hebrew Bible, but this is never in reference to Jesus of Nazareth.