Men began to call on the name of the Lord during the days of Seth, third born of Adam and Eve in Genesis 4:26.
Answer
Adam would have had cause to call upon the name of the Lord after he and Eve were banished from the garden of Eden. Though he gained much knowledge regarding the things in the garden, he had little knowledge of the new world he had been sent to. Though some inspired thoughts would have come from God to help him, there would have been times when he would have needed help from the Lord. If you remember Adam built an alter at which place he offered up his prayes to God.
the kings men
The name of every Elizabethan and Jacobean acting company tells you the name of the company's patron or sponsor. It's like having an acting company called the Coca-Cola Players. Lord Strange's Men, The Lord Admiral's Men, The Lord Chamberlain's Men and the King's Men were sponsored by Lord Strange, the Lord Admiral, the Lord Chamberlain, and the king, James I, respectively.
When the company first formed in 1594, they were known as Lord Hunsdon's Men after their patron. Soon after, when he received his appointemnt as the Lord Chamberlain to Queen Elizabeth, the name changed to reflect his new title and the company became the Lord Chamberlaon's Men. In 1603, King James I, who commissioned the new translation of the Bible, became the company's new patron and they became known as the King's Men.
They didn't change their name--it was changed for them when their patron changed or when his job changed. In fact their name changed several times: From the Lord Chamberlain's Men to Lord Hunsdon's Men when the Lord Chamberlain died and his son Lord Hunsdon took over patronage of the company, from Lord Hunsdon's Men to the Lord Chamberlain's Men when Hunsdon became Lord Chamberlain like his father, and from the Lord Chamberlain's Men to The King's Men when King James I took over patronage of the company. The partners in the company had nothing to say about it.
They did not. They were formed as the Lord Chamberlain's Men in 1594. Their name changed to the King's Men (they did not have any choice in their name) when the King became their patron nine years later in 1603.
Gen:4:26: And to Seth, to him also there was born a son; and he called his name Enos: then began men to call upon the name of the LORD.
The Kings Men
the kings men
Shakespeare was a shareholder in Lord Hunsdon's Men who changed its name to the Lord Chamberlain's Men, who later became the King's Men.
The name of every Elizabethan and Jacobean acting company tells you the name of the company's patron or sponsor. It's like having an acting company called the Coca-Cola Players. Lord Strange's Men, The Lord Admiral's Men, The Lord Chamberlain's Men and the King's Men were sponsored by Lord Strange, the Lord Admiral, the Lord Chamberlain, and the king, James I, respectively.
Lord Hunsdon's Men became the Lord Chamberlain's Men which became the King's Men.
When the company first formed in 1594, they were known as Lord Hunsdon's Men after their patron. Soon after, when he received his appointemnt as the Lord Chamberlain to Queen Elizabeth, the name changed to reflect his new title and the company became the Lord Chamberlaon's Men. In 1603, King James I, who commissioned the new translation of the Bible, became the company's new patron and they became known as the King's Men.
They didn't change their name--it was changed for them when their patron changed or when his job changed. In fact their name changed several times: From the Lord Chamberlain's Men to Lord Hunsdon's Men when the Lord Chamberlain died and his son Lord Hunsdon took over patronage of the company, from Lord Hunsdon's Men to the Lord Chamberlain's Men when Hunsdon became Lord Chamberlain like his father, and from the Lord Chamberlain's Men to The King's Men when King James I took over patronage of the company. The partners in the company had nothing to say about it.
The first appearance of the word "worship" is in Genesis 22:5. The first reference to the act of worship is in Genesis 4:26 - "Then men began to call on the name of the Lord." [NKJV]
They did not. They were formed as the Lord Chamberlain's Men in 1594. Their name changed to the King's Men (they did not have any choice in their name) when the King became their patron nine years later in 1603.
The Lord Chamberlain's men changed their name because they gained the patronage of the reigning monarch King James I thus becoming The King's Men.
The company with whom Shakespeare was most closely associated went under three names at various times. It formed as The Lord Chancelor's Men in 1594. It took the name Lord Hunsdon's Men when its original patron died, and resumed its original name when he, too, was made Lord Chamcelor, like his father. In 1603, the name changed to The King's Men to honor their new patron, King James I.