Yes, Jireh is another name for God. It is a Hebrew term that means "provider" or "God will provide."
God will provide
Jireh is not a Hebrew word. There no J in Hebrew.
A name from one of the many names of God - Jehova Jireh (pronounced JI-Ruh or JA-Ruh) meaning "God Provides"
None of the names (or titles or descriptive words also referred to as "names") given to Jesus directly mean "the provider." One Hebrew name for God, though, used in the Old Testament is Jehovah-Jireh, which means "God, my provider." If one accepts the doctrine of the Trinity, which would mean that Jesus was God incarnate, then you could say that was also a name of Jesus.
The Hebrew word 'jireh' is usually pronounced "jai rah". It means that God is a the provider of all the good things.
Jehovah Jireh means 'God will provide'__________________________Jehovah is the common English translation of God's personal name. (Psalms 83:18)Jireh is from the Hebrew verb meaning to provide.This Biblical name is found at Genesis 22:14 and refers to a specific place on one of the mountains in the land of Moriah where Abraham found a ram caught in a thicket and subsequently offered it instead of his son, Isaac, as a sacrifice. Abraham viewed this ram as Jehovah's provision and therefore named the place Jehovah-jireh.
The concept of Jehovah Jireh in the Bible shows that God is faithful and provides for people in times of need.
The god of the Israelites had no name. He was called God, Jehovah Jireh (The Lord who Provides), Jehovah Raphah (The Lord who Heals), Yahweh, and many other names. In the Bible, God referred to himself as, "I am who I am."
Jireh Chapel was created in 1805.
The correct spelling is "Jehovah Jireh."
Genesis 22:14 says that Abraham called it: Yehwah' yireh' ('Jehovah-Jireh'-NEB, ASV)meaning "YHWH (Jehovah) will provide". (The Holy Scriptures 'A New Translation' by the Jewish Publication Society of America 1917, removed the name of God, "YHWH", and replaced it with "Adonai" making the name of the place read: 'Adonai-Jireh' meaning 'the LORD will provide'.
Yes, Jireh is mentioned in the Bible as one of the names given to God. It is derived from the Hebrew phrase "YHWH-Yireh," meaning "the Lord will provide," and is found in the story of Abraham and Isaac in the book of Genesis.