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  1. Sep 27, 2023 · Its etymology can be traced back to ancient Egypt, where it was used in religious and magical contexts. Today, “Amen” holds religious significance in Christianity, Judaism, and Islam, serving as a word of affirmation and agreement in prayers and worship.

  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › AmenAmen - Wikipedia

    According to a standard dictionary etymology of the English word, amen passed from Greek into Late Latin, and thence into English. [11] From Hebrew, the word was later adopted into the Arabic religious vocabulary and leveled to the Arabic root أ م ن, [12] which is of similar meanings to the Hebrew.

  3. Apr 14, 2021 · Facebook posts claim the word “amen” is derived from the ancient Egyptian god Amun Ra. This is false; experts say the common ending to prayers has Hebrew origins -- not Egyptian.

  4. Jan 28, 2021 · Apart from its initial vowel, which is “ay” in American English and “oo” in some varieties of Yiddish, amen is a word, used in their prayers by several million Jews and billions of Christians, that has changed remarkably little in either sense or sound in its over-2,500-year history.

  5. Jan 5, 2021 · Amen is an expression that all those things we just asked for in prayer, all the things we praised God for, all the questions, all the pain and the joy we express in prayer are founded in the truth of God.

  6. Apr 25, 2021 · In the early 1960’s part of a Hebrew legal document dating from the time of Jesus was found in which an individual declares “Amen, amen, ani lo ashem” meaning “Very truly, I am innocent.” It is possible, then, that Jesus borrowed this doubled form of amen from legal language of the day.

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  8. Although instead of “amen,” Muslims generally say “āmīn.” Interestingly, the Egyptians depicted a deity called Amen or Amon, represented by a ram. It was a god of life and reproduction. However, it’s merely a coincidence that the word amen resembles this god’s name.