<P> Many English translations of the Bible translate the Tetragrammaton as LORD, following the Jewish practice of substituting Adonai for it . In the same sense as the substitution of Adonai, the Septuagint translation of the Hebrew Bible to Greek mainly used the word Kyrios (Greek: Κύριος, meaning' lord') for YHWH . Apostle Paul was likely familiar with the use of the term Kyrios in the Septuagint and used it in his letters to refer to Jesus, thus signifying his divinity . </P> <P> The pronouncement "I Am that I Am" in Exodus 3: 14, in rabbinical scholarship taken as a gloss on the meaning of the Tetragrammaton, was in Hellenistic Judaism rendered as ἐγώ εἰμί ὁ ὢν . In the iconographic tradition of Eastern Christianity, it is common to depict Christ with a cruciform halo inscribed with the letters Ο, Ω, Ν for ὁ ὢν "He Who Is". </P> <P> In Exodus 34: 14, God does give his name as Jealous . Exodus 34: 14 - For thou shalt worship no other god: for the LORD, whose name is Jealous, is a jealous God (1611 edition of King James Version Bible). </P> <P> While the Old Testament has a wide variety of names and epithets that refer to God in Hebrew, the Greek text of the New Testament uses far fewer variants . </P>

What is the old testament name for god as being