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18 answers

Jesus mean Jehova Our Saviour

2007-04-17 12:33:12 · answer #1 · answered by show me the way 2 · 0 2

The way the Christians "evolve" and intepret things the whole World knows.
His name is Yeshua. Does Yeshua souns like Jesus to you ?
Look at the following verse : Isaiah 7:14
"Therefore, the Lord himself will give you a sign, behold a young woman (almah) will conceive and bear a child and shall call his name Immanuel."

They also call Jesus, Immanuel. Do you know why? This is how they interpret.
It is claimed that the above was a prophecy about the birth of Jesus to the Virgin Mary. It is further claimed that since the word Immanuel means "God with us," the person being talked about, i.e. Jesus was God.
The word translated as "virgin" is the wrong translation of the Hebrew word ALMAH. The word ALMAH in Hebrew means "young woman." The correct Hebrew word for virgin is BETHULAH. Since many young women begot children since those words were penned, it is not at all necessary that those words should apply to Jesus.
Another fact that is often ignored is that Jesus was never named Immanuel, nor did anyone ever address him as Immanuel when he lived. On the contrary, the Messiah was named Jesus (Luke 2:21) by the angel according to the gospels. Also, even if a person is named Immanuel, it doesn't mean that the person so named is God.

Consider for example all the people named ELI in the Old Testament. ELI means God in the Hebrew. It is also narrated that Jesus while talking to God referred to Him as ELI (Mark 15:34 & Matthew 27:46).
We cannot however on this basis of just a name accept all the people named ELI in the Old Testament as Gods. Similarly, we cannot accept a person named Immanuel (which means "God with us") as God. Jesus was never named Immanuel anyway.

You see the way Chistians intepret things, they think they are very clever but, they are downright ..... !

2007-04-17 13:00:11 · answer #2 · answered by The Skeptic 4 · 0 0

Yeshua is the Hebrew name, and its English spelling is “Joshua.” Iesous is the Greek transliteration of the Hebrew name, and its English spelling is “Jesus.” Thus, the names Joshua and Jesus are essentially the same; both are English pronunciations of the Hebrew and Greek names for the Lord. (For examples of how the two names are interchangeable, see Acts 7:45 and Hebrews 4:8 in the KJV. In both cases, the word Jesus refers to the Old Testament character Joshua.)

2007-04-17 18:39:03 · answer #3 · answered by Freedom 7 · 0 0

In Hebrew, Jesus' name was something like "Yahoshua" (the same name that is translated "Joshua" as in the son of Nun). When they translated the Old Testament scriptures into Greek, the Greek language doesn't have the same sounds as Hebrew (for example, there is no "sh" sound in Greek) so they had to transliterate the name as closely as they could...which came out "Ieosus" (Ee-ah-soos)- and they had to put an "s" on the end to denote a masculine name in Greek. Later, as Latin replaced Greek in the Roman Empire, the Greek Iousus" was transliterated into Latin as "Iesu"...and then later into Middle English as "Jesu" (The "J" having then just arrived on the scene to replace the I in certain cases, and possibly also the Y)....so it's just evolved from Hebrew to Greek to Latin to English- and since Hebrew is a dead language and was also the manuscripts we have of the Hebrew Bible were written without vowels, no one is quite sure what the original name was (Yahushua? Yehoshua? etc.) so we just use the evolved form of "Jesus"...which is as good as any...since no one can be sure of the exact real name. But Joshua the son of Nun and Jesus are both the same name and both speeled the same in thr Greek septuagint (or the "LXX" the Greek translation of the Hebrew Bible) as well as in the New Testament. -It was the common transliteration of that name. (And NOT as some Sacred-Namers would have us believe that it is somehow descened from "Zeus")

2007-04-17 12:47:59 · answer #4 · answered by Ed Norton 2 · 1 0

The name Jesus is the English form of the Greek "Ιησυϛ" (pronounced something like "ee-ay-soos" The Greek is a translation of the Hebrew (or Aramaic). We would translate the Hebrew as Yeshua or Yehoshua (better would be Joshua).

HTH

Charles

2007-04-17 12:39:22 · answer #5 · answered by Charles 6 · 0 0

Luke 2:21 says

"On the eight day, when it was time to circumcise him, he was named Jesus, the name the angel had given him before he had been conceived".

That's where it came from :)

2007-04-17 12:35:20 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

yeah, we know His birthname was Emmanuel, from the Hebrew Immanuel (God with us). Jesus is likely the name given Him by the Holy Spirit, and so He was called Jesus by all around Him. Jesus means Savior.

2007-04-17 12:35:27 · answer #7 · answered by Hey, Ray 6 · 0 0

His name IS Jesus.

2007-04-17 12:32:49 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 0 2

Here's some other names used of him:

Son of God (divine title)
Son of man (messianic title)
Lamb of God (by John the Baptist)
The Word (John's gospel and epistles)
The Life (John's first epistle)
I am (Jesus on one occasion; same as Jehovah)
Messiah, Christ is the english word
Son of David (by Jews)
The good shepherd (divine title)
Alpha and Omega, i.e. the Start and End (Revelation)
Lion of the tribe of Judah (messianic title)
The Amen, the ruler of Gods creation

2007-04-17 12:51:08 · answer #9 · answered by Cader and Glyder scrambler 7 · 0 0

His name is Jesus who is the son of God. Now you know.

2007-04-17 12:33:28 · answer #10 · answered by Josh D 6 · 0 0

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