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Post by Elizabeth on May 14, 2018 7:26:45 GMT
How many can you think of with verses?
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Post by mastrongnssideon on May 14, 2018 7:49:39 GMT
Yahweh
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Post by DKTrav88 on May 14, 2018 8:13:38 GMT
Alpha and Omega - Revelation 1:8, 1:11, 21:6, 22:13 Son of man - Matthew 8:20 and many times after Son of God - Matthew 4:3 and many times after Lord - Matthew 7:21 and many times after Lamb - Revelation 15:3, 21:22 Almighty - Revelation 1:8 KING OF KINGS, LORD OF LORDS - 1 Timothy 6:15, Revelation 17:14, 19:16 King of saints - Revelation 15:3 Emmanuel/Immanuel - Matthew 1:23, Isaiah 7:14 Bridegroom - Revelation 18:23 Faithful and True - Revelation 19:11 Messiah - Daniel 9:25-26 Prince - Daniel 9:25 Shiloh - Genesis 49:10 Christ - Matthew 1:1 and many times after Rock - 1 Corinthians 10:4
I’m sure I missed a couple names. These are the ones I remember off of the top of my head.
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Post by Διαμονδ on May 14, 2018 11:14:53 GMT
The Word of God- Logos!
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Post by joustos on May 14, 2018 14:17:10 GMT
Alpha and Omega - Revelation 1:8, 1:11, 21:6, 22:13 Son of man - Matthew 8:20 and many times after Son of God - Matthew 4:3 and many times after Lord - Matthew 7:21 and many times after Lamb - Revelation 15:3, 21:22 Almighty - Revelation 1:8 KING OF KINGS, LORD OF LORDS - 1 Timothy 6:15, Revelation 17:14, 19:16 King of saints - Revelation 15:3 Emmanuel/Immanuel - Matthew 1:23, Isaiah 7:14 Bridegroom - Revelation 18:23 Faithful and True - Revelation 19:11 Messiah - Daniel 9:25-26 Prince - Daniel 9:25 Shiloh - Genesis 49:10 Christ - Matthew 1:1 and many times after Rock - 1 Corinthians 10:4 I’m sure I missed a couple names. These are the ones I remember off of the top of my head. You made an impressive list; however, the sources are problematic, because the Old Testament names, as referring to Jesus of Nazareth, are modern (theological) interpretations. On the other hand, you omitted the name which Diamond provided: Logos [Word], in John-1, and Son [Descendant] of David, in Matthew's genealogy. A bigger problem has to do with the identity of Jesus of Nazareth, for the Gospels seem to speak of two different persons: One is the son of (King) David, and as such, he is the royal Jesus (who is going to be crucified as "the king of the Jews); the other is the son of God and Mary, who was born in Bethlehem... in order that the Scriptures would be fulfilled, wherefore, (like the Greek Dionysus), he was both divine and human, and is the Messiah or Redeemer. Jesus the King was born before the death of the Great Herod; the other Jesus was born when the Roman emperor was Tiberius who, as some people believed, required the Israelites to go for the census to the place of their birth... May I add one note for Strongnssideon: One of Jesus' names cannot be Yahveh, as obviously you inferred from John's doctrine that he is God [Theos, in the original Greek scriptures]. According to the Gospels, Jesus' God was El, as he (on the Cross)incvoked Eli or Eloah -- the Elohim in Genesis-1, not the Yahveh of Genesis-2 (the God of the Judaeans).
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Post by DKTrav88 on May 14, 2018 22:45:37 GMT
Alpha and Omega - Revelation 1:8, 1:11, 21:6, 22:13 Son of man - Matthew 8:20 and many times after Son of God - Matthew 4:3 and many times after Lord - Matthew 7:21 and many times after Lamb - Revelation 15:3, 21:22 Almighty - Revelation 1:8 KING OF KINGS, LORD OF LORDS - 1 Timothy 6:15, Revelation 17:14, 19:16 King of saints - Revelation 15:3 Emmanuel/Immanuel - Matthew 1:23, Isaiah 7:14 Bridegroom - Revelation 18:23 Faithful and True - Revelation 19:11 Messiah - Daniel 9:25-26 Prince - Daniel 9:25 Shiloh - Genesis 49:10 Christ - Matthew 1:1 and many times after Rock - 1 Corinthians 10:4 I’m sure I missed a couple names. These are the ones I remember off of the top of my head. You made an impressive list; however, the sources are problematic, because the Old Testament names, as referring to Jesus of Nazareth, are modern (theological) interpretations. On the other hand, you omitted the name which Diamond provided: Logos [Word], in John-1, and Son [Descendant] of David, in Matthew's genealogy. A bigger problem has to do with the identity of Jesus of Nazareth, for the Gospels seem to speak of two different persons: One is the son of (King) David, and as such, he is the royal Jesus (who is going to be crucified as "the king of the Jews); the other is the son of God and Mary, who was born in Bethlehem... in order that the Scriptures would be fulfilled, wherefore, (like the Greek Dionysus), he was both divine and human, and is the Messiah or Redeemer. Jesus the King was born before the death of the Great Herod; the other Jesus was born when the Roman emperor was Tiberius who, as some people believed, required the Israelites to go for the census to the place of their birth... May I add one note for Strongnssideon: One of Jesus' names cannot be Yahveh, as obviously you inferred from John's doctrine that he is God [Theos, in the original Greek scriptures]. According to the Gospels, Jesus' God was El, as he (on the Cross)incvoked Eli or Eloah -- the Elohim in Genesis-1, not the Yahveh of Genesis-2 (the God of the Judaeans). Uhh what? I didn’t omit anything. I wrote those names up in about two minutes I even said I missed some. And the question was “how many can you THINK of” and those I are the ones I thought of on the spot and knew there were more. I never claimed those were the only names Jesus went by. The sources are God’s word. I don’t need to go to the Greek to understand His word. His word is preserved for ever in all languages in which His word is written. But yes, in John 1:1 His name is “the Word”. Don’t really care what the Greek says. I’m not a language expert nor do I need to be to understand God’s word. Being a language expert is not a requirement to receive the Holy Spirit nor for salvation. Interpretation of languages is a gift, just as there are many gifts of the Holy Spirit.
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Deleted
Deleted Member
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Post by Deleted on May 14, 2018 23:11:38 GMT
Marlboro Sovereign Pall&Mall Lucky Strike
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Post by joustos on May 15, 2018 15:03:10 GMT
You made an impressive list; however, the sources are problematic, because the Old Testament names, as referring to Jesus of Nazareth, are modern (theological) interpretations. On the other hand, you omitted the name which Diamond provided: Logos [Word], in John-1, and Son [Descendant] of David, in Matthew's genealogy. A bigger problem has to do with the identity of Jesus of Nazareth, for the Gospels seem to speak of two different persons: One is the son of (King) David, and as such, he is the royal Jesus (who is going to be crucified as "the king of the Jews); the other is the son of God and Mary, who was born in Bethlehem... in order that the Scriptures would be fulfilled, wherefore, (like the Greek Dionysus), he was both divine and human, and is the Messiah or Redeemer. Jesus the King was born before the death of the Great Herod; the other Jesus was born when the Roman emperor was Tiberius who, as some people believed, required the Israelites to go for the census to the place of their birth... May I add one note for Strongnssideon: One of Jesus' names cannot be Yahveh, as obviously you inferred from John's doctrine that he is God [Theos, in the original Greek scriptures]. According to the Gospels, Jesus' God was El, as he (on the Cross)incvoked Eli or Eloah -- the Elohim in Genesis-1, not the Yahveh of Genesis-2 (the God of the Judaeans). Uhh what? I didn’t omit anything. I wrote those names up in about two minutes I even said I missed some. And the question was “how many can you THINK of” and those I are the ones I thought of on the spot and knew there were more. I never claimed those were the only names Jesus went by. The sources are God’s word. I don’t need to go to the Greek to understand His word. His word is preserved for ever in all languages in which His word is written. But yes, in John 1:1 His name is “the Word”. Don’t really care what the Greek says. I’m not a language expert nor do I need to be to understand God’s word. It’s not a requirement to receive the Holy Spirit nor for salvation. Interpretation of languages is a gift, just as there are many gifts of the Holy Spirit. I am sorry for giving the impression that you did something wrong or poorly. One point I wished to make is that when religionists or theologians identify the Messiah Daniel speaks of with Jesus of Nazareth, they do so on the basis of the fact that the Hebrew word "Messiah" has been translated by the Greeks as "Christos". Another point: when John says, "and the Word was God [Theos, in his Greek]", he did not say, "and the word was Yahveh [or Yahweh]." As a matter of fact, the New Testament never uses either "Yahweh" or "El"; it uses the generic word "God" [Theos], except in the quotation of Jesus' Aramaic word [Eli or Eloi].
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