By guest contributor Chris Sabine
Does it really matter what name we use as the Messiah’s name?
The question sounds absurd but, I hear that all the time from every flavor (denomination) of christianity that I come across. I prove that His name cannot be, never was, and never will be Jesus and yet they still call Him by a Greco-Roman false name given by Satan with the help of his pagan sun-worshiping stooges that created christianity and codified it in the 4th century long after all the New Testament writers had died. So let’s see if it really matters or not.
Christianity’s Spiritual Household:
God: They have no idea what His name truly is so they call Him by a title or a false name “Jehovah.”
Jesus: A name that did not come about in print until the 17th century (after the letter J was invented in the 16th century) and is not Hebrew. He was a Jew. He would have had a Hebrew name. There is no “J” sound in Hebrew therefore this clearly is not His name.
Church: The word “church” was not in the scriptures. That word comes from Circe, the daughter of the sun god. Early believers never called themselves a church or christian. They were the ekklesia or called out assembly. Also, that would technically be a title as well. They have no idea that the bride has a name nor what the name of the bride even is.
One True Faith’s Spiritual Household:
Yah (Psalm 68:4, Exodus 3:14): There are countless verses that contain the word “the Lord.” All translations have replaced the name Yah with “the Lord”. He gave His name for a reason and one of those reasons is for us to call upon His name as He instructed us to do. Another reason would be for identifying with Him. Without identification, Psalm 99:26 and Psalm118:26 wouldn’t be prophetic. If He didn’t care about what you call Him, He would have said to call upon His title, He knows who you mean.
Yahoshua (Numbers 13:16, Zechariah 3:1) Notice the “Yah” at the beginning of the name. This makes Psalm 99:26 and Psalm 118:26 prophetic as it contains the name of His Father. Therefore, Yahoshua came in His Father’s name and not some Greco-Roman name with absolutely no meaning. His true name literally means Yah’s salvation.
Y’Israel: Yahoshua’s bride is different from everyone else in Yah’s family, as the bride is given the covenant of marriage (ketubah), which is the eternal seal of the Holy Spirit. Jeremiah 31:31-33, Hebrews 8:10, Ephesians 5:32, 2 Corinthians 11:2. Once sealed, a person becomes a TRUE (spiritual) Jew or Yahudiy. Notice the “Yah” in Yahudiy. Again this is tied directly to the Father. This is also important as it relates to 2 Chronicles 7:14 and is the true people called by His name.
The differences in the two are striking and yet christianity will shrug it off with another “it really doesn’t matter.” That logic is shredded by John 4:24 which is a single verse that christianity largely ignores unless it is something they can agree with. When they can’t agree with truth, they just toss it aside. In tossing that verse aside, they can manipulate Acts 4:12 to mean the name “Jesus” and not the true name of the Messiah which is and always will be Yahoshua. So YES, what name you use can mean the difference in eternal life and eternal death.
Remember, the Almighty Creator doesn’t change and explains why in Malachi 3:6. Not surprisingly the reason for that is for the sake of His household of which the “church” most certainly is NOT.
For more information: Nobody in Scripture Ever Knew Jesus