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precious names given to the Lord Jesus in God’s word express
His person, purposes, power and pre-eminence. Names are little
more than a means of identification in contemporary usage. Not
so concerning Him whose name manifests His character. We can say
of Him, ‘as his name is, so is he’, cf. 1 Sam. 25. 25. It is
my object to draw out the hearts of the Lord’s people to
Christ by attempting to unfold some titles and names of our
blessed Lord and to show their spiritual significance.
It is my heart’s desire and
sincere hope that they may be of service by way of incentive to
the readers to search the Scriptures for themselves, that they
may see divine beauty, accuracy and precision in the wondrous
way in which God has been pleased to unveil to us the Person of
His beloved Son. He is the One whom God delights to honour. To
the natural mind there may seem no difference between phrases as
‘Jesus Christ’ and ‘Christ Jesus’. A little patient
study of the passages where they occur, and of the writer who
used them, will suffice to show that the Spirit intends us to
believe and understand a different revelation of His Son in the
use of each.
There are no redundancies in
the Scriptures of truth. When God gives a name or title to His
Son it is that we may know Him in the special character in which
the title is used to reveal Him. It is, by those who regard the
jot and tittle of God’s word, that the Bible is seen in its
minutest details to be inspired by God.
I. JESUS, Matt. 1. 21
Of all the glorious names given
to God’s only Son, the best loved by believers of every race
and age is the human name of the Saviour -Jesus. This is the
translation of the Hebrew word Jahoshua meaning ‘the
salvation of Jah.’ Mary had no choice in that name, it was
given by the angel Gabriel, as he had received it in the
presence of God and announced to Mary herself, before His birth,
Luke 1. 31. Gabriel also made known to Joseph that the child to
be born of Mary was the Son of God, Emmanuel, Matt. 1. 23, and
that he should call His name Jesus, for He would save His people
from their sins, Matt. 1. 21. The verb ‘to save’ used here
is related to the name Joshua. The first occurrence of this in
Exodus 14. 30, embraces all that the word was later to mean in
the Scriptures. ‘Thus the Lord saved Israel that day’. Dr.
W. Smith has observed, ‘this testifies to that great truth,
that the first occurrence of any major word in the Scripture is
the acorn out of which all that pertains to it was ultimately to
grow’.
Tracing the origin of the name
Jesus is interesting. In His day it was common among Jews. It is
the Greek rendering of the Hebrew Joshua. The Son of Nun was
first named Hoshea, or Oshea, meaning ‘salvation,’ but Moses
renamed him Jahoshua, Num. 13. 16, meaning ‘Jah is salvation’.
Moses ascribed any salvation gained by Joshua to Jehovah. No
doubt the deep significance of this name was fulfilled in Jesus,
the Saviour from sins.
Jesus is the name of His
humiliation. When it stands alone it brings Him before our
hearts, who, though He was God, stooped to become man to carry
out the will of God in the stupendous work of redemption. He who
is the Son of God became man (yet never ceased to be what He
eternally was), that He might become the Saviour of men. Jesus
is the One who, though rich, became poor, who humbled Himself,
appearing among men as man; who trod this earth in complete
subjection to the will of His Father as a man. The record of His
pathway from Bethlehem to Golgotha is the blessed subject of the
gospels. So, in their record the name Jesus appears more than
five hundred times. The examples of this use of His human name
are linked with His birth, baptism, temptation, teachings,
miracles, betrayal, shame, death and burial. The association of
the name Jesus marks the place He took as a man of sorrows and
acquainted with grief, in total submission to God. Jesus is the
usual name given to Him in the gospels, whereas in the Acts and
the epistles it occurs alone only twenty-nine times. In these
writings special testimony is ascribed to Him as the rejected
and crucified One, whom God has raised from the dead and has
highly exalted. Thus we read, ‘this Jesus hath God raised up’;
‘God hath made that same Jesus, both Lord and Christ’; ‘We
see Jesus . . . crowned with glory and honour’. Much has been
written to extol that name. The message of the grace and glory
of His name has been declared throughout the world. In life and
death that precious name is the object of trust and hope to
every humble believer.
Jesus! It speaks
a life of love
And sorrows meekly borne.
It tells of sympathy above
Whatever griefs we mourn.
The mention of Thy name shall bow
Our hearts to worship Thee;
The chiefest of ten thousand Thou
The chief of sinners we.
Mary Peters
2. CHRIST
As ‘Jesus’ is the personal
name of the Lord, so ‘Christ’ is His official title. It is
the Greek equivalent of the Hebrew ‘Messiah’ or ‘anointed’.
‘Christ’ therefore expresses the source of His relationship
to man as by God’s appointment. He was anointed by God.
In the second Psalm we read,
‘the kings of the earth set themselves, and the rulers take
counsel together against the Lord (Jehovah), and against his
anointed’.
The prayer of the infant church
shows how they understood the Psalm. ‘For of a truth, in this
city against thy holy Servant Jesus, whom thou didst anoint,
both Herod and Pontius Pilate, with the Gentiles and the peoples
of Israel, were gathered together’, Acts 4. 27, RV. As the
name of Jesus declares to us the Lord as the man of sorrows the
humbled One, so the title Christ tells of His acceptance by God.
When it occurs in the gospels with the article (‘the Christ’)
it is as the official designation of the One offered to Israel.
The Lord was anointed by God to
be Christ, but only anointed eyes could recognize Him. When He
asked the disciples, ‘whom do men say that the son of Man is?’
they said, 'Some say John the Baptist; some, Elijah; and others,
Jeremiah, or one of the prophets’. Yet when He asked, ‘but
whom say ye that I am?’ Peter answered, ‘thou art the
Christ, the Son of the living God’, Matt. 16. 13-16, R.V.
Peter’s eyes were anointed, Rev. 3.18, and he recognized in
the Son of Man none other than the Christ, the Son of the living
God. To the world He was ‘Jesus of Nazareth’ but to the few
to whom the Father had revealed Him He was ‘the Christ’, the
anointed of Jehovah. ‘Then charged he his disciples that they
should tell no man that he was the Christ’, Matt. 16. 20.
a. Christ the Prophet, Deut.
18. 15
According to the words of the Lord to Moses, the Lord would
raise up a prophet to Israel from among the brethren, like unto
Moses. The answer of John to the question, ‘Art thou that
prophet?’ was a negative reply, John 1. 21. Later, we read of
the confession of the great multitude of men who had witnessed
the miracle of the feeding of the 5000. ‘This is of a truth
that prophet that should come into the world’, John 6. 14. A
further indication of Christ as the prophet was given by Peter
at the healing of the lame man at the Gate Beautiful, Acts 3.
22-26. The only instance of a prophet being anointed, that I am
aware of, occurs in 1 Kings 19. 16, ‘Elisha the son of Shaphat,
of Abel-Meholah shalt thou anoint to be a prophet in thy room’.
b. Christ the Priest, Heb. 9.
11-16
Israel’s High Priest was anointed with oil by order of God,
‘and Moses poured of the anointing oil upon Aaron’s head’,
Lev. 8. 12. He could only enter the holiest of all once a year,
and not without blood, Lev. 16. 1-6. ‘But Christ being come an
high priest of good things to come . . . by his own blood he
entered in once into the holy place, having obtained eternal
redemption’, Heb. 9. 11-12.
As the High Priest appeared in
the presence chamber of Jehovah, the Holy of Holies, so we have
such an High Priest, the Great One, who sat down on the right
hand of the throne of the majesty in the heavens, Heb. 8. 1. And
as the High Priest bore the names of the tribes of Israel on his
breast, so Christ our High Priest now bears us nearer than Aaron
could, in the very presence of God, Heb. 7. 25. The saints,
therefore, are spoken of as being blessed with all spiritual
blessings in heavenly places in Christ, Eph. 1. 3, raised up
with Him and made to sit with Him in the heavenlies, Eph. 2.
4-6.
c. Christ the King, Ps. 2. 1-6;
Acts 4. 24-27
As King, Christ is the Lord’s anointed. And so, while kings of
the earth and rulers take counsel against the anointed, God
says, ‘Yet have I set my king upon my holy hill of Zion’.
Christ was offered to Israel as
their King. As Son of Abraham, He was heir to the land, Gal. 3.
6; Gen. 12. 7, and as Son of David, heir to the throne, 2 Sam.
7. 12-17; Matt. 1. 1.
When Pilate presented Christ,
he said, ‘Behold your King!’ But the answer was, ‘Away
with him, away with him, crucify him.’ Pilate said to them,
‘Shall I crucify your King?’ The chief priests answered, ‘We
have no king but Caesar’, John 19. 12-15. The rightful King
was rejected, but we see Him within the holiest of all, the
anointed of God.
Therefore we should carefully
consider that, while as Jesus He is Saviour, and thus near to
man, as Christ He is the anointed of God, and thus specially
near to Him. He was God’s prophet on earth, God’s priest in
heaven and will be God’s King at His return. What grace that
we, being in Christ, are accepted in all the dignity and
excellency of His blessed person, and His glorious eternally
abiding work, according to the estimate of Jehovah Himself. ‘For
God hath made that same Jesus both Lord and Christ’, Acts 2.
36.
It is always a joy to speak of
the blessed Lord. He is fairer than the children of men; His
glories are more than the colours on the coat of Joseph. The
many precious names given to the Lord Jesus in the word of God
express the incomparable beauties, moral perfections and eternal
dignity ever resident in His glorious Person. Already I have
attempted to present His name of humiliation ‘Jesus,’ and
His title ‘Christ’ which tells of His anointing by, and
acceptance with, God. We should now consider Him further as
Christ Jesus and Jesus Christ.
3. CHRIST JESUS
To many there may seem no
difference in the titles ‘Christ Jesus’ and ‘Jesus Christ.’
A little searching of the passages where they occur, and of the
writer who used them by the divine Spirit, will suffice to show
that the intention of the Holy Spirit was to testify of Him and
to present a different revelation of God’s beloved Son. The
ultimate purpose is that our hearts may be drawn to the
altogether lovely One, whose name is Wonderful. As the jot and
tittle of the language of the word is considered, one discovers
that every whit of it utters His glory and in its minutest
detail is inspired by God.
In the joining of His names in
Christ Jesus, the emphasis is on Christ. It speaks to every
exercised heart of the Anointed One who humbled Himself. It
tells of the Anointed of God coming to this world to be the
Saviour. Therefore, when we read of His advent, it is not ‘Jesus
Christ came’, but ‘Christ Jesus came into the world to save
sinners’, 1 Tim. 1. 15. It was on account of sinners that He
became Jesus the Saviour, but He was always Christ, the Anointed
One of God. Consequently, we observe the distinction that ‘Christ‘
stands nearest to God, while ‘Jesus’ is nearest to man.
Christ Jesus contains the idea
of ‘from God to man,’ while Jesus Christ suggests man being
brought to God by Him. So we read the grand truth, ‘there is
one God, one mediator also between God and men, himself man,
Christ Jesus,’ 1 Tim. 2. 5 R.V. Christ Jesus tells of the
wondrous path from heaven to earth, while Jesus Christ reaches
all the way upward from earth to heaven, 1 Pet. 3. 21-22.
We commend to all who are
interested in this meditation upon Him to compare the Scriptures
where ‘Jesus Christ’ and ‘Christ Jesus’ occur and mark
the instructive things that differ.
4. JESUS CHRIST
It is a joy to the heart to
consider the name of Jesus. That precious name bespeaks His true
and sinless humanity. The Messiah title Christ declares His
absolute deity. He is the Son of God Most High, His only
begotten, and the Son of His Love. It has been said that the
name Christ is associated with the entire content of His claims.
It is the divine counterpart of ‘Jesus.’ His human name
assures us that God is our Saviour, so His divine name declares
our Saviour as God.
As we meditate upon Jesus
Christ, sweetness should fill our redeemed spirits and praise
our lips. The emphasis here is on Jesus as the One who stooped
in grace and was obedient even to the death of the cross, but is
now made higher than the heavens in glory at God’s right hand.
One would also appreciate the chief thought that He is the One
who brings us nigh to God, ‘who hath reconciled us to himself
by Jesus Christ’, 2 Cor. 5. 18. We also have an Advocate with
the Father who is Jesus Christ the Righteous, 1 John 2. 2. In
resurrection Jesus Christ has gone into heaven, 1 Pet. 3. 21,
22. Christ Jesus came from and for God to men: Jesus Christ has
gone from and for men to God.
Jesus Christ,
Thou King of Glory
Born a Saviour Prince to be
While the angel hosts adore Thee
We joy in Thee,
Singing of Thy grace the story Praise,
Praise to Thee.
H. K. Burlingham
TO BE CONTINUED . . .
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