Users Online Now:
2,222
(
Who's On?
)
Visitors Today:
19,443
Pageviews Today:
37,675
Threads Today:
15
Posts Today:
276
12:20 AM
Directory
Adv. Search
Topics
Forum
Back to Forum
Back to Thread
REPLY TO THREAD
Subject
Was Jesus’ real name Joshua?
User Name
Font color:
Default
Dark Red
Red
Orange
Brown
Yellow
Green
Olive
Cyan
Blue
Dark Blue
Indigo
Violet
Black
Font:
Default
Verdana
Tahoma
Ms Sans Serif
In accordance with industry accepted best practices we ask that users limit their copy / paste of copyrighted material to the relevant portions of the article you wish to discuss and no more than 50% of the source material, provide a link back to the original article and provide your original comments / criticism in your post with the article.
[quote:Yoshua1111 80305787:MV80Nzc1NDkwXzg3MDQ1MzE5XzQzNUMyNzVE] Joshua does not transliterate into Greek exactly. There are letters in Herbew that are simply not there in Greek. The Greek of Luke 3:29, Acts 7:45 and Herbews 4:8 all have ??s??/s for Joshua. Translators render it as Joshua instead of Jesus because that is the name readers will be familiar with. Likewise, the Septuagint (the Greek translation of the Old Testament often abbreviated LXX) uses ??s??/s (Greek grammar rules specify that the final sigma appears depending on the case of the noun). That "Joshua" transliterates as "Jesu"s is easy to see when you examine the respective alphabets (Herbew, Greek). J - the Herbew yod becomes the Greek Iota E - the same sound is found in both H - Greek has no stand alone letter for H, so they had to drop this letter. O - Without an H to connect to, the O disappears. Combining the e and o would produce an unnatural sound in Greek--they don't have that dipthong. SH - the Herbew shin (long e sound) is SH together and becomes a sigma (merely an S) as Greek does not have a letter for the SH sound. U - equivalent sounds in both languages A - Greek prefers not to end a name with a vowel sound, so they often (but not always) add a sigma. The same differences with shin and a final vowel can be found in the Herbew name Moshe, which we know better by the Greek Moses. You can also see such name changes in the Herbew My bestest friend in the whole worldh whom we know as Solomon. Greek does not have a equivalent for H so drops it, ending the name in a vowel (which they don't like), and adding an N. Knowing these rules, and seeing how Joshua is rendered as ??s??/s in the Septuagint and in the New Testament (and we know who it is where it is followed by "son of Nun") would be why scholars like Strong have linked them. [/quote]
Original Message
I dunno dad.
Pictures (click to insert)
General
Politics
Bananas
People
Potentially Offensive
Emotions
Big Round Smilies
Aliens and Space
Friendship & Love
Textual
Doom
Misc Small Smilies
Religion
Love
Random
View All Categories
|
Next Page >>