The Name ‘Jesus’ in the Old Testament
Something very interesting occurred one spring in St. Louis. I was visiting in the home of our friends, Brother and Mrs. Charles Siegelman, and another Jewish man was present there. He claimed Jewish orthodoxy for his creed. Of course the conversation centred around Him Who is the Centre of all things – Jesus. This good Jewish brother opposed the claims of Christ in the Old Testament in a friendly fashion, but most forcefully. His best offensive weapon, he thought, was to fling at all of us the well-known challenge: “You can’t find the name ‘Jesus’ in the Old Testament;” and this he did.
I did not answer him directly, but asked him to translate for us from my Hebrew Bible Isaiah 62:11. Being a Hebrew scholar, he did so with utmost ease and correctness.
Here is how he translated that text verbatim: “Behold Jehovah has proclaimed unto the end of the world, Say ye to the daughter of Zion, Behold thy YESHUA (Jesus) cometh; behold, His reward is with Him and His work before Him.”
Just then he crimsoned as he realized what he had done and how he had played into my hands, and just fairly screamed out, “No! no! You made me read it ‘thy YESHUA (Jesus), Mr. Glass! You tricked me!”
I said, “No, I did not trick you; I just had you read the Word of God for yourself, Can’t you see that here SALVATION is a Person and not a thing or an event? ‘HE comes; HIS reward is with HIM, and His work before Him’.” Then he rushed at his own Old Testament, talking away frantically, saying, “I’m sure mine is different from yours.” When he found the passage in his Old Testament, it was, of course, identical. All he could use as an escape from admitting defeat was to deny the divine inspiration of the Book of Isaiah.
Then skipping on to Habakkuk, we have the greatest demonstration of the NAME ‘Jesus’ in the Old Testament; for here we have both the name as well as the title of the Saviour. In 3:13 we read literally from the original Hebrew: “Thou wentest forth with the YESHA (variant of YESHUA – Jesus) of (or for) thy people; with YESHUA thy MESSIAH (thine Anointed One, i.e. with Jesus thy Christ); thou woundest the head of the house of the wicked one (Satan).”
Here you have it! The very NAME given to our Lord in the New Testament – JESUS CHRIST! So don’t let anyone – Jew or Gentile – tell you that the Name JESUS is not found in the Old Testament.
And so when the aged Simeon came to the Temple, led there by the Holy Ghost, and took the baby Jesus in his arms, he said, “Lord, now lettest thou thy servant depart in peace, according to thy word; for mine eyes have seen thy YESHUA (Jesus).” Luke 2:29-30.
Certainly! Not only did his eyes see God’s SALVATION – God’s YESHUA (Jesus), but he felt Him and touched Him, and his believing heart throbbed with joy and assurance as he felt the throb of the loving heart of God throbbing in the heart of the holy infant Jesus.
“And thou shalt call His name SALVATION (YESHUA – Jesus), for He shall salvation – salvage – save His people from their sins!”
In dealing with my Jewish brethren for the past many years in Canada, the United States, Argentina and Uruguay, I had one great difficulty and it was this: my Jewish people would always fling at me this challenging question: “If Jesus is our Messiah and the whole Old Testament is about Him, how come His name is never mentioned in it even once?”
I could never answer it satisfactorily to their way of thinking, and I admit I often wondered why, His name was not actually written in the Old Bible.
Oh yes, I could show them His divine titles in Isaiah 7:14; 9:6; Jeremiah 23:5,6, etc., and even the word MESSIAH (Christ) in several places; but the Hebrew name that would be equal to Jesus, that I could not show. Until one day the Holy Spirit opened my eyes, and I just shouted. There was the very NAME Jesus found in the Old Testament about 100 times all the way from Genesis to Habakkuk! Yes, the very word —the very NAME that the angel Gabriel used in Luke 1:31 when he told Mary about the Son she was to have.
“Where do we find that NAME?” you ask. Here it is beloved: Every time the Old Testament uses the word SALVATION (especially with the Hebrew suffix meaning “my,” “thy” or “his”), with very few exceptions (when the word is impersonal), it is the very identical word YESHUA (Jesus) used in Matthew 1:21. Let us remember that the angel who spoke to Mary and the angel who spoke to Joseph in his dream did not speak in English, Latin or Greek, but in Hebrew; and neither Mary nor Joseph failed to grasp the meaning and significance of the NAME of this divine Son and its relation to His character and His work of salvation. For in the Old Testament all great characters were given names with a specific and significant meaning.
For example in Gen. 5:29 Lamech called his son “Comfort (Noah), saying, This same shall comfort us concerning our work and toil of our hands.”
In Gen. 10:25 Eber calls his firstborn son “Division (Peleg); for in his days the earth was divided.” The same is true of Abraham, Sarah, Isaac, Jacob (changed to Israel – God’s Prince), and all of Jacob’s sons.
In Exodus 2:10 Pharaoh’s daughter called the baby rescued from the Nile “Drawn-Forth (Moses); and she said, Because I drew him out of the water.” And so we can go on and on to show the deep significance of Hebrew names.
Now then when the angel spoke to Joseph, husband of Mary and the mother of our Lord, this is what he really said and what Joseph actually understood: “And she shall bring forth a Son, and thou shalt call His name YESHUA (SALVATION) for He shall save (or salvage) His people from their sins.” This text was so forcibly brought home to my soul soon after I was converted over 24 years ago that I saw the whole plan of the Old Testament in that one ineffable and blessed NAME.
So let us proceed to show clearly the Hebrew name YESHUA (Greek – Iesus, English – Jesus) in the Old Testament.
When the great Patriarch Jacob was ready to depart from this world, he, by the Holy Spirit, was blessing his sons and prophetically foretelling their future experiences in those blessings. In Genesis 49:18 he exclaims, “I have waited for thy salvation, O Lord!”
What he really did say and mean was, “To thy YESHUA (Jesus) I am looking, O Lord,” or, “In thy YESHUA (Jesus) I am hoping (trusting) 0 LORD!” That makes much better sense.
Of course, YESHUA (Jesus) was the One in Whom Jacob was trusting to carry him safely over the chilly waters of the river of death. Jacob was a saved man, and did not wait until his dying moments to start trusting in the Lord. He just reminded God that he was trusting in His YESHUA (Jesus – Salvation), and was at the same time comforting his own soul.
In Psalm 9:14 David bursts forth: “I will rejoice in thy salvation!” What he actually said was, “I will rejoice in thy YESHUA (Jesus).”
In Psalm 91:14 God says, “Because he delighted in Me I will deliver him: I will set him on high (raise him above circumstances), because he hath known My name, He shall call Me, and I will answer him: I am with him in affliction: I will succour him and honour him. With length of days (eternal life) will I satisfy him, and I will cause him to look upon my YESHUA (Jesus – Salvation).”
Of course. That promise is realized in Revelation 22:3,4. “And there shall be no more curse: but the throne of God and of the Lamb shall be in it: and His servants shall serve Him; and they shall see His face.”
In Isaiah 12:2,3 we have something wonderful. Here SALVATION is mentioned three times. The reader will be much blessed by reading these glorious verses in his Bible but let me give them as they actually read in the original Hebrew with Jesus as the embodiment and personification of the word SALVATION: “Behold, mighty (or, God the mighty One) is my YESHUA (Jesus – in His pre-incarnation and eternal existence); I will trust and not be afraid; for JAH-JEHOVAH is my Strength and my Song; He also is become my YESHUA (Jesus)” and “the WORD became flesh and dwelt among us” (John 1:14) – Jesus incarnate.
“Therefore with joy shall ye draw water out of the wells of YESHUA” (Jesus crucified – waters of salvation flowing forth from Calvary).
By permission of: Arthur E. Glass