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God's Name Christ
(King)
While some have said that the word, Christ, is a
title (which it is),
it is not a name. However, the following verses
prove the word,
Christ, is a name for God:
1. 1 Pet. 4:14, "If ye be reproached for the name of
Christ, happy are
ye..."
2. 2 Tim. 2:19, "And, let every one that nameth the
name of Christ
depart from iniquity."
3. Matt. 24:5, "For many shall come in my name,
saying, I am Christ;
and shall deceive many."
The word, Christ, means "anointed," and describes
God to us as the
"Anointed One." There were two old testament offices
that required
those who served in them to first be anointed. These
offices were the
office of king and the office of high priest. As we
will see, Christ is
both king and high priest of his people and his
coming was according to
old testament prophecy concerning both offices. In
Daniel 9:25, 26
there is a prophecy of the coming of "Messiah the
Prince." The word,
Messiah, is the old testament equivalent to Christ
and means
"anointed." Thus in "Christ" there is a fulfillment
of a three fold
promise of a coming King, a coming High Priest, and
a coming Prince.
In this essay we will consider Christ as a fulfillment
of an old testament
prophecy of a coming King. In future essays we will
consider Christ as
the High Priest and as the Prince.
II Sam. 7:12 16 records for us the prophecy that God
gave to David thru
his prophet Nathan of a future King: "And when thy
days be fulfilled,
and thou shalt sleep with thy fathers, I will set up
thy seed after
thee, which shall proceed out of thy bowels, and I
will establish his
kingdom. He will build an house for my name, and I
will establish the
throne of his kingdom for ever. I will be his father
and he shall be my
son. If he commit iniquity, I will chasten him with
the rod of men, and
with the stripes of the children of men. But my
mercy will not depart
away from him, as I took it from Saul, whom I put
away before thee. And
thine house and thy kingdom shall be established for
ever before thee:
thy throne shall be established for ever." Thus God
promised a King of
the seed of David to sit upon an everlasting throne
in an everlasting
kingdom, after David was dead and buried. Since
Solomon was anointed
and made king of Israel while David was yet alive,
Solomon could not
have been the promised king. On the day of Pentecost
Peter declared the
fulfillment of the old testament prophecy was Christ
when he said in
Acts 2:29, 30, "Men and brethren, let me freely
speak unto you of the
patriarch David, that he is both dead and buried,
and his sepulcher is
with us unto this day. Therefore being a prophet,
and knowing that God
had sworn with an oath to him, that of the fruit of
his loins, according
to the flesh, he would raise up Christ to sit on his
throne." That
Christ is already on the throne of David in an
everlasting kingdom is
plainly declared to us in Acts 2:36, "Therefore let
all the house of
Israel know assuredly, that God hath made that same
Jesus, whom ye have
crucified, both Lord and Christ." The Jewish nation
had been looking
for the coming King. When the wise men came they
asked, "Where is he
that is born King of the Jews?" Herod's response was
to ask the chief
priests and scribes "where Christ should be born?"
Some of the Jews
believed Christ would set up a natural kingdom, and
sit upon a natural
throne, calling him "thou Son of David." Great
multitudes expected him
to immediately establish himself as a natural king
when he ascended to
Jerusalem as they cried, "Hosanna to the Son of
David; blessed is he
that cometh in the name of the Lord:
Hosanna in the highest." Jesus declared his kingdom
to be a spiritual
and not a natural kingdom when he said to Pilate,
"My kingdom is not of
this world: if my kingdom were of this world, then
would my servants
fight, that I should not be delivered to the Jews:
but now is my kingdom
not from thence." Furthermore, Christ said, "The
kingdom of God cometh
not with observation. Neither shall they say, Lo
here! Or, lo there! For, behold, the kingdom
of God is within you." Moreover, Jesus
declared his kingdom a spiritual, not natural,
kingdom when he said in
John 3:3, 5 that a man must be born again in order
to see the kingdom of
God and must be born of water and Spirit before he
can enter the kingdom
of God.
As the king of this spiritual kingdom Christ is the
law giver (Gal.
6:2) of that kingdom. He has established the
government (Is. 9:6) of
that kingdom. He established the kingdom with
judgment and with justice
(Is. 9:7). He has established the offices in that
kingdom (Eph. 4:11, I Tim.3:1 13). He has given us
everything that is necessary and needful
in this kingdom as we read in 2 Tim. 3:16, 17, "All
scripture is given
by inspiration of God, and is profitable for
doctrine, for reproof, for
correction, for instruction in righteousness: that
the man of God may be
perfect, throughly furnished unto all good works."
May we all say as Paul said in 1 Tim. 1:17, "Now
unto the King eternal,
immortal, invisible, the only wise God, be honor and
glory for ever and
ever. Amen." O Lord let us not be as those who said,
"We will not have
this man to reign over us."
God's Name Creator
There are five verses in which God is specifically
called Creator:
1. Eccl. 12:1 "Remember now thy Creator in the days
of thy youth..."
2. Is. 40:28 "...that the everlasting God, the Lord,
the Creator of
the ends of the earth..."
3. Is. 43:15 "I am the Lord, your Holy One, the
creator of Israel,
your King."
4. Rom. 1:25 "Who changed the truth of God into a
lie, and
worshiped and served the creature more than the
Creator, who is blessed
for ever. Amen."
5. 1 Pet. 4:19 "Wherefore let them that suffer
according to the
will of God commit the keeping of their souls to him
in well doing, as
unto a faithful Creator."
In Col. 1:14 17 we glean that Christ is the Creator
and that he has
created all things "that are in heaven, and that are
in earth, visible
and invisible." Create can be defined as making
something from
nothing. Only God can create anything. Sometimes we
ascribe to
individuals that they are creative. However, what we
are intending to
convey is the idea that they have artistic ability
or that they have
inventive ability. To make something from nothing
only God can do that.
Rev. 4:11 reads, "Thou art worthy, O Lord, to
receive glory and honor
and power: for thou hast created all things, and for
thy pleasure they
are and were created." Not only does this verse
teach us that God has
created all things, but it also tells us His purpose
in creating all
things, i.e., "for his pleasure." God was under no
obligation to create
anything, but it pleased him to do so. In addition,
this verse teaches
us of a completed creation (were created) and an
ongoing creation (are
created). We read in the first two chapters of
Genesis where God
created the heavens and the earth in six days and
that he rested on the
seventh day. The visible, natural universe in which
we exist was
completed at that time. That creation was completed.
However, there is
an ongoing spiritual creation as set forth in Eph.
2:10, "For we are his
workmanship, created in Christ Jesus unto good
works, which God hath
before ordained that we should walk in them." Gal.
6:15 and II Cor.
5:17 refers to this spiritual inner man as being "a
new creature" in
Christ Jesus. Just as Christ spoke the natural
universe into existence,
"Let there be light and there was light," etc. he
also speaks spiritual
life into those who were before dead in trespasses
and sins: John 5:25,
"...the hour is coming and now is when the dead
shall hear the voice of
the Son of God and they that hear shall live."
According to Ps. 19:1
"the heavens declare the glory of God, and the
firmament sheweth his
handiwork..." Sometimes we are blessed to look at
the starry region
above and meditate upon the greatness of God's power
to be able to
create such a vast and huge universe in which we
exist. We are told
that there are literally billions of stars and at
such distances that
our minds are incapable of comprehending. Under the
law of cause and
effect the cause must be greater than the effect,
thus God must be
greater in power and might than this vast universe
in which we live.
Furthermore, we see such complexity and design in
the universe God has
created.
Man can make an
automobile or an airplane, yet the complexity
of those structures pales into utter insignificance
in comparison to a
single cell in a human body where countless millions
of chemical
reactions are taking place at any one time and in
perfect harmony. Man
builds machinery and in a few years it wears out,
man places satellites
in orbit about the earth and in a few years the
orbits decay and those
satellites return to earth. God set one satellite
(moon) orbiting the
earth and it stays just where God set it. A good
juggler can juggle
four or five balls for a few minutes. God takes
multiplied billions of
objects in the universe, has them traveling in
various orbits and
revolutions and they continue continuously in the
paths that God
assigned them. Yes the heavens declare the greatness
of God's power,
the greatness of his wisdom, the greatness of his
design, the greatness
of his knowledge. They also declare to us that our
Creator is a God of
purpose, that this universe didn't happen by chance
or happenstance, but
rather was created by the purposeful design of God.
In similar fashion to the above, our salvation from
sin, our new birth
(spiritual creation), and our resurrection to the
glory world are not
brought about by chance or happenstance, but are the
purposeful design
and power of our Creator. God purposed before the
world began to bring
these things about and they are brought about by his
power, wisdom,
knowledge, and design. According to Rom. 8:29, 30,
"For whom he did foreknow, he also did predestinate to be conformed
to the image of his
Son, that he might be the firstborn among many
brethren. Moreover, whom
he did predestinate, them he also called: and whom
he called, them he
also justified: and whom he justified, them he also
glorified." Surely,
we too can say, "Thou art worthy, O Lord, to receive
glory and honor and
power: for thou hast created all things, and for
they pleasure they are
and were created."
God's Name Emmanuel
The name, Emmanuel, only appears three times in the
scriptures: Is.
7:14; 8:8; and Matt. 1:23. In Matt. 1:22, 23 we
learn the meaning of
the name: "Now all this was done, that it might be
fulfilled which was
spoken of the Lord by the prophet saying, Behold a
virgin shall be with
child, and shall bring forth a son, and they shall
call his name
Emmanuel, which being interpreted is God with us."
We know that Jesus
came down in the form of a man and dwelled with men
for 33 ½ years as
"God manifest in the flesh." He was/is the God man
for he was/is verily
God and verily man. However, the name Emmanuel
carries more
significance than just the 33 ½ years of Jesus' life
on earth as a man.
Truly, God has been with his people ever since He
created man on earth.
God was with Adam and Eve in the garden before the
transgression. God
was with Abel as he offered a sacrifice that God
respected. God was
with Enoch as he walked with God for 300 years and
God took him for he
had this testimony that he pleased God. During the
days of Noah when
all flesh corrupted his way upon the earth and every
imagination of the
thoughts of his heart was only evil continually, we
find that Noah found
grace in the eyes of the Lord and God instructed
Noah to build an ark
according to the pattern God gave him. After the ark
was completed and
Noah and his wife and his three sons and their wives
entered the ark,
God manifested his presence with them when he
commanded the animals to
come into the ark unto Noah.
After the flood, God made his presence known to
Abram as he appeared to
him and commanded him to get up out of his country
and from his fathers house and his kindred and go to a land that God
would show him. God
manifested his presence unto Abraham in the matter
of the birth of Isaac
and with the offering up of Isaac, as well as with
the slaughter of the
kings, and the destruction of Sodom and Gomorrah.
Likewise, we read where God manifested his presence
with Isaac in the
bringing of a wife to Isaac (Rebecca) and with the
granting of Isaac's
entreaties on behalf of he and Rebecca to have
children (Jacob and
Esau). Likewise God's presence was manifested when
the Philistine king
would have taken Rebecca to be one of his wives.
Similarly, God manifested his presence to Jacob as
he fled from the
wrath of his brother Esau and as he returned to
Canaan and met Esau with
400 men. Likewise when Uncle Laban would have done
harm to Jacob, God
prevented him.
Of particular note was Jacob's son Joseph. When his
brothers sold him
into Egyptian bondage and he was put into prison
based on a false
accusation, God manifested his presence to Joseph,
raised him up out of
the prison, granted him favor to Pharaoh so that he
was second only to
Pharaoh in the Egyptian government, and used him to
save much people
alive during the great famine including Israel and
all his children.
Truly God was with them.
Later when there arose a king that knew not Joseph
in Egypt and the
children of Israel were made to serve with rigor,
God heard their cries
and according to his promise to Abraham, God sent
forth Moses to Pharaoh
to deliver Israel from Egyptian bondage. God
manifested his presence
with them as he sent forth 10 judgments upon Egypt
at which at last
Pharaoh agreed to let Israel go. God went before the
children of Israel
in a pillar of a cloud by day and a pillar of fire
by night to lead them
in the way and to give them light. He parted the
waters of the Red Sea
that Israel crossed over on dry ground and when the
Egyptian army
marched after, he caused the waters to return and to
destroy Pharaoh and
his host. God was with Israel in the wilderness as
he gave them daily
manna to eat.
When they thirsted he
had Moses to smite the rock and it
brought forth water. Even on the second occasion
when Israel murmured
against God and against Moses, God told Moses to
speak to the rock, but
Moses smote the rock twice and spoke unadvisedly
with his lips, yet God
still was merciful to Israel and gave them water
from the rock.
God manifested his presence with Joshua and Israel
when they went in to
possess the land of Canaan. He drove their enemies
out before them. He
was with Israel's army and they prospered greatly in
the war. Likewise,
God was with Israel in the days of the judges and
the days of the
kings. He manifest his presence with them when they
were in Babylonian
and Medo Persian captivity.
When Jesus walked on earth he manifested his
presence thru many signs
and wonders as he healed the sick, caused the blind
to see, the deaf to
hear, and the dumb to speak. He raised the dead,
cleansed the lepers,
made whole the shriveled limbs and caused the lame
to walk. He cast out
devils and unclean spirits. He taught and fed the
multitudes. He was
especially with the disciples and taught them the
things concerning the
kingdom of God. He answered their questions, gave
them their directions
and blessed their labors. Toward the end of his
ministry on earth he
promised to send another Comforter, the Holy Spirit.
Finally, Jesus was
with all the elect as he redeemed them from their
sins at the cross.
After his resurrection and before his ascension,
Jesus instructed the
apostles to tarry at Jerusalem until they were
endued with power on
high. On the day of Pentecost the Comforter (God the
Holy Spirit) came
down and there was a miraculous outpouring of signs
and wonders for
forty years.
God, the Holy Spirit, is with us today to direct the
ministry, appoint
their fields of labor, empower them to preach in
power and demonstration
of Spirit. He pricks the hearts of his people and
leads them to
repentance. He teaches them and opens the eyes of
their understanding.
He is with us in our trials and tribulations; he
comforts us amidst our
sorrows; he gives us direction for our lives; he
strengthens our faith.
Furthermore, according to the promise of Christ,
where two or three are
gathered together in his name, he is with us in our
midst. God is not a spectator on the sidelines of
life, but is with us in the midst of our lives.
He is Emmanuel: God
with us.
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