"Now I beseech you, brethren, by the name of our
Lord Jesus Christ, that ye all speak the same thing, and that there be no
divisions among you; but that ye be perfectly joined together in the same mind
and in the same judgment." (I Corinthians 1:10)
"Arguing semantics" is a term used by one
party in an argument to resist the other party's attempt to question the terms
and language used in the argument. Semantics means that someone is
focusing more on the chosen words and their possible, technical meanings,
rather than the substance of the argument.
This usually starts in the middle of an argument and
distracts from the main topic of the argument. When an argument deteriorates
and its focus becomes one about word definitions rather than the main topic,
usually by this point, the argument has become a waste of time because it has
morphed into an argument about irrelevant, unimportant details rather than the
original main point.
The doctrine of verbal
inspiration implies that not only are the words of Scripture inspired, but the
order in which they appear is also inspired. A study by commentators and
translators has rightly noted that a change in the order of the words would at
times (not all the times) change the meaning or emphasis of a passage. This
phenomenon is often seen in the order in which the various names of Christ
appear. By noting this order, one may sometimes (not all the times) gain new insight
into a passage.
What does it mean when
somebody says we're arguing over semantics? It means you're arguing over
interpretation, meaning, and definitions. It means they're arguing over
different words that mean the same thing, i.e. rain/showers. They
know the intent but are arguing the language used. II Timothy 2:23; "But
foolish and unlearned questions avoid, knowing that they do gender
strifes." Dwelling on
one word or one thing without considering the big picture.
Jesus Christ or Christ Jesus which is correct? If
Jesus Christ is not his name, then what is it? Christ Jesus is correct,
and so is Jesus Christ. Proper grammar does not determine how the name of
Jesus is written in the bible, Jesus does. If God wishes to have it written
"Jesus the Christ," Christ Jesus, and yes, Jesus Christ, proper
grammar does not decide this. Bible scholarship does not decide this.
Language does not control the bible. Language does not decide what or how God shall
speak. God controls language. It's never going to be the other way
around. Hebrew and Greek do not control God. Bibles printed before the
1870s have had the name "Jesus Christ" along with the name
"Christ Jesus" in them. The word "Christ" is not a title.
It is a name. "Let everyone that nameth the name of Christ depart
from iniquity" II Timothy 2:19. "Remember that Jesus Christ of
the seed of David was raised from the dead according to my gospel" II
Timothy 2:8. These words, written by Paul, are the words that Jesus said. These
words are the Gospel of God.
Despite our difficulties, we dare not seek to alter
them. Proper grammar can say what it wishes. As to "yeshuah"
being any "inherent name," that has been a late modern tradition.
Every bible in every language before modern time has the name Jesus in
it. The name "Jesus Christ" is a name of God that he has always
possessed. The confusion has arisen, unfortunately, because many choose to
believe a foreign language dictionary rather than the bible in their own
language. Greek and Hebrew lexicons have been pointless because we don't have
an original "bible."
“Jesus” is a name, meaning “Jehovah is
salvation.” And “Christ” - a title, meaning “anointed one.” It means the same
as Messiah, a word of Hebrew origin. The Christian Greek Scriptures begin
with the expression Jesus Christ in Matthew 1:1 and Mark 1:1. The same
expression is found in Revelation 22:21. The apostle Paul introduced the
expression Christ Jesus at Romans 3:24.
The title Christ could be added to the
personal name Jesus after his water baptism and after he was anointed with
God’s spirit, at which time he became the Christ. But one time, privately, when
in prayer with his disciples, Jesus prayed: “This means everlasting life, their
taking in knowledge of you, the only true God, and of the one whom you sent
forth, Jesus Christ.” (John 17:3)
In the other expression, Christ Jesus,
the apostle Paul puts the title Christ before the personal name Jesus. This
corresponds with putting the official title before any other officeholder’s
name, as, for example, King David, King Solomon, and Governor Zerubbabel. So,
the expression Christ Jesus calls attention first to the office and then
identifies the one who holds it. It literally means “Anointed Jesus”.
From this, it is seen that the Scriptures treat the expression Jesus Christ on
a different basis from the expression Christ Jesus. Either way works Jesus
Christ = Jesus the Anointed One or Christ Jesus= The Anointed One, Jesus. He
was called both in the Bible, don't fret over semantics.
The terms
"Jesus Christ" and "Christ Jesus" are both used in the
Scriptures (95 times and 142 times, respectively). Indeed, the Bible itself
does not refer to the Messiah as "Christ Jesus" during his earthly
life, but the bible does refer to the resurrected Son of God as "Jesus Christ"
even after his resurrection to heaven.
Here are some
occurrences of "Jesus Christ" from the bible itself. The last is
particularly interesting because it uses both "Jesus Christ" and
"Christ Jesus" and counsels Christians against unnecessary arguments.
Of course, the bible should be the authority for all Christians, but too many
so-called "Christians" ignore the bible. Revelation 1:1, 2, 5; Romans 1:1-8; 1
Corinthians 1:1-10
Christianity
is not semantics and verse dissection, but knowing Jesus. Some people
seem to think that because they have knowledge of a bunch of verses and words
that this elevates them to spirituality, whereby they can pick out their
special verses to do warfare against another semantic thinker.
This word warfare
game and arguing over semantics stems from seminary studies rather than the
mission field and real life. In the mission field when totally depending on the
Lord for sustenance, you must learn to use what works and not just a bunch of
theories. As Jesus said, to know the doctrine you must live the doctrine, use
the doctrine. Then it comes alive and then you believe when you act on your
faith. If any man will do the doctrine, said the Lord, for in the doing and
living out of the words, there is true understanding. Those on the home front,
not witnessing but sharpening word swords will differ with this, but it is
true. Word games help no one and are more a competition rather than a
co-operation in most cases.
The
doctrine of verbal inspiration, makes these believers think that every word and
comma and intonation in the bible is absolutely important if they can just get
it right and convince all others of the sacredness of this word or that word
with or without this letter or that letter. Discussions should elevate true-life
experiences way beyond mere concordance lookups and word dissections. Word
swordplay is really unfruitful in most cases.
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