Analysis Of 'Jesus Of Nazareth'

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Jesus and His disciples had just left the Upper Room and crossed over into the Garden of Gethsemane. Here they gathered and awaited Jesus next teachings, but were interrupted by Judas Iscariot and the Temple Guard. (Jn. 18:3) They had come to arrest Jesus as was ordered earlier by Caiaphas’s. (Jn. 7:44-45) Jesus came forward and asks them “Whom do you seek?” (Jn. 18:4). Their answer was “Jesus of Nazareth”, Jesus reply was “Ego Ami” (Grk.) “I AM he”. (Jn. 18:5) Little did the guards realize just how much power and glory lay in that reply. This is the same revelation Jehovah, God, had disclosed on multiple occasions in the Old Testament. In the Bible alone there are over seven-hundred times (700) that the words ‘I Am’ are used in reference …show more content…

As Towns states in John: Believe and Live, “He (Jesus) claimed to be equal to God as well as claimed the deity He so rightly held.” Jesus is the “self-existent one,” God in the flesh; the God-Man. Leon Morris explained that when Jesus said “I Am” he was confirming His messiahship. These are confirmed to be “solemn words of deity, as stated by Ed Hindson. No other could claim such and not be reckoned by God. Each time Jesus spoke these words it was with the full authority from and with God. Jesus “knew that God the Father had placed the power over all things into His hands” (Jn. 13:3). Jesus knew that He would return to His home in Heaven with the Father, but He had to deliver His message on earth first before His work was finished. Having expressed this on numerous occasions, Jesus tells the disciples “unless you believe that I Am, you will die in your sins” (Jn.8:24) If they fail to believe that He is God incarnate they will not see Him for their eternal life. Today this same statement holds true: one must see Jesus as one with the Father and believe that through Him they will have life everlasting. Otherwise they will die in their sins as Morris says: “that must clearly be a dreadful …show more content…

They merely affirm that God is God and that Jesus is God and they are free to do as they will. These statements, portray that Jesus as God, is not a ghostly figure or that the Holy Spirit is as such, but are divine beings that are to be revered and glorified. Just like the Father, who created all and have power over all things above and below as well as earth. In ancient history people were named for a reason, purpose, or a cause. It expressed the essence of a person’s being or personality. To know the total character and nature was by the name which they held or were given, and in certain situations, their names were changed. An example of such was Peter, to Simon Peter, Saul of Tarsus to

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