Jesus the Messiah

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At the close of the Old Testament, most of the Israelites were still in exile. They were separated from the things that gave them their identity. They had been removed from the Promised Land and pulled away from the temple, which was subsequently destroyed. These were major problems for Israel. How could they be the people of God if they could not worship in the temple and offer sacrifices to atone for their sin?

Various groups of Jews formed based on the way in which they expected the kingdom to be restored.

  • The Pharisees
    • believed that radical obedience to the Law would cause the Messiah to come and remove the Gentiles from power.
  • The Sadducees
    • forged an alliance with the Romans so they could gain status and control the temple.
  • The Zealots
    • hoped for a revolutionary Messiah who would come as a warrior and defeat the pagans.
  • The Essenes
    • believed that the situation in Jerusalem had become so corrupted by both Romans and faithless Israelites that they retreated into the desert so they could please God in isolation.

This prophet who came “in the spirit and power of Elijah” was John the Baptist. His role was to point the way to Jesus. And in effect, this is what the entire New Testament does

https://biblehub.com/greek/5547.htm

Christos: the Anointed One, Messiah, Christ
Original Word: Χριστός, οῦ, ὁ
Part of Speech: Noun, Masculine
Transliteration: Christos
Phonetic Spelling: (khris-tos’)
Definition: the Anointed One, Messiah, Christ
Usage: Anointed One; the Messiah, the Christ.

Messiah comes from the Hebrew word mashiach and means “anointed one” or “chosen one.” The Greek equivalent is the word Christos or, in English, Christ. The name “Jesus Christ” is the same as “Jesus the Messiah.” In biblical times, anointing someone with oil was a sign that God was consecrating or setting apart that person for a particular role. Thus, an “anointed one” was someone with a special, God-ordained purpose.”

-source: https://www.gotquestions.org/what-does-Messiah-mean.html


The New Testament shows that Jesus was fully human. Matthew and Luke do this by recording Jesus’s genealogy—Matthew traces Jesus’s family tree back to David and Abraham, while Luke traces it all the way back to the first man, Adam.

The New Testament writers emphasize that Jesus of Nazareth was fully God. While Matthew and Luke recount Jesus’s earthly genealogy, John’s gospel explains that Jesus did not begin His existence at His human birth. He was eternal. He has always existed. John tells us that He existed with God in the beginning (before creation) and that He was God (John 1:1–3).

Nothing matters more than the way we respond to Jesus.

The Old Testament is filled with references to Jesus, though many of them are subtle.

Many Jews expected God’s kingdom to be established at some point, and Jesus claimed that the time was now.


He didn’t come just to establish a vague sense of peace in the world, but to reestablish the rule of God over His creation.

Of course, the ultimate proof of the power of the cross is the resurrection. Many had claimed to be the Messiah, but only Jesus rose from the dead to prove it.


The resurrection is crucial to our faith and to the fulfillment of God’s saving purposes. Without it, we have no hope.

The message of Jesus’s death and resurrection demands something of us. Jesus continues to call people—He calls you and me—to follow Him and live, even if it costs us everything.