1
Unicorns in the Bible
5:26
2
Man wrote the Bible
1:30
3
Yahweh and the gods
1:23
4
Why does God allow falsehood to exist?
2:47
5
The Jesus myth theory
2:50
6
Those who never hear the gospel
3:41
7
Everlasting fire for finite sins
5:34
8
God's compassion in slavery
12:30
9
Did God command rape?
7:13
10
Bible contradiction - Mary & the resurrection tomb of Jesus
6:53
11
Did Jesus lie about prayer?
4:18
12
Bible contradiction - Light before the sun
5:29
13
Bible contradiction - Two genealogies of Jesus
3:04
14
How did the animals form Noah's ark get on other continents?
3:29
15
Eternal life will be boring
3:05
Does Jesus mean hail Zeus?
3:55
17
Christians are self righteous, judgmental, hypocrites
4:31

Does Jesus mean hail Zeus?

2 years ago
61

This video explores the claim that Jesus come from the phrase 'hail Zeus'.

Heard the good news?
https://rumble.com/vm9asu-the-gospel.html

Transliteration explanation:
When transliterating Yod-Shin-Vav-Ayin -- the Hebrew name Yeshua to Greek:
Yod - "ye" transliterates by pairing iota-eta (Ih) which is vocalized as "yay" or "ee-ay" because Greek has no consonant y.
Shin - "sh" transliterates as sigma (s) because there is no equivalent letter for the "sh" sound in Greek.
Vav - "u" the final u sound transliterates as the dipthong omicron-upsilon (ou) vocalized as "oo" because upsilon alone would not create the correct voicing needed.
Ayin - "ah" the rules that govern Greek grammar dictate that this letter not be vocalized, and is due to the fact that it is not allowable for masculine names to end with a vowel during the transliteration process from the Hebrew to Greek.
The final sigma (V) or "s" on the end is part of the standard transliteration from other languages to Greek. Greek nouns and names almost always have case endings, so the sigma (V) or "s" is added at the end of the word to distinguish that the name is the masculine form, and also makes it declinable.

Scriptures addressed in this video:
Exodus 33:11
Nehemiah 8:17
Hebrews 4:8
Hebrews 7:2

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