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  1. Yeshua (עושי, with vowel pointing ע י - yēšūă‘ in Hebrew)[1] was a common alternative form of the name ע י ("Yehoshuah" - Joshua) in later books of the Hebrew Bible and among Jews of the Second Temple period. The name corresponds to the Greek spelling Iesous, from which comes the English spelling Jesus.[2][3]

  2. Men's traditions truly blotted out Yahusha's name, and each time Wikipedia deletes it from their site, it is blotted-out again. We can only hope it will eventually stay. The attack on the Name Yahusha is bringing attention to it, so we can all rejoice in that fact. TORAH INSTITUTE. PO BOX 436044. Louisville, KY 40253-6044. phone: 502-261-9833

  3. Brill's Encyclopedia of the Qur'an further states "It is not certain that Jesus' original name was Yeshua'" However, the early Syriac/Aramaic form of the name Yeshua, the etymological link with 'salvation' (note the Hebrew consonantal root y-sh-`) in Matthew 1:21, all of the correspondences of Ἰησοῦς in the Greek OT and Second Temple ...

  4. The Master and Margarita (Russian: Мастер и Маргарита) is a novel by Soviet writer Mikhail Bulgakov, written in the Soviet Union between 1928 and 1940. A censored version, with several chapters cut by editors, was published in Moscow magazine in 1966–1967, after the writer's death on March 10, 1940, by his widow Elena Bulgakova (Russian: Елена Булгакова).

  5. The Caiaphas ossuary is one of twelve ossuaries or bone boxes, discovered in a burial cave in south Jerusalem in November 1990, two of which featured the name "Caiaphas". History. The Caiaphas ossuary is a highly decorated ossuary twice inscribed "Joseph, son of Caiaphas" which held the bones of a 60-year-old male.

  6. About Wikipedia; Contact us; Donate; Contribute Help; ... 7 removal of Exposing the "Yeshu'a" Name Game from references. 1 comment. 8 Yeshua and Showbread.

  7. Jesus ben Ananias. Jesus ben Ananias ( "the son of Ananias" [rendered as the "son of Ananus" in the Whiston translation]) [1] was a plebeian farmer, who, four years before the First Jewish-Roman War began in 66 AD, went around Jerusalem prophesying the city's destruction. The Jewish leaders of Jerusalem turned him over to the Romans, who ...

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