@Duran
Let’s answer your question clearly and directly, without being distracted by the abuse you included, which only reveals your inability to engage civilly with theological dialogue.
1. What is the Hebrew name (3068) יהוה in English, and who does it represent in Exodus 3:15?
The Tetragrammaton יהוה is traditionally rendered in English as Yahweh or, in its older English form, Jehovah. It represents the one true God—the God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, as the text explicitly states. It is the divine name by which God identifies Himself to Moses at the burning bush. So yes, this name clearly refers to the eternal God.
2. What is the Hebrew name (3091) יהושע in English, which corresponds to the Greek name (2424) Ἰησοῦς, and who does it represent in Luke 1:31?
The name יהושע (Yehoshua) is the original Hebrew form of the name rendered in Greek as Ἰησοῦς (Iēsous), and in English as Jesus. The name means “Yahweh is salvation” or “Yahweh saves.” In the context of Luke 1:31, this name is given by divine command: “You shall name him Jesus.” The one it refers to is Jesus Christ, the incarnate Son of God—the second Person of the Trinity, who became man for the salvation of mankind.
Now, while you were simply “asking questions,” your implication was clear: that these are two distinct individuals with distinct identities and names—Yahweh and Jesus (the Son), and thus they must be separate gods or beings. But here’s the theological problem with that suggestion.
The Christian faith, grounded in Scripture, teaches that the one God of Israel, YHWH, reveals Himself fully in Jesus Christ. The New Testament does not present Jesus as separate from YHWH—but as the very incarnation of the same divine being revealed in the Old Testament. This is why the apostle Paul, in Philippians 2:9–11, says that Jesus is given the name above every name, and that “every knee shall bow and every tongue confess that Jesus Christ is Lord.” This is a direct quotation of Isaiah 45:23, where YHWH says that every knee will bow to Him. In other words, Paul is identifying Jesus with YHWH—not merely giving him a high title, but ascribing to him the worship and identity that belong to YHWH alone.
Moreover, Hebrews 1:10 applies Psalm 102—a psalm addressed to YHWH—directly to the Son, calling Him the one who “laid the foundations of the earth.” John 1:1 likewise affirms that the Word (who becomes flesh in verse 14) was God and was “in the beginning with God.” And in John 8:58, Jesus says plainly, “Before Abraham was, I AM,” using the very divine identifier God used in Exodus 3:14.
So while יהוה in Exodus refers to God—whom we call the Father—we must not pretend that this name excludes the Son. Jesus bears the very name of God because He is God. That’s why the name “Yehoshua” (Yahweh saves) is not a name in contrast to Yahweh, but a name that reveals Yahweh’s saving action in the person of Jesus. In Isaiah 43:11, God says, “I, even I, am YHWH, and beside me there is no savior.” Yet in Luke 2:11, Jesus is announced as the Savior—again, this is not a contradiction unless one denies that Jesus shares in the divine identity.
You asked who these names refer to. I’ve told you plainly:
- YHWH (Jehovah/Yahweh) refers to the one true God, revealed in the Old Testament—especially to Israel—and in the New Testament, fully revealed in the Trinity: Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.
- Yehoshua (Jesus) refers to the incarnate Word, the Son of God, who is Yahweh in the flesh. His name means “Yahweh saves,” and He is the very embodiment of that truth.
You cannot pit the name Yahweh against the name Jesus, because Scripture shows they belong to the same divine reality. To divide them is to misunderstand the very unity of God’s revelation. The Father is Yahweh. The Son is Yahweh. The Holy Spirit is Yahweh. One God, three Persons—not confusion, not separation, but the mystery of the Trinity revealed in Jesus Christ.