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Does Isaiah 9:6 Call Yahshua “The Mighty God”?
FHMI-0012Shane VaughnDoctrinal Paper / Theological Treatise
- (primary) Isaiah 9:6
- (secondary) Isaiah 9:7
- (secondary) John 5:19
- (secondary) John 10:25
- (secondary) John 14:10
- (secondary) Acts 2:22
- (secondary) 1 Corinthians 8:6
- (secondary) Hebrews 1:1–2
presence of yahwehdivine agencychurch historyrestoration movementstrinityonenessunitarianisaiah 9:6 interpretationel gibbor meaningmighty god translation debatemessianic prophecydivine agency theologyauthority of the father’s namemessiah and the fathertrinitarian interpretation of isaiah 9:6hebrew prophetic titlesname of yahweh in messiah
Summary
This doctrinal treatise examines the widely debated interpretation of Isaiah 9:6, a passage often used to argue that the Messiah is Yahweh Himself. Through linguistic analysis of the Hebrew term El Gibbor, biblical patterns of divine agency, and historical theological interpretation, the work argues that the verse describes the authority and mission of the Messiah rather than declaring Him to be the Almighty God. The treatise presents Yahshua as the appointed representative of Yahweh who bears the Father’s name and authority.
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