A root of the Paleo Hebrew name of Jesus is found by observing when Moses changed the name of Oshea by adding Jeh to it forming Jeh-oshea. The Jeh is a contraction of Ehjeh asher Ehjeh (I AM that I AM). Oshea means deliverer. Ehjeh was a name of God for salvation given to Moses on behalf of the Israelites. By bringing these two names together we have Jehoshea (Greek/Aramaic Jehoshua). The name means "GOD OUR SALVATION HAS BECOME OUR DELIVERER). Paleo Hebrew contiunued to be used all the way up to and past the time of Jesus. It is seen on temple coins and appears to have been used in many Jewish writings although the Babylonian Aramaic was the predominate language of that day. After the first century and into the second, Paleo Hebrew and Aramaic became extinct and was not recovered, in some cases partially invented, until the latter part of the seventh century. Modern Hebrew is a recent invention no older that 100 years. It incorporates both roots of Paleo Hebrew and Aramaic. If you want to know the Aramiac for Jesus, it is Yeshu(s) (ישו) or Jeshu(s); the s added for syntax. It must be understood that "Ye" is abbreviated "Yeh" and this is also "Jeh" as seen above. While scholars are still at disagreement about the name of Jesus, we can be sure that since it came to earth on the lips of Gabriel, that it is both authentic and accurate. The letter "J" arguments against the name Jesus have no weight or validity as the Egyptian language had a "J" sound and image and Paleo Hebrew descends via this language and its Phoenician root.
Yeshu (ישו) is a variation of the Hebrew word for deliverance.
Phoenician or Paleo-Hebrew
No. They are unrelated.
Paleo really means paleontologist, it means old/or ancient
ancient
Presepium is not a Hebrew word; it is a Latin word referring to a crèche, such as exists in Jesus Nativity scenes.
ancient
The Hebrew translation for "Jesus wept." is: .ישו בכה
All Jews are Hebrews. Jesus was both a Jew and a Hebrew. The term "Jew" referred to the people of Judea, of which Jesus was a member, and was used as early as the fourth century BCE (including in the book of Esther). All Jews were Hebrews (since a Hebrew is any descendant of Eber and Eber is an ancestor of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, the ancestors of the Jews), but not all Hebrews were Jews. Jesus was also more strongly aligned with the Pharisees he rejected than any of the other contemporaneous Jewish movements. Although the Pharisees would not become the dominant form of Judaism until the Talmud was published, their views and methods of interpretation were certainly well-developed by Jesus' time.
Paleo Lithics Paleo Indians Paleo Future Paleoconservatism Paleo Lithics Paleo Indians Paleo Future Paleoconservatism
Since Jesus was a Hebrew I belive he would have prayed in Hebrew.
Beth-lechem [ בֵּית לָחֶם] is Hebrew for House of Bread [or food].