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First Harvest Ministries International • Rev. John Shane Vaughn • Page 1
FROM THE APOSTOLIC ASSEMBLIES HEADQUARTERS
FIRST HARVEST MINISTRIES INTERNATIONAL
A DOCTRINAL TREATISE
DOES ISAIAH 9:6 CALL YAHSHUA
“THE MIGHTY GOD”?
The Meaning of El Gibbor and the Authority of the Father’s Name
From the Desk of the Apostolic Founder
Rev. John Shane Vaughn
First Harvest Ministries International
INTRODUCTION
A Prophecy About a Child — and a Name
There are moments in Scripture when a single verse becomes the battlefield for an entire
theology. Isaiah 9:6 is one of those verses.
For centuries, this prophecy has been wielded as what many believe to be the decisive
blow in the argument for the deity of Messiah — the irrefutable proof-text that Yahshua
is not merely the Son of YAHWEH, but YAHWEH Himself clothed in flesh. And I
understand the appeal. When the words are read in their popular English translation, the
conclusion seems almost inescapable:
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“For unto us a child is born, unto us a son is given... and his name shall be
called Wonderful, Counselor, The Mighty God, The Everlasting Father,
The Prince of Peace.”
Mighty God. Two words that have launched a thousand sermons and settled, for many,
the entire question of Yahshua’s nature.
But I want to invite you to sit with me at the feet of this prophecy and look more carefully
— not to diminish the Messiah, but to discover him more fully. Because when we allow
the Hebrew language to speak on its own terms, and when we recover the ancient
understanding of what it means to bear a name, this prophecy does not collapse into a
lesser thing. It rises into something far richer, far more consistent with the whole counsel
of Scripture, and far more breathtaking in its implications.
The conclusion that Isaiah 9:6 declares the Messiah to be YAHWEH Himself rests upon
two foundational misunderstandings: a misreading of the Hebrew phrase El Gibbor, and
a misreading of the Hebrew concept of “name.” Correct those two misunderstandings,
and the prophecy stands with a clarity and beauty it was always intended to possess.
Isaiah was not declaring that the Messiah is YAHWEH. He was declaring that the Messiah
would carry the authority, the mission, and the very name of YAHWEH into the earth —
as YAHWEH’s appointed champion and anointed King.
That is a declaration just as profound. Perhaps more so.
PART I
The Hebrew Phrase El Gibbor
Before we can rightly understand what Isaiah declared, we must examine precisely what
he said. The phrase translated “Mighty God” in our English Bibles is the Hebrew:
אֵל גִּבּוֹר — El Gibbor
These two words carry a weight and range of meaning that no single English translation
can fully capture. Let us examine them with the care they deserve.
El (אֵל) — Power and Authority
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The Hebrew word El does not operate in Scripture as an exclusive title reserved solely for
the Creator. To read it that way is to read English assumptions back into the Hebrew text.
In its broadest and most foundational sense, El simply denotes power, strength, and
authority. It is the word behind concepts of might — whether that might belongs to the
Almighty YAHWEH, to a divinely appointed ruler, or to a figure of exceptional authority.
This is not a novel or speculative observation. It is confirmed by the consistent usage of
the Scriptures themselves. Psalm 82:6 records the voice of YAHWEH addressing human
judges:
“I said, you are elohim, sons of the Most High.”
These were not deity. They were mortal men — judges and rulers entrusted with
YAHWEH’s authority to govern and adjudicate in the earth. And yet Scripture applies the
language of el and elohim to them precisely because they had been invested with divine
authority. The title followed the commission. The name followed the calling.
This principle is not peripheral to the Hebrew worldview. It is central to it. Authority
delegated by YAHWEH carries the weight of YAHWEH’s own name, because the One who
sends determines the standing of the one who is sent.
Gibbor (גִּבּוֹר) — The Warrior-Champion
The second word, gibbor, is a word that would have made the blood of any ancient
Israelite stir. It is the word of the warrior, the champion, the one who stands in the breach
when lesser men have fallen back. It carries the aroma of the battlefield and the weight of
decisive, heroic strength.
In 2 Samuel 23, the mighty men of David — his legendary gibborim — are described in
language that reads almost like an ancient ballad. These were men who held passes single-
handedly, who slew giants, who broke through enemy lines for a cup of water. Not one of
them was YAHWEH. Every one of them was human. And every one of them was called by
this word: gibbor.
In Ezekiel 32:21, the phrase gibborim among the mighty describes the fallen rulers of the
nations in Sheol — powerful kings who once shaped the course of history. Human. Mortal.
And yet: gibborim.
Clearly, gibbor carries no implication of deity. It is the word of heroic human strength —
strength that, at its highest expression, is wielded on behalf of a divine commission.
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The Combined Meaning: YAHWEH’s Warrior-King
When we join these two words together in their proper context — a Messianic king
prophecy, an announcement about a child who will be born and a son who will be given
— El Gibbor emerges in its full, intended beauty:
The Mighty Champion. YAHWEH’s Warrior-King. The Heroic Ruler. The
Divinely Empowered Conqueror.
This is not a title declaring the metaphysical nature of the Messiah. This is a title declaring
his mission and his authority. He comes as YAHWEH’s champion — the appointed one
who will do what no army could accomplish, who will establish the reign of YAHWEH’s
Kingdom by the power of YAHWEH’s own commissioning hand.
PART II
The Verse Is About His Name
There is a second critical detail in this prophecy that the modern reader, reading quickly,
almost universally misses. And it changes everything.
Isaiah does not write: “He IS Wonderful, Counselor, Mighty God...”
He writes:
“His NAME shall be CALLED...”
That distinction is not grammatical decoration. It is the interpretive key that unlocks the
entire prophecy.
In the ancient Hebrew world, a name was not merely a label. A name was an identity
capsule — it contained within it the nature, the mission, the authority, and the
representation of the one who bore it. To speak a name was to invoke everything that
name embodied. To carry a name was to carry the full weight of the authority behind it.
When YAHWEH changed Abram’s name to Abraham, He was not updating a birth
certificate. He was investing Abraham with a new identity and a new covenant
commission. When Jacob became Israel, the name encoded the entire destiny of a people.
Names in the Hebrew tradition mean something — they carry the substance of calling.
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This is precisely why Isaiah frames his announcement the way he does. He is not making
a statement about the Messiah’s inner divine nature. He is announcing what will be
encoded in his name — what mission and authority his name will declare to the world.
PART III
The Son Comes in the Father’s Name
Here is where prophecy and fulfillment meet in the most striking way imaginable.
In the course of his ministry, Yahshua said something that most of his hearers — and
many modern readers — have passed over far too quickly. He said, with unmistakable
clarity:
“I have come in my Father’s name.” (John 5:43)
This is not a throwaway line. This is the theological key to Isaiah 9:6.
Yahshua did not come representing himself. He came as the authorized representative of
YAHWEH — the sent one, the anointed one, the man who carried into the world the full
weight of the Father’s name, the Father’s mission, and the Father’s authority. As an
ambassador carries the authority of the nation that sends him, Yahshua carried the
authority of the YAHWEH who commissioned him.
This principle, once understood, illuminates not just Isaiah 9:6 but the entire arc of the
Messianic mission. The titles in Isaiah’s prophecy are not declarations that the Messiah
is YAHWEH. They are declarations of what YAHWEH has invested in him. What
YAHWEH’s authority, wisdom, and power look like when they walk in human form —
sent, commissioned, authorized, and named.
PART IV
The Sacred Root of the Father’s Name
To fully grasp the prophetic genius of Isaiah’s declaration, we must understand the name
from which everything flows.
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The personal name of the Creator — the name that is above all names, the name that fills
the pages of Scripture nearly seven thousand times — is:
YHWH — יהוה
Traditionally pronounced Yahweh, this name is the bedrock of all of Israel’s theology. It
is the name declared to Moses from the burning bush. It is the name that echoes through
every psalm and every prophecy. It is the name that YAHWEH Himself said He would be
remembered by throughout all generations.
Within that sacred name lies a divine root — a shortened, poetic form that carries the
same holy weight:
YAH — יָה
This is not merely an abbreviation. It is the pulsing heart of the divine name, appearing
in its own right throughout Scripture — most famously in the word HalleluYAH, which
literally means “Praise YAH!”
“Sing unto Yahweh... exalt Him by His name: YAH.” (Psalm 68:4)
This divine root does not remain locked in the heavens. It descends into human names —
into the names of prophets and kings and priests who were called to carry YAHWEH’s
mission into the earth. And it descends most profoundly and completely into the name of
the one Isaiah was announcing.
PART V
The Name of the Son: The Prophecy Encoded
The Messiah’s name is:
Yahshua — יהושע
This name is not arbitrary. It is not merely a common Hebrew name assigned to a
common Hebrew child. It is a theological declaration — a prophecy compressed into a
single word, spoken over the Son before he drew his first breath.
Yahshua is formed from two components:
YAH — the sacred root of the Father’s own name
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SHUA — from the Hebrew root yasha, meaning salvation, deliverance, rescue
The name of the Messiah therefore means, literally and unmistakably:
“YAHWEH is salvation.”
Or, rendered in its fullest meaning: YAHWEH saves. YAHWEH delivers. YAHWEH
rescues.
Do you see what is happening here? The Son’s very name is a sermon. His name
announces not his own independent glory, but the saving work of the Father through him.
He did not come proclaiming himself. He came proclaiming YAHWEH. Every time
someone spoke his name — Yahshua — they were involuntarily uttering a confession:
YAHWEH is the Savior.
Not because the Messiah is YAHWEH, but because YAHWEH is saving the world through
the Messiah. The Father’s name lives in the Son’s name. The Father’s mission is carried
on the Son’s shoulders.
Isaiah knew this. He encoded it in the prophecy. “His name shall be called...”
PART VI
Why the Titles of Isaiah 9:6 Belong to the Name
Because Yahshua comes in the Father’s name, bearing the Father’s authority and
executing the Father’s mission, the titles that Isaiah assigns to his name are not claims of
identity — they are descriptions of the anointing he carries.
WONDERFUL COUNSELOR
The wisdom of YAHWEH does not descend upon the world as an abstract force. It walks
into the room with Yahshua. The counsel of the Almighty, which is higher than all human
wisdom and deeper than all human searching, finds its earthly voice in this one man. He
did not speak his own words — he was careful to say so repeatedly:
“The words that I speak unto you I speak not of myself.” (John 14:10)
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He was the mouthpiece of the Most High — and in him, the world was offered something
it had never possessed before: direct access to the counsel of YAHWEH in human
language, human form, human relationship. Wonderful Counselor. Not because he is
YAHWEH, but because YAHWEH’s counsel flows through him without diminishment.
MIGHTY CHAMPION (El Gibbor)
Here is the title at the center of our inquiry, and here is its glory restored.
The Messiah is YAHWEH’s warrior-king — the one sent into the arena of human history
to do battle against the principalities and powers that have enslaved YAHWEH’s creation.
He stands in the breach. He fights the battle no human army could win. He defeats the
ultimate enemies — sin, death, and the dominion of darkness — not by the sword of iron,
but by the obedience of a surrendered life and the power of a resurrection morning.
El Gibbor. The Mighty Champion. This title does not tell us that the Messiah is God. It
tells us that YAHWEH has raised up a champion worthy of the mission — and has invested
that champion with authority sufficient for the task.
EVERLASTING FATHER (Avi Ad)
Of all the titles in Isaiah’s prophecy, this one has generated the most confusion — and the
most misuse. The argument runs like this: if the Messiah is called “Everlasting Father,”
he must be the Father. And if he is the Father, he must be YAHWEH Himself.
But this conclusion imports a modern English reading onto an ancient Hebrew concept.
The Hebrew behind this title is Avi Ad — Father of Eternity, or more precisely, Father of
the Coming Age. This is not a declaration that the Messiah and the Father are the same
being. It is a declaration of the Messiah’s regal and paternal role in the Kingdom age he
inaugurates.
In the ancient Near Eastern world, the great king was often described in paternal terms
— as the father and protector of his people, the one under whose rule his subjects found
security, provision, and identity. The Messiah, as the King of the coming Kingdom,
becomes in this sense the father-figure of the age — the paternal ruler and protector under
whose authority the redeemed of YAHWEH will flourish forever.
And because he carries the Father’s name, the Father’s character — fatherly,
compassionate, providing, protecting — is fully expressed through him. He is not the
Father. But the Father is fully seen in him.
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PRINCE OF PEACE (Sar Shalom)
The final title brings the prophecy home to its destination: the Kingdom of YAHWEH
established in the earth.
The Hebrew word translated “peace” is shalom — a word far richer than the mere absence
of conflict. Shalom is wholeness. It is the state in which everything is functioning as
YAHWEH designed it — relationships restored, creation healed, justice flowing like a
river, every human being inhabiting the fullness of their YAHWEH-given purpose. It is
divine order made visible.
The Messiah is the Sar Shalom — the Prince, the Commander, the Ruler of that divine
order. He does not merely bring peace. He governs it. His Kingdom is the Kingdom where
shalom reigns permanently and without challenge.
PART VII
The King on David’s Throne
The prophecy of Isaiah does not leave its subject ambiguous. It continues without pause:
“Of the increase of his government and peace there shall be no end, upon
the throne of David, and upon his kingdom, to order it and to establish it
with judgment and with justice from henceforth even for ever.”
This is the portrait of a king. A human king. A son of David. A ruler who sits upon a throne
— David’s throne — and governs a Kingdom in the earth.
The Messiah is not YAHWEH descending to occupy a throne He has no need of. The
Messiah is YAHWEH’s anointed king — the one raised up from among the people of
Israel, from the lineage of the greatest king they had ever known, to do what David could
never fully accomplish: establish the eternal Kingdom of YAHWEH on earth as it is in
heaven.
This is the Messianic vision in all its grandeur. Not the Creator becoming the creature.
But the Creator raising up from within His creation a man so thoroughly yielded, so
completely anointed, so fully invested with divine authority that the whole earth will one
day bow at his feet and confess that Yahshua the Messiah is Lord —
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“...to the glory of YAHWEH the Father.” (Philippians 2:11)
Note well the end of that confession: to the glory of the Father. Even in the moment of
Yahshua’s highest exaltation, the glory flows upward — back to YAHWEH, from whom it
came.
CONCLUSION
The Mighty Champion Who Bears the Father’s Name
Let us gather what Isaiah 9:6 actually declares, and let its full beauty be seen.
A child would be born into this world — not YAHWEH Himself descending in disguise,
but a genuine human child, born of a woman, entering history the way every human being
enters it. A son would be given — not given by himself, but given by the Father, who sent
him.
And this son would carry something no other human being in history would carry in the
same way: the name of the Father. Not the Father’s identity, but the Father’s authority.
Not the Father’s being, but the Father’s mission. Not the Father himself, but everything
the Father intended to do in the earth, channeled through a human life consecrated wholly
to that purpose.
Because of that name — because of that investment of divine authority — he would rightly
be known as:
Wonderful Counselor — the voice of YAHWEH’s wisdom in human flesh
Mighty Champion (El Gibbor) — YAHWEH’s appointed warrior-king
Father of the Coming Age (Avi Ad) — the paternal ruler of the eternal
Kingdom
Prince of Peace (Sar Shalom) — the governor of YAHWEH’s divine order
The Messiah is therefore the champion of YAHWEH, the King appointed to rule the earth,
and the man through whom YAHWEH’s salvation is revealed to the world.
His very name proclaims it. It has always proclaimed it.
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Yahshua.
YAHWEH is salvation.
Not YAHWEH become man. But YAHWEH saving the world through the man He chose,
anointed, sent, and named.
The Father gave the Son the Name. The Son carried the Name faithfully — all the way to
an empty tomb. And one day every tongue will confess what the name has always
declared:
YAHWEH saves.
Issued from the Apostolic Assemblies Headquarters
First Harvest Ministries International
Rev. John Shane Vaughn
Apostolic Founder