Adonai
- My Lord
by Lois Tverberg
"If
you confess with your mouth Jesus as Lord, and believe in your heart
that God raised Him from the dead, you will be saved." Romans
10:9
The word adon (ah-DOAN) means "Lord", as a term for royalty
or authority, and of course, often in reference to God Himself.
With a possessive suffix, the wordadonai means "my Lord",
and is used
when displaying an attitude
of obedient submission to a greater power. When we refer to God as Adonai,
we are saying that He is sovereign and in authority over us personally.
We can learn interesting things about
Jesus by how He is addressed using the term,"Lord". Throughout
the gospels Jesus is addressed with respect by strangers as "rabbi"
or "teacher". Only a few times is He actually addressed using
His common name, Jesus, and only by demons (Mark 1:24) and a few who didn't
know him. But Jesus' disciples and others who believed in Him referred
to Him as "Lord"1,
suggesting that they were giving Him great honor, with the understanding
that He is the Messianic King. To call Jesus, "Lord" is using
a term for addressing royalty, like saying "Your Majesty" or
"Your Highness". It is also a common term for addressing God
Himself, and has a hint of worshipping Jesus as God.
It is interesting that even though the demons know that He is the Son
of God, they refuse to use the word Lord to address Him! (Luke 4:34, 40)
To call him Lord is to say that He
is the King that God has sent who has a right to reign over us. Jesus
even seems to expect that those who call Him Lord obey Him - He said,
"Why do you call Me, 'Lord, Lord,' and do not do what I say?"
(Luke 6:46). According to Paul, those who are saved have two things: both
a belief in the atoning work of Jesus, and a commitment to honor Him as
their own Lord and King. As Paul says,
If you confess with your mouth
Jesus as Lord, and believe in your heart that God raised Him from the
dead, you will be saved. (Romans 10:9)
1See David Flusser,
Jesus, Magnes Press c. 1997, p 32.
|