What I'm saying is not true because I say it, but because it is the only thing that makes sense. If my name is James, then my name is James and not Ya'akov. Why are you having such difficulty with this?
I am not having any difficulty because I understand Etymology and historical use of names and words.
Yeshua (
Hebrew: יֵשׁוּעַ,
romanized:
Yēšūaʿ) was a common alternative form of the name
Yehoshua (
Hebrew: יְהוֹשֻׁעַ,
romanized:
Yəhōšūaʿ,
lit. '
Joshua') in later books of the
Hebrew Bible and among Jews of the
Second Temple period. The name corresponds to the Greek spelling
Iesous (Ἰησοῦς), from which, through the Latin
IESVS/
Iesus, comes the English spelling
Jesus. The Hebrew spelling
Yēšūaʿ (ישוע) appears in some later books of the Hebrew Bible. Once for
Joshua the son of Nun, and 28 times for
Joshua the High Priest and other priests called Jeshua – although these same priests are also given the spelling Joshua in 11 further instances in the books of
Haggai and
Zechariah. It differs from the usual Hebrew Bible spelling of Joshua (יְהוֹשֻׁעַ,
Yəhōšūaʿ), found 218 times in the Hebrew Bible, in the absence of the consonant
he (ה) and placement of the
semivowel vav (ו) after, not before, the consonant
shin (ש). It also differs from the Hebrew spelling
Yeshu (ישו) which is found in
Ben-Yehuda Dictionary and used in most secular contexts in
Modern Hebrew to refer to
Jesus, although the Hebrew spelling
Yēšūaʿ (ישוע) is generally used in
translations of the New Testament into Hebrew[3] and used by Hebrew-speaking Christians in Israel. The name Yeshua is also used in Hebrew historical texts to refer to other Joshuas recorded in Greek texts such as
Jesus ben Ananias and
Jesus ben Sira.
[4] In English, the name Yeshua is extensively used by followers of
Messianic Judaism,
[5] whereas
East Syriac Christian denominations use the name
ʿIsho in order to preserve the Syriac name of Jesus.
[6] The 2004 film
The Passion of the Christ, which was made in
Aramaic, used Yeshua as the name of Jesus and is the most well-known western Christian work to have done so.
[7] (Wiki)