Who is Jesus Christ?
The short answer
Jesus Christ is the eternal Son of God who became a real human being to save us. He is one person — fully God and fully man — and his name carries his mission: "Jesus" means "God saves," and "Christ" means the long-promised anointed one sent to rescue and lead his people.
Full explanation
Start with the name, because the name is already an answer. "Jesus" is a Hebrew name that means "God saves." When the angel told Mary and Joseph what to call the child, he was not just labelling a baby; he was announcing a rescue. "Christ" is not a surname but a title — it translates the Hebrew "Messiah," the one anointed by God to be king, priest, and prophet for his people. So "Jesus Christ" already says, in two words, who he is and why he came: God's anointed one, here to save.
But Christianity claims something larger still. Jesus is not merely a great teacher, a holy man, or a messenger sent on God's behalf. The Church confesses that he is the eternal Son of God, equal to the Father, who existed before the world began and through whom everything was made. At a particular moment in history, this divine Son took on a complete human life — a body, a mind, a will, a heart — without ceasing to be God. He is one person living out two full realities at once.
A helpful way to picture it: imagine an author who loved the world he had written so much that he chose to step inside the story and become one of its characters — not pretending to be a character, but truly becoming one, while remaining the author the whole time. Jesus is God's "stepping into the story." He gets tired, hungry, and grieved like us, yet the same person calms storms and forgives sins because he is also the one who made the storms and against whom every sin is committed.
This is why people's answer to the question "Who do you say that I am?" matters so much. Peter answered, "You are the Christ, the Son of the living God" (Matthew 16:16), and that confession became the bedrock of the Church. To know who Jesus is is not a piece of religious trivia; it is to know the face God himself chose to show us. Everything the Church believes about God, salvation, and the meaning of human life flows from getting this one person right.
So when we ask who Jesus is, the answer is not finally a definition but a person to be met. The Gospels do not hand us an abstract idea; they hand us a life — born in poverty, walking dusty roads, healing the sick, dying on a cross, and rising again — and they invite us to recognise in that life the living God who saves.
Why this matters
If Jesus is who the Church says he is, then he is not one option among many wise voices; he is God in person, and meeting him changes everything about how we understand ourselves and our destiny. It means God is not distant or theoretical — he has a face, a voice, and a history. And it means salvation is not a technique we master but a relationship we are offered, with someone who walked our own road first.
Myth Common misunderstanding
A common view today is that Jesus was a remarkable moral teacher and nothing more — a kind, wise human worth admiring. But that flattens what he actually said and did. A merely good teacher does not forgive sins committed against God, accept worship, or claim to exist before Abraham was born. Either those claims are true, or they are the opposite of good teaching. The Church has always taken him at his word: he is the Son of God who became man, not a sage we may keep at a polite distance.
Scripture connections
- John 1:14 — the eternal Word of God "became flesh and dwelt among us," naming the heart of who Jesus is.
- Matthew 16:16 — Peter confesses Jesus as the Christ, the Son of the living God.
- Philippians 2:6-11 — though he was in the form of God, he emptied himself and took the form of a servant.
- Colossians 1:15-20 — Jesus is the image of the invisible God, through whom and for whom all things were created.
Church teaching references
Reflect
If you let Jesus' own claims about himself stand — rather than trimming him down to a wise teacher — what would change about the way you bring your life to him?