(Disclaimer: This transcript is auto-generated and may contain mistakes.) Number one is that the words God and Lord are names. A lot of people try to deny this and say, oh, those aren't names, those are just titles. Well, here's the thing, you didn't get that from the Bible. Because if you look up the word title in the Bible, the only time it uses the word title is like when Jesus died on the cross, he had a title over his head. And it basically was something that was written on a signage that said, this is Jesus, the King of the Jews. Another time somebody looks at a gravestone in a cemetery and read the title on the monument. And then another time a guy named Elihu, who was a vain guy who clouded words without knowledge, just said, well, I don't give people flattering titles. That's it. But there's nowhere that you could point to in the Bible that says that God or Lord is a title. In fact, those are names. I'm going to prove that to you. Number two that I want to prove to you is that God does not have only one name. God has many names. And then number three, God's names are cumulative, meaning he doesn't replace one name with another. When he gets a new name, he keeps the old name. So I'm going to prove those things to you from the Bible. First of all, let me just read to you what the dictionary definition of a name is. The dictionary says that a name is a word or a combination of words by which a person, place, or thing is designated, called, or known. So a word or a group of words by which something is called, designated, or known. Well, of course, God is called the Lord. He's designated as the Lord. He's known as the Lord. People will ask questions like, well, if the son's name is Jesus, what's God the Father's name? Here's what his name is, God the Father. That's his name, God the Father. That is a group of words by which that person is known, designated, and called God the Father. What's the name of the Holy Spirit? You're not going to believe this, Holy Ghost. The Holy Spirit is his name. These are the names, God the Father, Jesus, and the Holy Ghost. Those are the names. But I'm getting ahead of myself. We need to focus on the Old Testament this morning. These are names. Now, before we go to the Old Testament, though, look down at your Bible in Revelation 19, excuse me, look at your Bible at 1916 of Revelation. I'm going to show you that these things are true. What does it say in verse 16? And he had on his vesture and on his thigh a name written. Does it say he had a title written? He had a name written, King of Kings and Lord of Lords. So that's a name, according to the Bible, if we make the Bible our final authority. Back up to verse 12, it says, his eyes were as a flame of fire, and on his head were many crowns, and he had a name written that no man knew but he himself. Now, if the Jehovah's Witnesses are right, when they claim that God only has one name, and that name is Jehovah, well, here we see the Lord having a name that nobody knows, except he himself, right? And then it says in verse 13, he was clothed in a vesture dipped in blood, and his name is called the Word of God. So there's another name for Jesus Christ, the Son of God. His name is the Word of God. His name is the King of Kings and Lord of Lords. Those aren't titles, they're names, according to the Bible, if we let the Bible define it for itself.