The name "Jesus" does not mean "Hail, Zeus"; it comes from the Hebrew Yeshua, meaning "The Lord Saves." Regardless of the language or pronunciation, Jesus is the Savior who saves us from our sins.
Some claim that the name "Jesus" means "Hail, Zeus," but this is false and misleading. The angel Gabriel instructed Mary to name her child Jesus, which comes from the Hebrew Yeshua and means "The Lord Saves," pointing to His role as Savior. Linguistically, Yeshua, Iésous, Joshua, and Jesus are simply different translations of the same name across languages. Attempts to discredit the name Jesus rely on linguistic misunderstandings and conspiracy theories, not historical or biblical evidence. Paul warns believers to “avoid foolish controversies” and myths (Titus 3:9; 1 Timothy 1:3-4). Our focus should remain on who Jesus is and what He accomplished—the salvation that His life, death, resurrection brought to all who believe in Him (Romans 10:9-10; 1 Corinthians 15:3-4). Getting caught up in claims that Jesus’ name secretly honors a pagan god distracts from worshiping the true Savior, who brings us salvation.
Within this camp of false teachers, there are some who say "Jesus" actually means "Hail Zeus" It's not hard to hear the similarities between the sound of "Jesus" and a quick mashup of "Hail Zeus," but that's not even the bizarre argument these few teachers make. They say that Roman Church officials changed the Messiah's name from YAHSHUA (which they say means "YAH is Salvation") to a hybrid Greek/Latin word, Iésous, which supposedly means "Hail Zeus." They claim this change was made to make their religion more acceptable to the pagan culture. Zeus was chief of the Greco-Roman pantheon of gods, so, according to this theory, the supposed new demigod was easily accepted, and Christianity was melded with paganism.
As further "proof" for this conspiracy theory, proponents say that when people say Jesus in Spanish it is obvious they are actually saying "Hey, Zeus." They also mention sculptures of Zeus with a beard and images of Jesus with a beard.
But YAHSHUA is not even correct, as the Hebrew name for the Savior is Yeshua. Looking seriously at the linguistics, the Hebrew name Yeshua is translated into Iésous in Greek, the same name Gabriel, the angel, told Mary to name her child (Matthew 1:21). Jesus is Greek for Joshua, a Jewish name that means "he will save his people from their sins." The Gospel writers wrote in Greek. Yeshua, Jesu, Joshua, and Jesus are the same name in different languages. Names can and do translate in different languages. For example, John is Jean in France, Juan in Spain, and Johan in Germany.
Jesus’ name may sound different, but He is the same person. When we are talking about Jesus Christ, we are referring to the child born to Mary in Bethlehem who grew up, gathered followers, taught for three years, died on a cross, then rose from the dead. In English, we call Him Jesus. This person is decidedly not Zeus. Such arguments distract from what is most important: Christ saves.