<P> The followers of Jesus became known as Christians (as in Acts 11: 26) because they believed Jesus to be the Khristós or Mashiach prophesied in the Hebrew Bible . Jesus was not, and is not, accepted in Judaism as a Jewish messiah, and the concept of a divine messiah was always rejected by Judaism as idolatry . Religious Jews still await their messiah's first coming and the Messianic prophecies of Jewish tradition to be accomplished . Religious Christians believe in the Second Coming of Christ, and they await the rest of Christian messianic prophecies to be fulfilled . One of those prophecies, distinctive in both the Jewish and Christian concept of the messiah, is that a Jewish king from the Davidic line, who will be "anointed" with holy anointing oil, will be king of God's kingdom on earth, and rule the Jewish people and mankind during the Messianic Age and World to come . Muslims accept Jesus (Arabic: عيسى ‎, translit . ʿĪsā) as al - Masih, the messiah in Islam, and believe he will come again, but don't believe that the messiah is divine or the Son of God . </P> <P> The area of Christian theology called Christology is primarily concerned with the nature and person of Jesus Christ as recorded in the canonical gospels and the letters of the New Testament . </P> <P> Christ comes from Χριστός (Christos), meaning "anointed one". In the Greek Septuagint, christos was used to translate the Hebrew מָשִׁיחַ (Mašíaḥ, messiah), meaning "(one who is) anointed .", a title allegedely adopted from the term for the tradition of anointing the Egyptian pharaoh during coronation or marriage with oil drawn from the fat of messeh, who was the sacred crocodile or crocodile star in the spells and the same anointing ritual may be traced to earlier Mesopotamian Mušḫuššu . In coffins of Egyptian mummies the word krst is found as a blessing and anointing from Horus and Osiris, hence the word Christos is thought as loaned . Krst denoted the process of preparation of the mummy by embalming, purifying and anointing, and can mean anointed, buried or covered in oil . </P> <P> The word Christ (and similar spellings) appears in English and in most European languages . English - speakers now often use "Christ" as if it were a name, one part of the name "Jesus Christ", though it was originally a title ("the Messiah"). Its usage in "Christ Jesus" emphasizes its nature as a title . Compare the usage "the Christ". </P>

Where does the word christ come from and what does it mean
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