What's in a name? Much, it seems. And here's a little story that was all 
over my local news yesterday about some East Tennessee parents who were told by 
Tennessee Child Support Magistrate Lu Ann Ballew that they would have to change 
their child's first name - which is Messiah - because that is a title which fits 
Jesus of Nazareth alone:
The word Messiah is a title, and it's a title that has only been 
earned by one person, and that one person is Jesus Christ.
This story is doubly silly because the parents were before the judge in the 
first place because they couldn't agree on what the child's last name should be. 
But evidently the first name of Messiah offended the religious sensibilities of 
Magistrate Ballew; although Ballew did offer the additional rationale that 
because the child would be growing in such a Christianized portion of the 
country, "It could put him at odds with a lot of people and at this point he has 
had no choice in what his name is." 
 This reminds of the spring of 1968. My older brother, on a whim, had 
stopped off at our local mom & pop store and picked up a pack of Topp's 
Baseball Cards. This soon led to our following the sport closely as we continued 
amassing a collection of baseball cards.
This reminds of the spring of 1968. My older brother, on a whim, had 
stopped off at our local mom & pop store and picked up a pack of Topp's 
Baseball Cards. This soon led to our following the sport closely as we continued 
amassing a collection of baseball cards.
And then one day my brother opened a pack he had bought and looked at me 
all wild-eyed and said "holy moley, Doug, here's a guy named Jesus!" It was 
Jesus Alou, a then Giants outfielder, and we were astounded at his hubris. We 
wondered what kind of parents would do a thing like name their child Jesus. We 
stared at the name on that card for a long while in disbelief. But we were kids, 
too.
Here in the Bible Belt biblical names are common. I have one. My middle 
name is Nathan. Mom deliberately chose that in honor of the Old Testament 
prophet. I had childhood friends named Timothy, Thomas, Matthew and so forth. As 
children we made fun of our friends' names no matter what they were. 
My best friend when I was 8 had made up a little rhyme about my first name 
(I never went by Nathan, although my mom called me that almost exclusively when 
I was a kid and still does now on occasion). It went like this:
Doug, Doug the beetle-bug, 
the rotten apple cider jug.
Funny, right? But it caught on. I was just frustrated because, at eight, my 
poetic skills were such that I couldn't return the "favor" by thinking of a 
rhyme for his first name, which was Jimmy (still another biblical name, 
James). In fact, I don't think my poetic skills are adequate for that 
task today. But also I've outgrown that type of thing.
So back to Messiah. Of course the mom is outraged and is going to appeal. I 
was heartened that most of the feedback on the forced name change has been 
negative. Even here in the Bible Belt the idea of a judge overruling parental 
rights in choosing a child's name is unpopular - even with a controversial name 
such as this.
 
 
While I don't think "Messiah" is the best name in the world, the mother is free to bestow that name on her son. She isn't harming her son in any way by giving him that name. The judge was completely out of line in forcing a name change.
ReplyDeleteAhab, I can't help but think a successful appeal is on the way. I was happily surprised at how much dissent there is about that judge's decision around here.
Delete