While many different people share common names like Mary/Miriam, a notable instance of the same name applying to both sexes is Adam, as the Hebrew word "adam" (meaning "man" or "humanity") was used for both the first man and as the generic term for humankind, male and female, in Genesis 1:27, notes this eBible Q&A page. Other unisex names include Anah, Areli, Ariel, and Gomer, used for both men and women in different biblical contexts, according to Pampers list of biblical names.
The two most notable are Joseph, son of Jacob in the Old Testament, and Joseph, husband of Mary in the New Testament. Also, Jesus had a brother named Joses (probably Joseph Jr.), and Barnabas' real name was Joses.
Unisex Biblical Names for Baby Girls and Boys
However, Genesis 1:27 refers to Adam as “it” (oto, singular) and “them” (otam, plural) in the same sentence; male and female, created in the image of God. The rabbis understood this to mean that Adam was created as an intersexed being, a hermaphrodite; singular in one respect, plural in another.
There are seven times in Scripture when God calls the name of a person twice.
The name mentioned nearly 7,000 times in the Hebrew Scriptures (Old Testament) is the personal name of God, represented by the Tetragrammaton (יהוה), which is transliterated as YHWH and often rendered as Jehovah or Yahweh in English Bibles, though many translations substitute "LORD" or "God". While the exact count varies slightly by translation and text, it is by far the most frequent name in the Bible, distinct from descriptive titles like "Lord" or "Almighty".
Joshua 24:14–15 Reminds Us to Serve God
And then for us to pray that God would save us from idols in our country. We must decide if we will serve God or ourselves. Let's do that. God, we start this prayer by saying you alone are God.
A biblical worldview (based on God's revealed Word in the Bible) makes it clear that God made two sexes of humans, male and female: “So God created man in his own image, in the image of God he created him; male and female he created them” (Genesis 1:27).
John 16:33 means that while followers of Jesus will face hardship, suffering, and tribulation in the world, they can find inner peace and courage because Jesus has already conquered sin, death, and evil ("overcome the world"), and His Spirit lives within them, offering victory and hope amidst their struggles. It's a promise of spiritual triumph over worldly troubles, not an absence of them.
Proverbs 18:22 means finding a good wife is a great blessing and a sign of God's favor, portraying marriage as a divine gift and a partnership where a godly woman serves as a wise helper, bringing comfort, purpose, and spiritual growth, not just a casual companion. It emphasizes that this isn't a guarantee for any marriage but highlights the value of a covenant partner, reflecting God's design for life and support.
Currently, the New Revised Standard Version (NRSV), Today's New International Version (TNIV), the Revised English Bible (REB), The New Century Version (NCV), the Contemporary English Version (CEV), and the New Living Translation (NLT) are the translations that have opted toward gender neutral language.
A unisex name is the same name that is given to a boy or a girl: Alexis, Clare, Gale, Kimberly. Some male names are now also used as female names, for example, Ashley, Casey, Jordan, Taylor.
Unusual biblical names for boys
The difference between ☦ (Orthodox Cross) and ✝ (Latin Cross) lies in their bars: the Orthodox cross has three bars (a small top one for the inscription, the main one, and a slanted bottom one for the footrest), symbolizing Eastern Orthodoxy, while the Latin cross has one bar, representing Western Christianity's focus on Jesus' sacrifice and resurrection, with both symbols generally signifying faith, Christianity, or support, but specific denominations prefer their distinct form.
Melchizedek is only mentioned twice in the entire Hebrew Bible (Genesis 14:17-20 and Psalm 110:4).
Yes, there is a woman known for having a name with over 1,000 letters, famously featured on The Oprah Winfrey Show in 1997; her full name is Rhoshandiatellyneshiaunneveshenk Koyaanisquatsiuth Williams, but she goes by "Jamie" for simplicity, and her name was recorded as 1,019 letters long. Her mother gave her the name to make her unique and break the Guinness World Record, with the name containing parts of family names, places, and terms like "love" and "friend".
The holy things and the pearls represent the things of God, perhaps the gospel itself. The dogs and pigs represent hostile, unworthy people. And so the statement translates into something like this: Do not preach the things of God to hostile, unworthy people.
In other words, when John 3:16 says that God loves the world, it means that He loves every person, head for head, equally. The logic goes something like this: God loves every person; Christ died for every person; therefore, salvation is possible for every person.
Nothing happens by chance – all things happen by the choice and power of God. He rules all things in the universe, even games of chance. Learn wisdom. You will have an informed view of life and a solid basis for great faith. Nothing surprises the LORD – He planned everything, even the things that surprise you.
Here's Matthew 19:4–6: “Have you not read,” He asked the Pharisees, “that he who created them from the beginning made them male and female, and said, 'Therefore a man shall leave his father and mother and hold fast to his wife, and the two shall become one flesh'? So they are no longer two but one flesh.
In mythology, a goddess is a female god.
Isaiah 43:19 means God promises to bring new hope and provision, even in seemingly impossible situations, urging people to look forward rather than dwelling on past troubles by making pathways in the wilderness and streams in the desert, a metaphor for miraculous solutions and new life. It's a message of transformation, encouraging faith in God's power to create new opportunities and deliver His people, much like He provided for Israel in the past.
Application in Modern Context
In our fast-paced and often chaotic world, Joshua 24:14-15 invites us to pause and reflect on our own spiritual journey. It prompts us to evaluate our priorities and recommit ourselves to serving God with sincerity and passion.
When Jesus said, "Foxes have holes, and birds of the air have nests, but the Son of Man has nowhere to lay his head," He meant that following Him involves radical commitment, sacrifice, and homelessness, contrasting the natural security of animals with His own itinerant life and foreshadowing the hardship, not earthly glory, that true discipleship entails, calling people to count the cost.
yet the dogs under the table eat of the children's crumbs; which they leave, or let fall: signifying that she did not envy the blessings of the Jews, or desire any thing might be done injurious to them; only that this favour might be granted her, which she owned she was unworthy of, that her daughter might be healed.