Jesus vs Lord

Jesus

intj
  • An exclamation, particularly used to express excitement or exasperation. 

name
  • A male given name from Spanish in Spanish culture; an anglicized spelling of Jesús. 

  • A male given name from Aramaic of Semitic origin. 

  • Jesus of Nazareth, a first-century Jewish religious preacher and craftsman (commonly understood to have been a carpenter, see Ancient Greek τέκτων (téktōn, “builder”)) from Galilee held to be a prophet, teacher, the son of God, and the Messiah, or Christ, in Christianity; also called "Jesus Christ" by Christians. Held to be a prophet by Muslims and Baháʼís. 

  • One of a variety of persons or entities in western Manichaeism, of whom some correspond closely to the Christian conception of Jesus of Nazareth. 

verb
  • To exclaim "Jesus" (at). 

  • To subject to (excessive) Christian proselytizing, preaching, or moralizing. 

noun
  • The Christian savior. 

Lord

intj
  • An interjection variously expressing astonishment, surprise, resignation. 

noun
  • A generic title used in reference to any peer of the British nobility or any peer below the dignity of duke and (as a courtesy title) for the younger sons of dukes and marquesses (see usage note). 

  • The elected president of a festival. 

  • A high priest. 

  • A formal title of the lesser British nobility, used for a lord of the manor or Lord Proprietor. 

  • Similar formal and generic titles in other countries. 

  • An additional title added to denote the dignity of certain high officials, such as the "Lord Mayors" of major cities in the British Commonwealth 

name
  • The God of Abraham and the Jewish scriptures. 

  • The Abrahamic deity of the Jewish, Christian, and Islamic faiths. 

  • God the Father; the Godhead. 

  • Jesus Christ, God the Son. 

  • Any other deity particularly important to a religion or a worshipper. 

  • An English surname transferred from the nickname, originally a nickname for someone who either acted as if he were a lord or had worked in a lord's household. 

How often have the words Jesus and Lord occurred in a corpus of books? (source: Google Ngram Viewer )