God didn’t love just the Jews or just the middle east, or just whomever … God loved the world and gave His only begotten Son that whosoever …” Jesus began His life in Israel as a Jew, and fulfilled His destiny as the Christ, the Messiah for Israel, and the Savior of the World. Complete the theology of the Messiah begun in Workshop Three and expand it to Jesus, the Savior of the World.In Workshop Three, you researched the background of the Jewish idea of the Messiah. In this assignment, you have three tasks. First, complete theology of Jesus as the Messiah for Israel. Second, demonstrate Jesus as Savior of the World. Third, describe theological implications of the theology of Jesus as Messiah and Savior. More detail describing the three tasks follows.The following elements need to be thoroughly addressed:Successfully complete the first task by describing Messianic passages in the Gospels. They can be metaphors, like the one the curriculum discussed previously (i.e., Workshop Four, activity Two; include here), as well as statements by Jesus or others, and comments by the Gospel writers. Be sure to explain the passages.Successfully complete the second task by describing passages in the Gospels demonstrating Jesus as Savior of the world. Explain the passages.Successfully complete the third section by researching the Gospels for passages that explicitly or implicitly describe the theological consequence of Jesus’ work as the Messiah and Savior. Include the ideas of Incarnation, Atonement, and Redemption. Again, the passages can be metaphors, statements by persons in the Gospel stories, or comments by the Gospel writers.The paper must meet the expectations provided above.Provide at least two academic resources.3-4 pages.Support your work with scholarly academic resources using APA -7 format