God is first revealed to mankind as "Elohim," not as Jehovah. Jehovah is the personal name for God which denotes a relationship.Doubting Thomas said:If the Word's being is grounded in that of the FATHER (ie is "from" the Father), then He can appropriately be called the "SON" even before His Incarnation. In other words, if the Father can legitimately be referred to as "Father" from eternity before the Incarnation, the Word of the Father can likewise legitimately be referred to as the "Son" from eternity.
Now if someone wants to deny that the Word eternally derives His being from the Father, I'd like to see how this can be "defended" without collapsing into modalism or tritheism.
Genesis 1:1 In the beginning God created the heaven and the earth.
--God: Elohim--One God; The Supreme God, and yet the word is used in its plural form, a possible reference to the trinity. God first revealed Himself to us as the Creator, the one and only Supreme God of the universe. Not until much later was he known as Jehovah.
He was therefore not known as the Father from eternity.
We must take these "titles" in the context in which they are written.
Perhaps it may be even more accurate then to say: God the Creator, God the Word, and God the Holy Spirit. God is God. There is only one God. He reveals Himself in many different ways (under different titles) at different times throughout human history. I think you are straining at gnats.
He is the Messiah, the King of Kings, the Lord of lords, the Great Shepherd, The Door, the Alpha and the Omega, the Resurrection and the Life, the Great I Am, the Prince of Peace, the Rose of Sharon, the Lily of the Valley, the Bright and Morning Star, the Rock of Ages, the Saviour, Jehovah, and on and on. He goes by many titles and many descriptions. The Book of Ruth describes him as the Great Redeemer/Kinsman.