Like already said, the -cp is just for telling the jvm in the command line which class to use for the main thread and where it can find the libraries (define classpath). In -jar it expects the class-path and main-class to be defined in the jar file manifest. So other is for defining things in command line while other finding them inside the jar manifest. There is no difference in performance. You can't use them at the same time, -jar will override the -cp.
Though even if you use -cp, it will still check the manifest file. So you can define some of the class-paths in the manifest and some in the command line. This is particularly useful when you have a dependency on some 3rd party jar, which you might not provide with your build or don't want to provide (expecting it to be found already in the system where it's to be installed for example). So you can use it to provide external jars. It's location may vary between systems or it may even have a different version on different system (but having the same interfaces). This way you can build the app with other version and add the actual 3rd party dependency to class-path on the command line when running it on different systems.