The promise of their God, the LORD, that someday the curse of sin brought on by the devil's temptation in the Garden of Eden (the perfect paradise God originally created) would be done away in a human Savior (Genesis 3:15) was expounded in prophecies that indicated the exact genealogy of this Savior. First he would be born of the race of Shem (Genesis 9:26), the nation of Abraham (Genesis 12:1-3), the tribe of Judah (Genesis 49:10), the family of Jesse (Isaiah 11:1), and the house of David (1 Chronicles 17:14). Then He adds that it the boy will be born of a virgin woman (Isaiah 7:14). In the OT Law, if a man died, his wife would be given to his nearest kin to redeem his line (Ruth 3:9). Who knows? Maybe his offspring would be the boy to fulfill God's promise?! For the Jews religious salvation was literally directly connected to genealogy. Heaven was only for those under the power of the son of King David. They would preserve their records as their own lives... for them, it was their life. The first Christian Gospel was written to the Jews by Matthew and he begins by listing the full genealogy of Jesus from Abraham (Matthew 1:1-16).
well basically because they dealt with so much in their history.other than the Holocaust and because no other religious group had undergone so much persecution based on its beliefs. and many of the cruel events that happened to them in history kept on repeating themselves over and over.Ther were so many different incidents that they dealt with that it will shock you if you were ever to see..
Both Matthew and Luke believed a genealogy of Jesus to be important because it enabled them to show that Jesus was descended from King David, just as it had been prophesied that the Messiah would be. Although both evangelists professed that Mary had been a virgin, they showed that Joseph was descended through the male line back to the great Zorobabel, son of Salathiel, and then back to King David himself.
Both genealogies used numerology, with a pattern of sevens to show the superstitious ancients that Jesus was predestined for greatness. Neither of them is fully consistent with the Old Testament account, but Matthew demonstrated that there were 14 generations: from Abraham to David; from David to Josiah; from Josiah to Jesus. To do this, he had to (among other things) ignore 3 kings in the Old Testament. Luke had great men occur in multiples of 7 generations starting from Adam, with: Enoch at 7; Abraham at 21; David at 35; Jesus at 77. He also had: Joseph at 42 and 70; Jesus (Jose) at 49. To do this, he had to insert his own fictitious people into the Old Testament list: Kainan at 13; Admin at 28.
Finally, the genealogy was important in Matthew's Gospel because the author drew a close parallel between Joseph and the Patriarch Joseph, and between Jesus and Moses. Whereas Luke gives the father of Joseph as Heli, Matthew gives his father as Jacob, just as Jacob was the father of the Patriarch Joseph.
Ruth, Tamar, and Rahab
Mormons, members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (the "Mormon" church) believe that they can perform religious sacraments on behalf of their deceased ancestors and give them the opportunity to accept Jesus Christ in the afterlife. This is viewed as a selfless act of service, and many Mormons find fulfillment in knowing that they are able to give their ancestors the Gospel of Jesus Christ in return for all that their ancestors have done for them. However, this requires that they know who their ancestors were. To do that, they must use genealogy. All the genealogical information that the Mormon Church receives is made available to the public through its genealogy service, FamilySearch.org, and it's local FamilySearch Libraries. Please see the "Related Links" below to learn more about why Mormons do genealogy work.
The author of Matthew's Gospel included a genealogy for several reasons:To demonstrate that Jesus was descended from King David, and even Zorobabel;To assist in drawing a parallel between Jesus and Moses, with the father of Joseph being called Jacob in both the Old Testament and the New Testament;To prove through numerology that Jesus was destined for greatness. He demonstrated that there were 14 generations: from Abraham to David; from David to Josiah; from Josiah to Jesus. To do this, he had to ignore 3 kings in the Old Testament and have David in the preceding (as 14) and following (as 1) groups, but not so Josiah.Raymond E. Brown (An Introduction to the New Testament) says that there is little likelihood that Matthew's genealogy is strictly historical.
I am ready to begin researching my family's genealogy.
For many families it is very important. Many will try to trace their family tree and do things like visit places their ancestors came from and try to contact distant relations.
A:Luke begins the genealogy of Jesus with (Luke 3:23) his father (as was supposed) Joseph, the son of Heli.
The opening topic of the Gospel of Matthew in the Bible is the genealogy of Jesus, tracing his lineage back to Abraham. This genealogy highlights Jesus's connection to the promises made to Abraham and David in the Old Testament.
Matthew's purpose for the genealogy of Jesus was likely to prove the royal lineage. The lineage proved that he was in the line of King David.
The genealogy in Matthew shows that Jesus is a legal descendant of David through the royal line. This genealogy traces the legal descent of Jesus as King of Israel. Luke's genealogy concludes with Joseph, of whom Jesus was the adopted Son, the genealogy in Luke 3 probably traces the ancestry of Mary, of whom Jesus was the real Son. Jesus is legal heir to the throne of David through Joseph and the actual seed of David through Mary.
Her name is not in the genealogy, she is referred to as wife of Uriah in Matthew 1:6.
Here is one:Matthew 1:1New King James Version (NKJV)The Genealogy of Jesus Christ1 The book of the genealogy of Jesus Christ, the Son of David, the Son of Abraham:
No. Luke 3:23-24 (KJV) proves that this was the genealogy of Joseph: "And Jesus himself began to be about thirty years of age, being (as was supposed) the son of Joseph, which was the son of Heli, which was the son of Matthat ..."
A:To the authors of Matthew and Luke, the genealogy of Jesus was important because it demonstrated that Jesus was descended from King David, as the first-century Jews expected their Messiah would be. It was, of course, expected by both authors that the virgin birth be overlooked, since this would seem to make the genealogy meaningless.Both authors also believed that the genealogy was important because numerology proved that Jesus was destined for greatness - see, for example Matthew 1:17, which explains that there are fourteen generations from Abraham to David, fourteen more until the carrying away to Babylon and then fourteen to Jesus. To do this, Matthew has to ignore 3 kings in the Old Testament and have David in the preceding (as 14) and following (as 1) groups, but not so Josiah.Luke's Gospel also has sixteen verses on the genealogy of Jesus, back through Joseph and his father Heli all the way to Adam. The author does not highlight the numerology as does the author of Matthew, but this genealogy is equally propitious, as it has great men occurring in multiples of seven generations. To do this, he had to insert his own fictitious people into the Old Testament list: Kainan at 13; Admin at 28.
Matthew 1 is speaking of the genealogy of Jesus Christ.
Jesus doesn't mention Enoch at all. But Enoch is mentioned in the genealogy of Jesus in Luke 3:37
Matthew's gospel opens with a genealogy of Jesus (Matthew 1:1-17). Luke's genealogy is presented in the third chapter of his gospel (Luke 3:23-38).
The Book of Matthew.