M
MadeUpName2
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Jesus’ descent from David sometimes comes up in apologetics discussions. Ancestry calculations may add a wrinkle to the debate.
Mathematicians calculate how far back you’d have to go before EVERYBODY in the past either had a line that died out, or is your ancestor. Everybody alive today is related to pretty much everybody else from mere thousands of years ago. So regardless of where you live, your ancestors probably included Indo-Europeans, ancient American hunters, and the guys who built Khufu’s pyramid.
Here’s a good video explaining this process:
David and his son Solomon both had numerous wives and concubines. The Bible states that Solomon alone had 700 wives and 300 concubines. Rehoboam had 18 wives and 60 concubines, with numerous children. Even from the perspective of a skeptic who doubts the Bible’s exact figures, a Near Eastern monarch from this period would be expected to have large numbers of wives, concubines, and children – Ramesses the Great being an excellent example. Additionally, they belonged to an ethnic group that might have practiced more endogamy (marriage within the group) than other Near Eastern societies. So you might expect the Davidic line to show up as common ancestors to other people in the region.
Would it be possible to run calculations to determine whether most – if not all – of the adult men in Judea during the first century belonged to David’s lineage? (Including Jesus.)
And if so, would such a calculation prove that Jesus belonged to the Davidic line? Or would this sort of calculation miss some crucial element of ancient Jewish or Christian succession rules?
Mathematicians calculate how far back you’d have to go before EVERYBODY in the past either had a line that died out, or is your ancestor. Everybody alive today is related to pretty much everybody else from mere thousands of years ago. So regardless of where you live, your ancestors probably included Indo-Europeans, ancient American hunters, and the guys who built Khufu’s pyramid.
Here’s a good video explaining this process:
David and his son Solomon both had numerous wives and concubines. The Bible states that Solomon alone had 700 wives and 300 concubines. Rehoboam had 18 wives and 60 concubines, with numerous children. Even from the perspective of a skeptic who doubts the Bible’s exact figures, a Near Eastern monarch from this period would be expected to have large numbers of wives, concubines, and children – Ramesses the Great being an excellent example. Additionally, they belonged to an ethnic group that might have practiced more endogamy (marriage within the group) than other Near Eastern societies. So you might expect the Davidic line to show up as common ancestors to other people in the region.
Would it be possible to run calculations to determine whether most – if not all – of the adult men in Judea during the first century belonged to David’s lineage? (Including Jesus.)
And if so, would such a calculation prove that Jesus belonged to the Davidic line? Or would this sort of calculation miss some crucial element of ancient Jewish or Christian succession rules?
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