I know of two pairs of twins in the bible Jacob and Esau, and Thomas and his twin.
Jacob and Esau
I know one pear of twins in the bible, it is in the book of Genesis . the twins are Jacob and Esau.Answer #2:There is also Doubting Thomas, who was called 'Thomas Didymus' ('Didymus' is Greek for 'twin'), but (strangely, having made such a point of it) there is no record of who his twin was. Curiouser still, , 'Thomas' is derived from the Aramaic word for ... (wait for it) ... 'twin'! Why such a fuss to tell us he is a twin, but not who is twin was? Unless, of course, it was obvious to those who wrote about him, but didn't want to shout about it. It would explain why he was so hard to convince about the nature of his brother...
Ferternal twins don't look alike, but twins do
The fact that twins run in families is actually a myth. The odds of twins having twins is the same as a non-twin having twins. That is about 1 in 33.
I know of two pairs of twins in the bible Jacob and Esau, and Thomas and his twin.
The word "twins" is in the King James Version of the Bible 6 times. It is in 6 verses.
Jacob and Esau
Cane and Able
Faith Bible Christian School
There are two set's of twins mentioned in the bible and I'm sure this has been answered before. We have Esau and Jacob, and Tamar's twins Zeresh and Pharez. However, there is sketchy talk of Thomas (a disciple of Jesus) being a twin for the meaning of his name. there is also talk of Joseph's sons being twins but i doubt it for scripture would have said so.
They could have been twins, or it could be that the Bible does not speak of the second time.
1) Esau and Jacob (Genesis ch.25) 2) Zerach and Peretz (Genesis ch.38).
Yes they are christian. Remember on the episode where London goes to Thailand and Zack mentions the Gible they how else would they not know about the Bible.
identical twins are single egg twins. fraternal twins a two egg twins. fraternal
I know one pear of twins in the bible, it is in the book of Genesis . the twins are Jacob and Esau.Answer #2:There is also Doubting Thomas, who was called 'Thomas Didymus' ('Didymus' is Greek for 'twin'), but (strangely, having made such a point of it) there is no record of who his twin was. Curiouser still, , 'Thomas' is derived from the Aramaic word for ... (wait for it) ... 'twin'! Why such a fuss to tell us he is a twin, but not who is twin was? Unless, of course, it was obvious to those who wrote about him, but didn't want to shout about it. It would explain why he was so hard to convince about the nature of his brother...
There is Identical twins, Nonidentical twins and Conjoined twins.