No. Matthew 1:15-16 says: "And Eliud begat Eleazar; and Eleazar begat Matthan; and Matthan begat Jacob;
And Jacob begat Joseph ..."
There is no doubt that Matthew was providing what he believed to be the genealogy of Joseph, not Mary.
The Gospel of Matthew begins with a genealogy tracing Jesus' earthly lineage back to Abraham. It establishes Jesus' connection to the lineage of King David, fulfilling Old Testament prophecies about the Messiah coming from David's line. This genealogy sets the stage for Matthew to portray Jesus as the long-awaited fulfillment of Jewish expectations for a Messiah.
In Matthew's Gospel, there are sixty generations from Adam to Jesus, through Joseph and Joseph's father Jacob. In Luke's Gospel, there are seventy six generations from Adam to Jesus, through Joseph and Joseph's father Heli.
In Matthew's Gospel, there were: 14 generations from Abraham to David, inclusive; 14 generations from David to Josiah, inclusive; and 14 generations from Jechonias (son of Josiah) to Jesus, through Joseph. This is actually 41 generations from Abraham to Jesus, since David is counted twice. In Luke's Gospel, there were: 77 generations from Adam to Jesus, through Joseph. This included 55 generations from Abraham to Jesus, once again inclusive. Luke's Gospel 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. The reason it took exactly this many generations in each case was that each of the authors wished in his own way to prove, through numerology, that Jesus was destined for greatness. The number 7 was regarded as associated with greatness, and so therefore was the number 14. To do this, Matthew had to ignore three kings in the Old Testament and to count David twice. Using a different, but parallel genealogy, Luke had to insert his own fictitious people into the Old Testament list: Kainan at 13; Admin at 28.
AnswerThe authors of Matthew and Luke each wrote somewhat different genealogies of Jesus, through Joseph, back to the Old Testament figures. Each sought to use numerology to prove that Jesus was predestined to be great. 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 ignore 3 kings in the Old Testament and have David in the preceding (as 14) and following (as 1) groups, but not so Josiah.
The symbol for Saint Matthew is not specifically the human manifestation of Jesus. Rather, it is just a generic man. This symbol is given Matthew because of the way he opens his Gospel narration; each evangelist is given such a symbol. Matthew's is a man because he begins his Gospel with the human geneology of Christ, tracing His ancestry through the ancestral familial line of men before Him thus establishing His human birth rights and legitimacy among the Jewish nation.
traits passed down from parent to offspring but it may skip generations and that are improved through all the generations through the ages like birds and and other animals!
A Pedigree
A pedigree chart is a tool used to trace traits through generations in a family. It displays the inheritance pattern of specific traits or conditions, helping to analyze how they are passed down from one generation to the next. This tool is commonly used in genetics and hereditary studies to understand patterns of inheritance.
A pedigree chart is a tool commonly used to trace a trait through generations of a family. It shows the relationships among family members and can help identify patterns of inheritance for specific traits or conditions. By analyzing a pedigree chart, genetic counselors and researchers can better understand how traits are passed down within a family.
pedigree is the answer!!
The answer is: pedigree
Matthew's Gospel traces Jesus' ancestry through the male line from his father Joseph, then Joseph's father Jacob, and back through the great Zorobabel, son of Salathiel, then Jechonias, to David and finally Abraham.Luke's Gospel traces Jesus' ancestry through the male line from his father Joseph, then Joseph's father Heli, and back through the great Zorobabel, son of Salathiel, then Neri, to David and finally Adam.Matthew says that there were 28 generations from David to Jesus, and 41 generations from Abraham to Jesus. Luke says that there were 42 generations from David to Jesus, and 77 generations from Adam to Jesus. Both genealogies contain significant discrepancies against the Old Testament genealogies and, needless to say, neither account is likely to be historically accurate.