14.
s from Matthew's Gospel and Luke's Gospel have been given for both the Captivity in Egypt and for the Babylonian Exile.Matthew's GospelMatthew's Gospel gives 38 generations from father to son, between the patriarch Judah and Jesus. It gives 14 generations between Jechonias, father of Salathiel (at the start of the Babylonian Exile), and Jesus (KJV).Luke's GospelLuke's Gospel gives 53 generations from father to son, between the patriarch Judah and Jesus. It gives 23 generations between Neri, father of Salathiel (at the start of the Babylonian Exile), and Jesus (KJV).There were 14 generations from the exile and captivity in Babylon to the birth of Jesus:-Mat 1:12-17 [Good News Bible] From the time after the exile in Babylon to the birth of Jesus, the following ancestors are listed: Jehoiachin, Shealtiel, Zerubbabel, Abiud, Eliakim, Azor, Zadok, Achim, Eliud, Eleazar, Matthan, Jacob, and Joseph, who married Mary, the mother of Jesus, who was called the Messiah. [v. 13] (SEE 1:12) [v. 14] (SEE 1:12) [v. 15] (SEE 1:12) [v. 16] (SEE 1:12) [v. 17] So then, there were fourteen generations from Abraham to David, and fourteen from David to the exile in Babylon, and fourteen from then to the birth of the Messiah.
Jesus was never in exile at any point in his life.
The return from exile predated Jesus by over five centuries.
Jesus did not rebuild the temple.
The Bible= Judaism and christianity.... the bible book of exodus............
Do you mean exodus? It's in the book of Exodus.
No, there are no direct references to Jesus in the Book of Lamentations in the Bible. Lamentations is a collection of poetic laments over the destruction of Jerusalem, traditionally attributed to the prophet Jeremiah. The focus is on the suffering of the people and their cry for restoration.
The Babylonian exile is the name given to the period of time in The Bible where the Babylonians captured many of the Israeli people and made them slaves.
A book of the bible did not allow anything, people did. If the question intends to ask: "In what book of the Bible does it discuss the return of the Jews from exile and the rebuilding of the Temple in Jerusalem?" there are two answers. The Book of Ezra and the Book of Nehemiah discuss this.
There is, of course, no hidden verse in Matthew's genealogy of Jesus, but there is arguably a hidden meaning. Matthew wanted to demonstrate that Jesus was destined for greatness. To do this, he produced a genealogy that 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. This continued from the time of the Exile to Jesus, but during these generations we have no other genealogy with which to compare Matthew's. Fourteen was regarded as a magic number, and the apparent coincidence that each fourteenth generation in this genealogy was a great man in Jewish history, meant that Jesus would also be a great man. Matthew wrote; ".....in all, forty-two generations (1: 17) but only 41 are listed, so there must be a missing or hidden verse somewhere.
According to main Bible Scholars the Bible first started to be written down around the time of the exile so around 500 B.C.E. Meanwhile the New Testament was around 40 years after Jesus was Crucified,but the official Books of the Bible were final made at the council of Nicaea. With many books being left out like the book of Enoch , the Gospels of Mary,Thomas, and Judas etc.
Jesus abraham joseph