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The gospel author who traces Jesus' lineage back to Adam is Luke, in the Gospel of Luke chapter 3.
Luke's Gospel traces the lineage back to Adam.
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.
The Gospel of Luke traces Jesus' lineage through the line of David all the way to the first man, Adam. (Luke 3.23-38)
In Matthew's Gospel, Jesus was a descendant of Solomon, son of David, through the male line from his father Joseph.In Luke's Gospel, Jesus was a descendant of Nathan, also a son of David, through the male line from his father Joseph.Looking carefully at the two different accounts, we can see that Jesus was also the descendant of the great Zorobabel, son of Salathiel, but Matthew says that Zorobabel's grandfather was Jechonias, while Luke says that Zorobabel's grandfather was Neri. In other words, neither author knew. They were both writing Christian midrash.
The word gospel means "good news" which is the story of Jesus. The gospel is the story of the death, burial, and resurrection of Jesus Christ. There can't be a gospel that does not have the story of Jesus in it unless in is an incorrect gospel. All of the gospel books in the KJV Bible - Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John - have the story of Jesus in them.
A:The gospels provide some guidance on this, although contradictory.Scholars say that Mark's Gospel, the first New Testament gospel to be written, portrays Jesus as an ordinary man who became the Son of God at his baptism.The Gospels of Mathew and Luke both make it clear that Jesus became the Son of God from his conception. The narratives indicate that this was the beginning of Jesus' existence.John's Gospel differs quite markedly from the others and says (John 1:2) that Jesus was with God in the beginning.
The nativity scenes that are seen in various forms during December come primarily for the stories in Matthew's gospel in the New Testament. They are about the birth of Jesus.
Yes! Jesus Christ reigns for all eternity!
Mary Magdalene preached the gospel of Jesus.
The Aquarian Gospel of Jesus the Christ was created in 1908.