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The Gospels contain very few passages which give rise
to a confrontation with modern scientific data.
Firstly however, there are many descriptions referring
to miracles which hardly lend themselves to scientific
comment. The miracles concern people-the healing of the
sick (the insane, blind, paralytic ; the healing of
lepers, resurrection of Lazarus) as well as the purely
material phenomena that lie outside the laws of nature
(the description of Jesus walking on water that held him
up, the changing of the water into wine). Sometimes a
natural phenomenom is seen from an unusual angle by
virtue of the fact that the time element is very short:
the immediate calming of the storm, the instantaneous
withering of the fig tree, the miracle catch of fish, as
if all the fish in the sea had come together at exactly
the place where the nets were cast.
God intervenes in His Omnipotent Power in all these
episodes. One need not be surprised by what He is able to
achieve; by human standards it is stupendous, but for Him
it is not. This does not at all mean that a believer
should forget science. A belief in divine miracles and in
science is quite compatible: one is on a divine scale,
the other on a human one.
Personally, I am very willing to believe that Jesus
cured a leper, but I cannot accept the fact that a text
is declared authentic and inspired by God when I read
that only twenty generations existed between the first
man and Abraham. Luke says this in his Gospel (3, 23-28).
We shall see in a moment the reasons that show why Luke's
text, like the Old Testament text on the same theme, is
quite simply a product of human imagination.
The Gospels (like the Qur'an) give us the same
description of Jesus's biological origins. The formation
of Jesus in the maternal uterus occurred in circumstances
which lay outside the laws of nature common to all human
beings. The ovule produced by the mother's ovary did not
need to join with a spermatozoon, which should have come
from his father, to form the embryo and hence a viable
infant. The phenomenon of the birth of a normal
individual without the fertilizing action of the male is
called 'parthenogenesis'. In the animal kingdom,
parthenogenesis can be observed under certain conditions.
This is true for various insects, certain invertebrates
and, very occasionally, a select breed of bird. By way of
experiment, it has been possible, for example, in certain
mammals (female rabbits), to obtain the beginnings of a
development of the ovule into an embryo at an extremely
rudimentary stage without any intervention of
spermatozoon. It was not possible to go any further
however and an example of complete parthenogenesis,
whether experimental or natural, is unknown. Jesus is an
unique case. Mary was a virgin mother. She preserved her
virginity and did not have any children apart from Jesus.
Jesus is a biological exception. [ The Gospels sometimes refer to Jesus's 'brothers'
and 'sisters' (Matthew l3, 46-60 and 64-68; Mark 6, 1-6;
John 7, 3 and 2, 12). The Greek words used, adelphoi and adelphai, indeed signify biological brothers and sisters;
they are most probably a defective translation of the
original Semitic words which just mean 'kin'. in this
instance they were perhaps cousins.]
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The two genealogies contained in Matthew's and Luke's
Gospels give rise to problems of verisimilitude, and
conformity with scientific data, and hence authenticity.
These problems are a source of great embarrassment to
Christian commentators because the latter refuse to see
in them what is very obviously the product of human
imagination. The authors of the Sacerdotal text of
Genesis, Sixth century B.C., had already been inspired by
imagination for their genealogies of the first men. It
again inspired Matthew and Luke for the data they did not
take from the Old Testament.
One must straight away note that the male genealogies
have absolutely no relevance to Jesus. Were one to give a
genealogy to Mary's only son, who was without a
biological father, it would have to be the genealogy of
his mother Mary.
Here is the text of the Revised Standard Version of
the Bible, 1952:
The genealogy according to Matthew is at the beginning
of his Gospel:
"THE BOOK OF THE GENEALOGY OF
JESUS CHRIST,
THE SON OF DAVID, THE SON OF ABRAHAM.
Abraham
Isaac
Jacob
Judah
Perez
Hezron
Ram
Amminadab
Nahshon
Salmon
Boaz
Obed
Jesse
David
Solomon
Rehoboam
Abijah
Asa
Jehoshaphat
Joram
Uzziah
Jotham
Ahaz
Hezekiah
Manasseh
Amos
Josiah
Jechoniah
Shealtiel
Zerubbabel
Abiud
Eliakim
Azor
Zadok
Achim
Eliud
Eleazar
Matthan
Jacob
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was the
father of
was the father of
was the father of
was the father of
was the father of
was the father of
was the father of
was the father of
was the father of
was the father of
was the father of
was the father of
was the father of
was the father of
was the father of
was the father of
was the father of
was the father of
was the father of
was the father of
was the father of
was the father of
was the father of
was the father of
was the father of
was the father of
was the father ofat the time of the deportation to Babylon.
After the deportation to Babylon:
was the father of
was the father of
was the father of
was the father of
was the father of
was the father of
was the father of
was the father of
was the father of
was the father of
was the father of
was the father of
of whom Jesus was born, who
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Isaac
Jacob
Judah and his brothers
Perez and Zerah by Tamar
Hezron
Ram
Amminadab
Nahshon
Salmon
Boaz by Rahab
Obed by Ruth
Jesse
David the king
Solomon by the wife of Uriah
Rehoboam
Abijah
Asa
Jehoshaphat
Joram
Uzziah
Jotham
Ahaz
Hezekiah
Manasseh
Amos
Josiah
Jechoniah and his brothers
Shealtiel
Zerubbabel
Abiud
Eliakim
Azor
Zadok
Achim
Eliud
Eleazar
Matthan
Jacob
Joseph the husband of Mary
was called Christ.
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So all the generations from Abraham to David were
fourteen generations, and from David to the deportation
to Babylon fourteen generations, and from the deportation
to Babylon to the Christ fourteen generations".
(Matthew, I, 1-17)
The genealogy given by Luke (3, 23-38) is different
from Matthew. The text reproduced here is from the
Revised Standard Version of the Bible:
"Jesus, when he began his ministry, was about
thirty years of age, being the son (as was supposed) of
Joseph, the son of Heli, the son of Matthat, the son of
Levi, the son of Melchi, the son of Jannai, the son of
Joseph, the son of Mattathias, the son of Amos, the son
of Nahum, the son of Esli, the son of Naggai, the son of Maath, the son of
Mattathias, the son of Semein, the son
of Josech, the son of Joda, the son of Joanan, the son of Rhesa, the son of
Zerubbabel, the son of Shealtiel, the
son of Neri, the sOn of Melchi, the son of Addi, the son
of Cosam, the son of Elmadam, the son of Er, the son of
Joshua, the son of Eliezer, the son of Jorim, the son of Matthat, the son of Levi, the son of Simeon, the son of
Judah, the son of Joseph, the son of Jonam, the son of Eliakim, the son of
Melea, the son of Menna, the son of Mattatha, the son of Nathan, the son of David, the son of
Jesse, the son of Obed, the son of Boaz, the son of Sala,
the son of Nahshon, the son of Amminadab, the son of
Admin, the son of Ami, the SOD of Hezron, the son of
Perez, the son of Judah, the son of Jacob, the son of
Isaac, the son of Abraham, the son of Terah, the son of Nahor, the son of
Serug, the son of Reu, the son of Peleg, the son of Eber, the son of
Shelah, the son of Cainan, the son of Arphaxad, the son of Shem, the son of
Noah, the son of Lamech, the son of Methuselah, the son
of Enoch, the son of Jared, the son of Mahalaleel, the
son of Cainan, the son of Enos, the son of Seth, the son
of Adam, the son of God."
The genealogies appear more clearly when presented in
two tables, one showing the genealogy before David and
the other after him.
GENEALOGY OF JESUS, BEFORE DAVID
According to
Marrhew Matthew
does not mention
any name before Abraham.
- Abraham
- Isaac
- Jacob
- Judah
- Perez
- Hezron
- Ram
- Amminadab
- Nahshon
- Salmon
- Boaz
- Obed
- Jesse
- David
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Accordingto Luke
- Adam
- Seth
- Enos
- Cainan
- Mahalaleel
- Jared
- Enoch
- Methuselah
- Lamech
- Noah
- Shem
- Arphaxad
- Cainan
- Shelah
- Eber
- Peleg
- Reu
- Serug
- Nahor
- Terah
- Abraham
- Isaac
- Jacob
- Judah
- Perez
- Hezron
- Arni
- Admin
- Amminadab
- Nahshon
- Sala
- Boaz
- Obed
- Jesse
- David
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GENEALOGY OF JESUS, AFTER DAVID
According to Matthew 14
David
15 Solomon
16 Rehoboam
17 Abijah
18 Am
19 Jehoshaphat
20 Joram
21 Uzziah
22 Jotham
23 Ahaz
24 Hezekiah
25 Manasseh
26 Amos
27 Josiah
28 Jechoniah
Deportation to Babylon
29 Shealtiel
30 Zerubbabel
31 Abiud
32 Eliakim
33 Azor
34 Zadok
35 Achim
36 Eliud
37 Eleazar
38 Matthan
39 Jacob
40 Joseph
41 Jesus
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According to Luke 35
David
36 Nathan
37 Mattatha
38 Menna
39 Melea
40 Eliakim
41 Jonam
42 Joseph
43 Judah
44 Simeon
45 Levi
46 Matthat
47 Jorim
48 Eliezer
49 Joshua
50 Er
51 Elmadam
52 Cosam
53 Addi
54 Melchi
55 Neri
56 Shealtiel
57 Zerubbabel
58 Rhesa
59 Joanan
60 Joda
61 Josech
62 Semein
63 Mattathias
64 Maath
65 Naggai
66 Esli
67 Nahum
68 Amos
69 Mattathias
70 Joseph
71 Jannai
72 Melchi
73 Levi
74 Matthat
75 Heli
76 Joseph
77 Jesus
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Apart from variations in spelling, the following must
be mentioned:
The genealogy has disappeared from the Codex Bezae
Cantabrigiensis, a very important Six century
manuscript in both Greek and Latin. It has completely
disappeared from the Greek text and also a large part of
the Latin text. It may quite simply be that the first
pages were lost.
One must note here the great liberties Matthew has
taken with the Old Testament. He has pared down the
genealogies for the sake of a strange numerical
demonstration (which, in the end, he does not give, as we
shall see).
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Before Abraham: Luke mentions 20 names; the Old
Testament only mentions 19 (see table of Adam's
descendants in the Old Testament section of this work).
After Arphaxad (No. 12) , Luke has added a person called
Cainan (No. 13), who is not mentioned in Genesis as the
son of Arphaxad.
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From Abraham to David: 14 to 16 names are found
according to the manuscripts.
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From David to Jesus.
The most important variation is the Codex Bezae
Cantabrigiensis which attributes to Luke a whimsical
genealogy taken from Matthew and to which the scribe has
added five names. Unfortunately, the genealogy of
Matthew's Gospel has disappeared from this manuscript, so
that comparison is no longer possible.
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We are here faced with two different genealogies
having one essential point in common, i.e. they both pass
via Abraham and David. To make this examination easier,
we shall separate the whole into three critical sections:
-From Adam to Abraham.
-From Abraham to David.
-From David to Jesus.
Matthew began his genealogy with Abraham so we are not
concerned with his text here. Luke alone provides
information on Abraham's ancestors going back to Adam: 20
names, 19 of which are to be found in Genesis (chapters
4, 5 and 11), as has already been stated.
Is it possible to believe that only 19 or 20
generations of human beings existed before Abraham? The
problem has been examined in the discussion of the Old
Testament. If one looks at the table of Adam's
descendants, based on Genesis and giving figures for the
time element contained in the Biblical text, one can see
that roughly nineteen centuries passed between man's
appearance on earth and the birth of Abraham. Today it is
estimated that Abraham Was alive in circa 1850 B.C. and
it has been deduced from this that the information
provided by the Old Testament places man's appearance on
earth at roughly thirty-eight centuries B.C. Luke was
obviously guided by these data for his Gospel. He
expresses a blatant untruth for having copied them down
and we have already seen the decisive historical
arguments leading to this statement.
The idea that Old Testament data are unacceptable in
the present day is duly admitted; they belong to the
'obsolete' material referred to by the Second Vatican
Council. The fact, however that the Gospels take up the
same scientifically incompatible data is an extremely
serious observation which may be used to oppose those who
defend the historical accuracy of the Gospel texts.
Commentators have quickly sensed this danger. They try
to get round the difficulty by saying that it is not a
complete genealogical tree, that the evangelist has
missed names out. They claim that this was done quite
deliberately, and that his sole "intention was to
establish the broad lines or essential elements of a line
of descent based on historical reality." [ A. Tricot, Little Dictionary of the New Testament
(Petit Dictionnaire du Nouveau Testament in "La
Sainte Bible", Desclée, Pub. Paris)] There is
nothing in the texts that permits them to form this
hypothesis. In the text it says quite clearly: A was the
father of B, or B was the son of A. For the part
preceding Abraham in particular, the evangelist draws
moreover on the Old Testament where the genealogies are
set out in the following form:
When X had lived n years, he became the father of Y .
. . When Y had lived n years, he became the father
of Z. . . .
There is therefore no break.
The part of Jesus's genealogy according to Luke, which
precedes Abraham, is not acceptable in the light of
modern knowledge.
2. The Period from Abraham to David.
Here the two genealogies tally (or almost), excepting
one or two names: the difference may be explained by
copiers' errors.
Does this mean that the evangelists are to be
considered accurate?
History situates David at circa 1000 B.C. and Abraham
at 1800-1860 B.C.: 14 to 16 generations for roughly eight
centuries. Can one believe this? One might say that for
this period the Gospel texts are at the very limit of the
admissible.
It is a great pity, but unfortunately the texts no
longer tally at all when it comes to establishing
Joseph's line from David, and figuratively speaking, Jesus's, for the Gospel.
Leaving aside the obvious falsification in the Codex
Bezae Cantabrigiensis concerning Luke, let us now
compare what the two most venerable manuscripts have to
offer: the Codex Vaticanus and the Codex
Sinaiticus.
In the genealogy according to Luke 42 names are placed
after David (No. 35) down to Jesus (No. 77). In the
genealogy according to Matthew 27 are mentioned after
David (No. 14) down to Jesus (No. 41). The number of
(fictitious) ancestors given to Jesus after David is
therefore different in the two Gospels. The names
themselves are different as well.
This is not all.
Matthew tells us that he discovered how Jesus's
genealogy split up after Abraham into three groups of 14
names; first group from Abraham to David; second from
David to the deportation to Babylon; third from the
deportation to Jesus. His text does indeed contain 14
names in the first two groups, but in the third-from the
deportation to Jesus-there are only 13 and not 14, as
expected; the table shows that Shealthiel is No. 29 and
Jesus No. 41. There is no variation of Matthew that gives
14 names for this group.
To enable himself to have 14 names in his second
group, Matthew takes very great liberties with the Old
Testament text. The names of the first six descendants of
David (No. 15 to 20) tally with the data in the Old
Testament, but the three descendants of Ioram (No. 20),
given in Chronicles 11 of the Bible as Ahaziah, Joash,
and Amaziah, are suppressed by Matthew. Elsewhere,
Jechoniah (No. 28) is for Matthew the son of Josiah,
although Kings II of the Bible tells us that Eliakim
comes between Josiah and Jechoniah.
It may be seen from this that Matthew has altered the
genealogical lines in the Old Testament to present an
artificial group of 14 names between David and the
deportation to Babylon. There is also the fact that one
name is missing in Matthew's third group, so that none of
the present-day Gospel texts contains the 42 names
mentioned. What is surprising is not so much the
existence of the omission itself (explained perhaps by a
very old scribe's error that was subsequently
perpetuated), but the almost total silence of
commentators on this subject. How can one miss this
omission? W. Trilling breaks this pious conspiracy of
silence in his book The Gospel According to Matthew
(L'Evangile selon Matthieu) [ Pub.
Desclée, coll. 'Parole et Prière', Paris.] by devoting one line to
it. It is a fact which is of considerable importance
because the commentators of this Gospel, including the
Ecumenical Translation and Cardinal Daniélou among
others, stress the great symbolical significance of
Matthew's 3 x 14. This significance was so important for
the evangelist that he suppressed Biblical names without
hesitation to arrive at his numerical demonstration.
To make this hold good, commentators will, no doubt,
construct some reassuring statements of an apologetic
nature, justifying the fact that names have been craftily
suppressed and carefully avoiding the omission that
undermines the whole point of what the evangelist was
trying to show.
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In his book The Gospels of Childhood (1967) Les
Evangiles de l'Enfance) [ Pub. Editions du
Seuil, Paris.], Cardinal Daniélou invests
Matthew's 'numerical schematisation' with a symbolic
value of paramount importance since it is this that
establishes Jesus's ancestry, which is asserted also by
Luke. For him Luke and Matthew are 'historians' who have
completed their 'historical investigations', and the ,
genealogy' has been 'taken down from the archives of
Jesus family'. It must be added here that the archives
have never been found. [ Although the author assures us that he knows of
the existence of these supposed family archives from the
Ecclesiastic History by Eusebius Pamphili (about whose
respectability much could be said), it is difficult to
see why Jesus's family should have two genealogical trees
that were necessarily different just because each of the
two so-called 'historians' gave a genealogy substantially
different from the other concerning the names of those
who figure among Jesus's ancestors.] Cardinal Daniélou condemns
out of hand anyone who criticizes his point of view.
"It is the Western mentality, ignorance of
Judeo-Christianity and the absence of a Semitic outlook
that have made so many experts in exegesis loose their
way when interpreting the Gospels. They have projected
their own categories onto them: (sic) Platonic,
Cartesian, Hegelian and Heideggerian. It is easy to see
why everything is mixed up in their minds." Plato,
Descartes, Hegel and Heidegger obviously have nothing to
do with the critical attitude one may have towards these
whimsical genealogies.
In his search for the meaning of Matthew's 3 x 14, the
author expands on strange suppositions. They are worth
quoting here: "What may be meant are the common ten
weeks of the Jewish Apocalypse. The first three,
corresponding to the time from Adam to Abraham, would
have been subtracted; seven weeks of years would then
remain, the first six would correspond to the six times
seven representing the three groups of fourteen and
leaving the seventh, started by Christ with whom the
seventh age of the world begins." Explanations like
this are beyond comment!
The commentators of the Ecumenical Translation-New
Testament-also give us numerical variations of an
apologetic nature which are equally unexpected: For
Matthew's 3 x 14:
a) 14 could be the numerical total of the 3 consonants
in the Hebrew name David (D= 4, V= 6), hence 4+6+4= 14.
b) 3 x 14 = 6 x 7 and "Jesus came at the end of
the sixth week of Holy history beginning with
Abraham."
For Luke, this translation gives 77 names from Adam to
Jesus, allowing the number 7 to come up again, this time
by dividing 77 by 7 (7x 11= 77). It is quite apparent
that for Luke the number of variations where words are
added or subtracted is such that a list of 77 names is
completely artificial. It does however have the advantage
of adapting itself to these numerical games.
The genealogies of Jesus as they appear in the Gospels
may perhaps be the subject that has led Christian
commentators to perform their most characteristic feats
of dialectic acrobatics, on par indeed with Luke's and
Matthew's imagination.
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