Monthly Archives: February 2026

How many generations were there between David and Jehoiachin?

The gospel of Matthew claims that there were 14 generations from Abraham to David, 14 from David to the exile to Babylon, and 14 from the exile to the Messiah. There is some ambiguity in that statement: When you say there were N generations from X to Y, are you counting both X and Y as part of those N generations, or are you counting just one of them, or neither of them? Matthew does list the generations he’s talking about, though, so we can look at his list to get a better idea of what exactly he means.

Looking at that list of ancestors, it seems like the author intends to count both the first and the last person as part of the group of 14 generations. We can also see that he is including the last generation in one group of 14 as the first generation in the next group of 14. And that when Matthew talks about the generation of the exile to Babylon, he’s talking about Jeconiah, AKA Jehoiachin.

But there’s a problem with Matthew’s list: The second group actually contains 15 generations, not 14. You could count it as 14 if you interpret that number as a difference between generations, rather than inclusive of both the first and last person listed, but then you would have to say the other groups were just 13 generations each. Whichever way you count them, Matthew’s second group does not have the same number of generations as his first and third, contrary to what he claims after listing them.

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Discrimination in the Bible

What does the Bible have to say about prejudice and discrimination and equality and stuff? Quite a bit, but most of the time, the views it promotes are absurdly immoral. Supposedly, God doesn’t show any partiality, and the Bible says people shouldn’t show partiality or favoritism, either. But when the Bible does actually teach equality, it’s usually only to say that everyone should be treated equally badly.

I’ve written blog posts cataloging everything the Bible has to say about how people were, or should be, treated differently based on their…

  • Nationality (Mostly it’s insanely anti-Gentile.)
  • Sex (Mostly it’s unbelievably anti-woman.)
  • Kinship (How you get treated in the Bible too often depends on who you’re related to, instead of being determined by anything about you. God occasionally claims to be against this, but he clearly isn’t.)
  • Sexual orientation (The Bible doesn’t have a lot to say about this, but what it does say is extremely anti-gay.)
  • Species (God doesn’t seem to think much of animals, and sometimes he wants people to be treated that badly too.)
  • Age (Biased against younger people most of the time.)
  • Religion (Mostly it demonizes anyone who isn’t Jewish or Christian. And then Paul demonizes the Jews too. Since religions are beliefs, religions can be wrong, so “religious intolerance” isn’t always a bad thing. But the kind in the Bible is generally the bad kind.)
  • Occupation (The Bible has lots of different opinions and rules, most of them pretty awful, about what rights rulers, slaves, prostitutes, priests, and people of other professions should or shouldn’t have.)
  • Class (No consistency on whether being rich or poor is worse.)
  • Tribe (The Levites are a special tribe that God wants everybody else to give free food and money to, according to Moses the Levite.)

Now, what other forms of discrimination does the Bible mention?

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The Parable of the Gardening Eagles

An eagle planted a vine. The vine grew toward the eagle, until another eagle came and watered the vine, and then the vine grew toward that eagle. Then some people came and pulled the vine out of the ground, and it withered and died.

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