annotated_annals/content/bible_journal/1chronicles_2:1-17.md

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title = "1 Chronicles 2:117"
date = "2023-08-30"
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### [Read the passage.](https://biblia.com/bible/esv/1Chronicles2.1-17)
The genealogy continues with the sons of Israel. However the Chronicler's focus
is the line of David, so only Judah's sons are listed afterwards. Let me just
say, the Bible doesn't pull any punches when it talks about how bad people are,
and the patriarchs aren't very good role models. Judah's most important sons in
this record are actually by his daughter-in-law Tamar. She tricked him into it,
but it worked because he thought she was a prostitute, which doesn't make him
sound any better.
Of the two sons of Tamar, Perez and his son Hezron are part of David's line, so
Zerah and his descendants are detailed first. The most famous of the Zerahites
was Achan, who took things from Jericho that were supposed to be devoted to the
Lord.
The sons of Hezron are given next, and this time David's ancestors come first.
From here, we aren't given any names besides direct decendants from Ram all the
way down to Jesse, the father of David. We also learn the names of David's
brothers, when we only get three of them in 1 Samuel. But there's a problem.
David is listed as the seventh son born to Jesse, but 1 Samuel mentions a few
times that David was the youngest of _eight_ sons. This is especially strange
because 1 Chronicles 27 mentions Elihu, David's brother, who isn't in this
list. How do we reconcile this while maintaining the truthfulness and inerrancy
of the inspired word of God? By splitting hairs and saying Elihu was Jesse's
son but not begotten by him. In other words, Elihu was adopted. He was would
have older than David, but maybe joined the family after David was born. When
Samuel journeyed to Bethlehem to anoint a new king, Jesse brought out seven
sons, including Elihu, but not David who was out tending the sheep.
No one ever talks about David's sisters, but apparently he had two. I learned
today that the commander of David's armies, Joab the son of Zeruiah, was thus
David's nephew. That puts a new color on all of their interactions in 2 Samuel,
particularly the incidents with Uriah and Absalom.
And you thought genealogies were boring.
* * *
Your goodness is so amazing that it can take our colossal screw-ups and make
them work into Your plan.