Question: "Why are Jesus' genealogies in Matthew and Luke so different?"
                              
Answer: Jesus' genealogy is given in two places in Scripture: Matthew 1 and Luke 3:23-38. Matthew traces the genealogy from Jesus to Abraham. Luke traces the genealogy from Jesus to Adam. However, there is good reason to believe that Matthew and Luke are in fact tracing entirely different genealogies. For example, Matthew gives Joseph's father as Jacob (Matthew 1:16), while Luke gives Joseph's father as Heli (Luke 3:23). Matthew traces the line through David's son Solomon (Matthew 1:6), while Luke traces the line through David's son Nathan (Luke 3:31). In fact, between David and Jesus, the only names the genealogies have in common are Shealtiel and Zerubbabel (Matthew 1:12; Luke 3:27). 
                              Some  point to these differences as evidence of errors in the Bible. However,  the Jews were meticulous record keepers, especially in regard to  genealogies. It is inconceivable that Matthew and Luke could build two  entirely contradictory genealogies of the same lineage. Again, from  David through Jesus, the genealogies are completely different. Even the  reference to Shealtiel and Zerubbabel likely refer to different  individuals of the same names. Matthew gives Shealtiel's father as  Jeconiah while Luke gives Shealtiel's father as Neri. It would be normal  for a man named Shealtiel to name his son Zerubbabel in light of the  famous individuals of those names (see the books of Ezra and Nehemiah).
                              One explanation, held by the church historian Eusebius, is that Matthew 
is  tracing the primary, or biological, lineage while Luke is taking into  account an occurrence of "levirate marriage." If a man died without  having any sons, it was tradition for the man's brother to marry the  widow and have a son who would carry on the deceased man's name.  According to Eusebius's theory, Melchi (Luke 3:24) and Matthan (Matthew  1:15) were married at different times to the same woman (tradition names  her Estha). This would make Heli (Luke 3:23) and Jacob (Matthew 1:15)  half-brothers. Heli then died without a son, and so his (half-)brother  Jacob married Heil's widow, who gave birth to Joseph. This would make  Joseph the "son of Heli" legally and the "son of Jacob" biologically.  Thus, Matthew and Luke are both recording the same genealogy (Joseph's),  but Luke follows the legal lineage while Matthew follows the  biological.
                              
                              Most  conservative Bible scholars today take a different view, namely, that  Luke is recording Mary's genealogy and Matthew is recording Joseph's.  Matthew is following the line of Joseph (Jesus' legal father), through  David's son Solomon, while Luke is following the line of Mary (Jesus'  blood relative), through David's son Nathan. Since there was no Greek  word for "son-in-law," Joseph was called the "son of Heli" by marriage  to Mary, Heli's daughter. Through either Mary's or Joseph's line, Jesus  is a descendant of David and therefore eligible to be the Messiah.  Tracing a genealogy through the mother's side is unusual, but so was the  virgin birth. Luke's explanation is that Jesus was the son of Joseph,  "so it was thought" (Luke 3:23).
                              
                              COMMENT:
There  are more sick evidences that prove that there is no such thing as the  truth revealed in the bible - there are only sick lies and the sick  deceptions revealed in the bible. Specially as the bible has been  written by inspired superstitious primitives on earth of God in heaven!                                                            Poch Suzara
                                      
                                          
                                   
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