Genesis
10 generations from Adam to Noah — tracking God's image through a cursed world
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221 generations across 20 chapters — from Adam to Jesus, with every branch, exile, and unlikely hero along the way.
Every genealogy traces how God kept His promise through messy, broken, unlikely people. The names aren't filler — they're the receipts.
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The first families — from creation to the flood to the nations spreading across the earth.
Genesis
10 generations from Adam to Noah — tracking God's image through a cursed world
Genesis
Table of Nations — every ancient people traced back to Noah's three sons
Genesis
Shem to Abraham — 10 generations narrowing from the flood to the covenant
Abraham, Isaac, Jacob — the family line God chose to build a nation from.
Genesis
Abraham's descendants — the covenant line splits through Isaac, while Ishmael builds 12 tribes
Genesis
Esau's full family tree — wives, sons, chiefs, and the kings of Edom
Genesis
Jacob's entire family moving to Egypt — 70 people total, organized by the 12 sons
The priestly and tribal lines forged during slavery and liberation.
Exodus
Levi's family tree — three branches, with the Kohath line leading to Moses and Aaron
Tribal counts and clan leaders organized for 40 years of desert wandering.
Numbers
First census of Israel at Sinai — 12 tribes counted for military service, Levi excluded
Numbers
Second census of Israel on the plains of Moab — new generation counted 40 years after Sinai
Royal bloodlines, priestly successions, and the families that built (and broke) Israel.
1 Chronicles
David's royal family — sons born in Hebron and Jerusalem, the kings of Judah from Solomon to exile, and post-exile descendants through Zerubbabel
Ruth
10 generations from Perez to David — the line that connects Ruth and Boaz to Israel's greatest king
1 Chronicles
Adam to Edom — the whole human family tree narrowing to Abraham, then branching through his sons
1 Chronicles
Judah's family tree — from Israel's twelve sons through Perez, Hezron, and Ram to David, with side branches through Caleb and Jerahmeel
1 Chronicles
Judah's clans continued (including the prayer of Jabez) and Simeon's tribal expansion
1 Chronicles
Reuben, Gad, and the half-tribe of Manasseh — the Transjordan tribes who rose and fell
1 Chronicles
The Levites — Israel's priestly tribe. Three branches serving the tabernacle and temple
1 Chronicles
Northern tribes roster — Issachar, Benjamin, Naphtali, Manasseh, Ephraim, and Asher
1 Chronicles
Benjamin's detailed genealogy and King Saul's royal line
The lineage that ends at Jesus — traced two ways, both pointing to the same person.
Matthew
Three sets of 14 generations from Abraham to Jesus
Luke
77 generations from Jesus back to Adam — tracing through Nathan, not Solomon
221 generations. 20 genealogy chapters. One continuous thread from the first human to the Messiah. The Bible's family records aren't decoration — they're proof that God keeps His promises across millennia.