The first genealogy we see in the Bible is ADAM to NOAH (Genesis 5).
However, as we progress through these studies, you will see that Biblical names and genealogies are not only important for historical and cultural veracity, but they’re loaded with insight, meaning, and sometimes, downright supernatural design. At first glance, let’s face it, they’re boring. Rather, we look at traditional and tested examples of supernatural design and integration that leap from the pages of God’s Word.īible Codes throughout the Bible are based on all sorts of mundane things, including names and genealogies.
We are not focused on the controversial and media-hyped topics such as hidden Equidistant Letter Sequencing (ELS), made popular in Michael Drosnin’s book, The Bible Code. Bible Codes are Fascinating Examples of Supernatural Designīible Codes are models, types and codes in the Bible, which show evidence of divine integration throughout 66 separate books, written by 40 distinct authors over nearly 1,600 years.