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  1. After Zoker, James and Simeon the son of Clopas the family of Jesus disappears into the obscurity that envelops the subsequent history of Jewish Christianity in Palestine. Only one more member of the family may be identifiable.

  2. One hundred and twenty years is the biblical limit on human life (Genesis 6:3), which no one after Moses may exceed (Deuteronomy 34:7), but which someone as righteous as Moses might equal. Hegesippus’s account traces the work of Jesusfamily into a third generation.

  3. Dec 19, 2015 · After Jesus’ death his followers were gathered in Jerusalem and “Mary, the mother of Jesus with his brothers” were part of the group—but no Joseph (Acts 1:14). The silence seems to indicate that something has happened to Joseph.

  4. Hegesippus, (c. 110 AD—180 AD), a 2nd-century Christian chronicler of early church history, mentions the two grandsons of Jude, a half-brother of Jesus, who lived in Rome during the reign of Emperor Domitian (81—96). The names of the two grandsons of Jude were supposedly Zoker and James, according to notes in the the Bodleian Library, one ...

  5. In first century Jerusalem, Jesus of Nazareth was crucified as a heretic. He had no wife and no children, but he did leave behind a family – one that can be traced for more than a century after his death. “It's possible to actually do something of a primitive family tree of Jesus,” says Dr. Paul Maier, the author of The Constantine Codex.

  6. Accounts are sketchy as to what happened to the brothers and sisters of Jesus in his family tree after His resurrection. The Bible does offer, however, clues regarding what may have happened to his mother Mary.

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  8. James, probably the oldest of Jesus' brothers, made the decision at the Jerusalem Council that Gentile Christians did not have to obey ancient Jewish laws.

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