Irrelevant. The OP says there were only two tribes.
There were 12. Fact.
Why can't you answer the question?
Was the House of Israel and the House of Judah still divided in the first century?
Why are you so afraid to answer?
Irrelevant. The OP says there were only two tribes.
There were 12. Fact.
Still 12 tribes in the first century. Fact.
Irrelevant, there were still 12 distinct tribes around.
As I pointed out earlier, though the ten tribes were dispersed long before the first century, the Jews (i.e. Judah, Levi and Benjamin) still referred to themselves as "house of Israel". We do so to this day. So the phrase itself doesn't mean all 12 tribes.
To be a member of an ethnic tribe today you would need to have 100% of that tribe's DNA.
As I pointed out earlier, though the ten tribes were dispersed long before the first century, the Jews (i.e. Judah, Levi and Benjamin) still referred to themselves as "house of Israel". We do so to this day. So the phrase itself doesn't mean all 12 tribes.
So were there 12 ethnic tribes in the 1st century or not?
"House of Israel" is a tricky and confusing phrase.
Prior to the split, the phrase is found in Exodus with Moses, and refers to all 12 tribes.
After the split, the phrase refers only to the 10 tribes from the Northern nation of Israel, and many times in contrast to the House of Judah.
In all likelihood, the Israelites from the 12 different tribes didn't look like each other.
Jacob had 4 children to Rachel and Lea's servants. Most likely, the servants were black or Egyptian.
Joseph married an Egyptian, which means his two sons Ephraim and Manasseh were half-Egyptian.
No there were only two ethnic tribes in the first century being Judah and Benjamin the others were gone. Judah and Benjamin as distinct tribes are gone today. To be a member of an ethnic tribe today you would need to have 100% of that tribe's DNA. If I made a claim of being a member of Levi like chair did and the DNA test showed any other ethnicity then the line was broken millenia ago.
... If I made a claim of being a member of Levi like chair did and the DNA test showed any other ethnicity then the line was broken millenia ago.
It goes by the father's line.
Why do most people who call themselves Jews today claim it is passed down through the maternal line?
In all likelihood, the Israelites from the 12 different tribes didn't look like each other.
Jacob had 4 children to Rachel and Lea's servants. Most likely, the servants were black or Egyptian.
Joseph married an Egyptian, which means his two sons Ephraim and Manasseh were half-Egyptian.
You have trouble with reading comprehension.
There weren't 12 tribes in the first century, HOWEVER, Jews then and now still refer to themselves as the House of Israel. One cannot take mention of the HOUSE OF ISRAEL to mean that there were 12 tribes at the time.
Should I repeat this in a larger font?
Made up.
Luke 2:36 (KJV)
James 1:1 (KJV)
It goes by the father's line. And guess what- you don't get to decide.