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For readers today, the “genealogies” (lists of names and relationships) are probably the most “so what?” parts of the Bible. But Luke made a key point with his genealogy, seen if we put it side by side with the list in Matthew 1. Matthew started Jesus’ lineage with Abraham, the father of the Hebrew nation. Luke came (verse 34) to Jacob, Isaac, Abraham—but went right on, all the way to “the son of Adam, the son of God.” The genealogy highlighted the sense of identity Jesus carried into his temptations. By saying “IF you are the Son of God,” the tempter asked, in effect, “Do you know who you are?” Because Jesus knew, he refused the temptation to try to prove his identity in self-serving ways.