Josh Barzon Profile picture
Aug 29, 2025 11 tweets 4 min read Read on X
🧵 Who Was Melchizedek?
For centuries, Jewish & Christian writers have wondered about the mysterious priest-king of Salem in Genesis 14. I am convinced that he was none other than Noah’s son, Shem. Here’s the biblical and historical evidence 🧵👇🏼 Image
🧵 The Mystery of Melchizedek
Genesis 14 introduces Melchizedek, king of Salem & “priest of God Most High,” who blesses Abraham. No genealogy. No origin story. Hebrews 7 highlights this silence, calling him “without father, without mother, without genealogy.” Image
🧵 The Shem Connection
Jewish writings like Targum Onkelos & Genesis Rabbah identify Melchizedek with Shem. Why? Because Shem lived over 600 years (Gen 11:10–11) which was long enough to overlap Abraham by centuries. He would have still been alive in Abraham’s time. Image
🧵 The ‘Without Days’ Tradition
Hebrews 7:3 describes Melchizedek as “without beginning of days or end of life.” Some saw this as figurative. Since Shem outlived generations, he was “ancient” in the eyes of Abraham and the other Canaanites… appearing almost “timeless.” Image
🧵 Heir of Blessing
Genesis 9:26–27 records Noah’s blessing on Shem: “Blessed be the LORD, the God of Shem.” The priestly line was thought to flow through him. Therefore, Shem as Melchizedek fits the role of priest-king who blesses Abraham. Image
🧵 Priest of the Most High
Unlike the pagan kings around, Melchizedek worships the true God. If he was Shem, Noah’s son, he would naturally preserve true worship and pass it on… standing as a faithful priest amid Canaan’s corruption. Image
🧵 Salem = Jerusalem?
If Melchizedek was Shem, then Salem (later Jerusalem) becomes the place where Shem dwelt, foreshadowing the city of God’s dwelling. It links Noah’s covenant family directly to the land promised to Abraham. Image
🧵 A Bridge in Redemptive History
Shem → Melchizedek → Abraham. This view makes Shem the priestly bridge between Noah’s covenant & Abraham’s covenant. The blessing of the nations passes through him. Image
🧵 Not Without Objections
Others argue that Hebrews treats Melchizedek as a type of Christ, not an actual known figure like Shem. The silence of Scripture on genealogy is intentional. Not because it’s Shem, but to point to Christ’s eternal priesthood. Image
🧵 Why Melchizedek Matters
Whether Melchizedek was Shem or not, the mystery serves the same purpose: to foreshadow Christ. Like Melchizedek, Jesus is both Priest & King, blessing Abraham’s offspring and reigning forever in the true Jerusalem. Image
🧵 Thanks for Making it to the End!
If you enjoyed this thread please give it a share!

Also, give my account @joshuabarzon a follow for more content about theology, church history, Bible translations, and graphic design #barzonDESIGN

Sources + More Reading
• Gleason Archer, Encyclopedia of Bible Difficulties
• F.F. Bruce, The Epistle to the Hebrews
• George W.E. Nickelsburg, Jewish Literature Between the Bible and the Mishnah

• • •

Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to force a refresh
 

Keep Current with Josh Barzon

Josh Barzon Profile picture

Stay in touch and get notified when new unrolls are available from this author!

Read all threads

This Thread may be Removed Anytime!

PDF

Twitter may remove this content at anytime! Save it as PDF for later use!

Try unrolling a thread yourself!

how to unroll video
  1. Follow @ThreadReaderApp to mention us!

  2. From a Twitter thread mention us with a keyword "unroll"
@threadreaderapp unroll

Practice here first or read more on our help page!

More from @JoshuaBarzon

Feb 8
4 U.S. presidents have been assassinated.

What’s less known is that 14 others faced serious assassination attempts that failed.

I dug into these “assassination” stories, & they are fascinating. Scroll down to learn about the “near misses” that almost changed U.S. History.🧵👇🏼 Image
🧵 Andrew Jackson (1835)
The first assassination attempt on a sitting U.S. president. A would-be assassin fired two pistols at Jackson at point-blank range. Both misfired. Jackson then attacked him with his cane. Image
🧵 Abraham Lincoln (1865)
Shot by John Wilkes Booth at Ford’s Theatre during a performance. Lincoln died the next morning. Lincoln became the first American President to be assassinated. Image
Read 20 tweets
Jan 13
🧵 Forgotten Characters of the Bible
Shiprah & Puah, the Rebel Midwives

The Bible’s first account of civil disobedience appears during Israel’s captivity in Egypt. A godless tyrant issues a deadly command, and two unlikely women quietly defy him.

This is their story… 🧵⬇️ Image
🧵 Israel’s Growth & Pharaoh’s Fear
Exodus opens by emphasizing that Israel “multiplied and grew exceedingly strong” so that “the land was filled with them” (Exod. 1:7). What Scripture presents as covenant blessing, Pharaoh interprets as political danger. A people once welcomed now appear uncontrollable…. and threatening.Image
🧵 Slavery and the Fear of Revolt
Ancient empires depended on enslaved labor, but they also feared it. Large slave populations were inherently unstable. History shows repeated slave uprisings when numbers and conditions aligned. Pharaoh’s anxiety reflects a common imperial fear: that an oppressed people might one day turn their strength against their masters.Image
Read 12 tweets
Jan 7
🧵 Forgotten Characters of the Bible - Mephibosheth, the Forgotten Prince of Israel

Mephibosheth’s story in the Bible is short but powerful. It is a tale of tragedy, grace, & covenant faithfulness.

But above all of that… he points us to Christ. Here’s his story 🧵👇🏼 Image
🧵 Mephibosheth’s Family
Mephibosheth was the son of Jonathan and the grandson of King Saul (2 Sam. 4:4). But he was born into chaos. Saul’s reign was collapsing, marked by jealousy, disobedience, and war with the Philistines. David was the eminent king. Image
🧵 Mephibosheth’s Early Tragedy
At age 5, Mephibosheth’s father and Grandfather (Jonathan & Saul) were killed in battle. His nurse fled in panic. She dropped him, and he became permanently crippled in both feet (2 Sam. 4:4). The prince of Israel is now an outcast cripple. Image
Read 11 tweets
Dec 22, 2025
🧵The Silent Years: How 400 Years Set the Stage for Christ

Between the last words of Malachi & the opening line of Matthew lie 4 centuries of silence. No prophets. No Scripture. But everything that happens in between is essential for understanding Christmas & the New Testament👇🏼 Image
🧵 What “Silence” Really Means

The silent years do not mean God stopped acting. They mean God stopped sending prophets and adding Scripture. From roughly 430 BC to the early first century AD, no new revelation is given, but history is moving rapidly under divine providence. This time is often called the inter-testamental period.

⭐️ How this helps us understand the New Testament: When prophecy resumes in the Gospels, it carries the weight of centuries of anticipation.Image
🧵 The World the Old Testament Leaves Behind

When the Old Testament closes, Judah is under Persian rule. The temple has been rebuilt around 516 BC, but Israel remains politically weak. They are home, yet not free. Promises of restoration feel unfinished, creating a deep sense of waiting.

⭐️ How this helps us understand the New Testament: This unresolved tension explains why deliverance is a dominant theme in the Gospels.Image
Read 11 tweets
Dec 17, 2025
🧵 Before the Manger: Matthew’s Fascinating Genealogy of Christ

Matthew chapter 1 is one of the most theologically loaded paragraphs in the New Testament. Many skip it. Matthew expects you to slow down. Here’s what most people miss in this opening chapter of Scripture…👇🏼 Image
🧵 It is a legal and royal document, not just a family tree

Matthew is not giving a sentimental ancestry. He is presenting Jesus’ legal right to the throne of David.

• Matthew writes for a Jewish audience
• Genealogies functioned like royal credentials
• By tracing Jesus through David → Solomon → the kings of Judah, Matthew establishes Jesus as the legitimate heir to Israel’s throne

This is why Matthew begins his Gospel with, “The book of the genealogy of Jesus Christ, the son of David, the son of Abraham”

That sentence alone signals kingship, covenant, and promise. Jesus is the rightful heir to the throne of Israel.Image
🧵 It is structured with deliberate symbolism (not randomness)

Matthew’s genealogy is not exhaustive. It is deliberately selective. He organizes the genealogy into three sets of fourteen generations:
•Abraham → David (14)
•David → the exile (14)
•The exile → Christ (14)

This is not accidental.

In Hebrew:
• David’s name (דוד) has a numerical value of 14
• Matthew is subtly saying: “David, David, David”

The entire structure proclaims that
Jesus is the climax of Israel’s entire royal story. He is the heir to David’s throne. The promised Messiah that even David longed for.Image
Read 10 tweets
Dec 15, 2025
🧵Finding Jesus in the Old Testament

Many people think the Old Testament is confusing or boring.

Jesus disagreed.

He said the Scriptures spoke about Him. Once you learn how to read it, the entire story changes. Here’s how the Bible teaches us to see Christ in the OT…
🧵👇🏼 Image
🧵 1. Direct Prophecies: Promise Before Fulfillment
Some Old Testament texts clearly speak about a coming king, servant, or redeemer. These are not vague hints but concrete promises given within real historical moments. Genesis 3:15, Psalm 110, Isaiah 53, Micah 5:2 all create expectation. The New Testament does not invent fulfillment. It recognizes it. These prophecies form the backbone of messianic hope and show that Christ’s coming was planned, promised, and awaited.Image
🧵 2. Forward-Looking Figures: People Who Point Beyond Themselves
Many Old Testament figures are not messiahs but previews. Adam, Noah, Abraham, Moses, and David each save, lead, or intercede in meaningful ways, yet always fall short. Their obedience shows promise. Their failure creates longing. God uses real people with real limits to point forward to someone greater. Christ does not merely resemble these figures. He completes what they could only begin.Image
Read 7 tweets

Did Thread Reader help you today?

Support us! We are indie developers!


This site is made by just two indie developers on a laptop doing marketing, support and development! Read more about the story.

Become a Premium Member ($3/month or $30/year) and get exclusive features!

Become Premium

Don't want to be a Premium member but still want to support us?

Make a small donation by buying us coffee ($5) or help with server cost ($10)

Donate via Paypal

Or Donate anonymously using crypto!

Ethereum

0xfe58350B80634f60Fa6Dc149a72b4DFbc17D341E copy

Bitcoin

3ATGMxNzCUFzxpMCHL5sWSt4DVtS8UqXpi copy

Thank you for your support!

Follow Us!

:(