Bible Reading

1 Chronicles Chapter 7 – What A Family Carries

A reflection on the strength of family: to shape faith, bear grief, and carry love across generations.

By Under the fig tree3 min read

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A genealogy of courage

“All these were the children of Asher, heads of their fathers' houses, choice men, mighty men of valor, chief leaders. And they were recorded by genealogies among the army fit for battle; their number was twenty-six thousand.” (1 Chron 7:40)

I’ve always found genealogies rather boring, until this verse, which inspired me to write on this chapter. This paints a beautiful image: generations of Asher’s children described the same way — choice, valiant, fit to lead the people of God.

Anyone who has tried to raise even a single child well knows this is not automatic. To read of one child like this would be remarkable; to read of thousands is something else entirely.

The same language appears across the chapter. Issachar’s descendants are "mighty men of valor" (7:5), and so are Benjamin’s (7:11).

The slow work of passing faith on

Courage did not always mean obedience. The half-tribe of Manasseh was also described as “mighty men of valor, famous men, and heads of their fathers’ houses,” but they were unfaithful to God. (1 Chron 5:24-25).

What we pass on matters. Here I remember the words of a church sister. When I asked her if she was enjoying taking care of her infant grandchild, she responded, “Of course, I’m raising a child of God!”

With her God-centric attitude in mind, this verse made me think about what a parent’s sacrifice can reap. Whatever was being handed down in Asher, Issachar, and Benjamin didn't remain in one household. It rippled outwards through families and generations. A genealogy makes that handing-down visible: faithfulness and character written out as names, one row to the next.

It’s hard not to think of our own church, and of the children growing up in it now. Imagine the next generation described the same way — faithful, steady, fit to lead God's people. It's a monumental thing to hope for, and it is built slowly, together, consistently, by families who pass on what matters.

When grief enters the genealogy

A genealogy carries more than valor. Earlier in the chapter, Ephraim's sons go down to Gath and are killed in a raid for livestock.

“And Ephraim their father mourned many days, and his brothers came to comfort him." (1 Chron 7:22 ESV)

For a moment, the names pause, and a father is left grieving. Then comes something deeply moving: Ephraim’s brothers came to comfort him. The family that hands down blessing is also the place where grief is carried together.

This is part of raising a family, and part of being alive at all. Ephraim could not have seen that moment coming. Most sorrow arrives this way: unasked and unprepared for.

A brother born for adversity

Yet this shows what family is for when sorrow comes: brothers who come and sit beside the one who is breaking; “a brother is born for adversity” (Prov 17:17). That is one of the strengths God places inside a family: people born, in part, for the hard days.

None of this is simple to live out. The chapter leaves us with honest questions. How do we raise our children well, and on purpose, for God? How do we raise the children of our church, so the next generation might be mighty warriors for the Lord? How do we show up for one another when sorrow comes without warning? And how do we stay close enough, day by day, to know what the people beside us are carrying?

These are the real relationships behind the formality of a genealogy: families doing the steady, unglamorous work of loving one another well, generation after generation.

How to be that family

When something hard happens to one of you, does the family draw near, or does each person carry it alone?

A few small ways to close that gap:

  • Put the screens away at mealtimes, even just a few nights a week. Most family conversation dies because there's no room left for it.

  • If talking doesn't come naturally, give it a frame. For some families, conversation prompt cards can take the pressure off having to begin from nothing. Children and even teenagers may enjoy how it feels like a game.

  • Be willing to go first. Letting your family see something real you're facing or thinking about, even asking their advice, often opens them up faster than direct questions do.

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