Contradictions and Paradoxes in 1 Chronicles 27:24

Check out Contradictions Catalog of 1 Chronicles 27:24 for the comprehensive list of verses that contradicts 1 Chronicles 27:24. Some key contradictions and paradoxes are described below.

According to the author of 1 Chronicles, Joab started counting the people of Israel, but he didn't finish because God was unhappy about it and got angry. This meant that the counting was not written down in the records of King David.

1 Chronicles 27:24: Joab the son of Zeruiah began to number, but he finished not, because there fell wrath for it against Israel; neither was the number put in the account of the chronicles of king David. [was: Heb. ascended]

Contradiction with 2 Samuel 24:1

1 Chronicles 27:24 states that Joab did not finish counting Israel, leading to wrath, while 2 Samuel 24:1 suggests the census was completed under God's anger without mentioning any incompleteness.

2 Samuel 24:1: And again the anger of the LORD was kindled against Israel, and he moved David against them to say, Go, number Israel and Judah.

Contradiction with 1 Chronicles 21:1-2

1 Chronicles 27:24 refers to Joab stopping due to God's wrath, but 1 Chronicles 21:1-2 attributes the census initiation to Satan as a provocation without indicating incomplete counting.

1 Chronicles 21:1-2: And Satan stood up against Israel, and provoked David to number Israel.

Paradox #1

1 Chronicles 27:24 refers to a census that King David started but did not complete, and it mentions that God's wrath came upon Israel because of it. The contradiction lies in comparing this event with 2 Samuel 24, where the census is completed, and a plague is sent as punishment instead. The conflict is about whether the census was completed and in the details of what exactly the punishment was.

Paradox #2

The potential doctrinal inconsistency with the verse in 1 Chronicles 27:24 could relate to why God's anger was kindled over the census, as it seems contradictory for God to be upset over actions that were sometimes necessary or commanded elsewhere in the Bible. This discrepancy might confuse readers about the nature of God's directives and why He would react negatively in this specific instance.

Paradox #3

This verse mentions something about Joab starting to count the people, but it wasn't finished, and that it brought God's anger upon Israel. The story reflects a similar event in 2 Samuel 24, where David orders a census, angering God, but here it stops short of mentioning the outcome or resolution. The inconsistency lies in how both accounts relate the timing and consequences of the census differently.

Paradox #4

The issue is that while Joab started counting the people, the full number was not recorded because God's wrath came upon Israel for the attempted census. It creates a contradiction with other parts of the Bible where different totals of Israel's population are mentioned.

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