Esrom
Esrom is the Greek form of Hezron, a biblical ancestor in the line of Judah and in the genealogy of Jesus.
Esrom is the Greek form of Hezron, a biblical ancestor in the line of Judah and in the genealogy of Jesus.
A Greek-language form of the Hebrew name Hezron, used for a man in the ancestry of Judah and of Jesus.
Esrom is the Greek form of the Hebrew name Hezron. In Scripture, Hezron is listed among the descendants of Judah and appears in the genealogical lines that connect Israel’s tribal history to David and, ultimately, to Jesus Christ. Esrom is therefore best treated as a variant proper name rather than as a separate theological concept or doctrine.
The name appears in biblical genealogies that trace the line of Judah and the royal-Messianic lineage. In the New Testament genealogies, the Greek form Esrom corresponds to Hezron.
Genealogies in the ancient Near East served to preserve family lines, inheritance rights, tribal identity, and covenant continuity. Esrom is one of the Greek forms used when Hebrew names are rendered in Hellenistic Greek.
For Jewish readers, genealogies affirmed covenant identity, tribal belonging, and the promised line through which David and the Messiah would come. Esrom belongs to that historical and covenant framework.
Greek Esrom corresponds to Hebrew Hezron (a transliterated proper name in genealogical lists).
Esrom matters because biblical genealogies show the historical continuity of God’s covenant promises, including the line leading to David and to Christ.
This is not an abstract concept but a personal name. Its significance is historical and covenantal rather than doctrinal in a systematic sense.
Do not treat Esrom as a separate figure from Hezron. It is a spelling/transliteration variant, not a distinct person.
Standard identification is that Esrom in the Greek genealogies corresponds to Hezron in the Hebrew text; there is no major doctrinal dispute involved.
This entry concerns a biblical proper name and genealogy. It should not be expanded into a doctrine or typology beyond what the text states.
It reinforces the historical rootedness of Scripture and the continuity of God’s promises across generations.