Most Christians learn about the twelve tribes of Israel and assume the number is settled. It is more complicated – and the complication matters, because it cuts to the heart of how we understand God’s covenant people.
Jacob had twelve sons. But before Jacob died, he adopted Joseph’s two sons – Ephraim and Manasseh – as his own heirs (Genesis 48:5-6). Each received a full tribal portion, effectively creating thirteen tribes from Jacob’s twelve sons. When counting territorial allotments, Levi was excluded because the Levites served as priests and received no land (Joshua 13:33). Remove Levi, add Ephraim and Manasseh in place of Joseph, and you get twelve landholding tribes. The number twelve is a function of inheritance structure, not a fixed headcount.
Dispensationalism has built elaborate prophetic systems on the twelve tribes that ignore this biblical complexity. More seriously, it insists that modern ethnic Jews are exclusively God’s chosen people – which Paul directly refutes in Romans 9:6-8: Not all who are descended from Israel belong to Israel.
Galatians 3:29: If you belong to Christ, then you are Abraham’s seed, and heirs according to the promise. Every believer – Jew, Gentile, every nation – is an heir. Ave Christus Rex.
