1 Chronicles 3:16

And the sons of Jehoiakim: Jeconiah his son, Zedekiah his son.

Cross-reference

1 Chronicles 3:15 lists Jehoiakim and Zedekiah as sons of Josiah, while 3:16 gives their sons—continuing the same genealogy.

2 Kings 24:6 Historical context

2 Kings 24:6 confirms Jehoiachin succeeded his father Jehoiakim, matching this genealogy.

2 Kings 24:8 Historical context

2 Kings 24:8 gives Jehoiachin's age and reign length, adding historical details to his listing.

2 Kings 24:17 calls Zedekiah the uncle of Jehoiachin, not his brother—contradicting 1 Chronicles 3:16 where Zedekiah is son of Jehoiakim.

2 Kings 25:27 Historical context

2 Kings 25:27 records Jehoiachin's release from prison years later, extending the story beyond the genealogy.

2 Chronicles 36:9 says Jehoiachin was eight when he became king, while 2 Kings says eighteen — a variant in parallel accounts.

Jeremiah 22:24 delivers a divine oracle against Jehoiachin, calling him a signet ring God would remove.

Jeremiah 22:28 continues the oracle, depicting Jehoiachin as a despised pot — deepening the judgment theme.

Matthew 1:11 lists Jeconiah as son of Josiah, but 1 Chronicles 3:16 says he is son of Jehoiakim—a direct genealogical discrepancy.

2 Chronicles 36:8 confirms Jehoiachin (Jeconiah) as son of Jehoiakim, matching 1 Chronicles 3:16 exactly.

2 Chronicles 36:10 calls Zedekiah brother of Jehoiachin, consistent with 1 Chronicles 3:16 listing both as sons of Jehoiakim.

Jeremiah 37:1 says Zedekiah reigned instead of Coniah (Jeconiah) and calls him son of Josiah, not son of Jehoiakim—contradicting 1 Chronicles 3:16.

Jeremiah 22:30 Prophetic fulfillment

Jeremiah 22:30 declares Jeconiah childless regarding the throne, explaining why his sons (listed in 1 Chronicles 3:17) never ruled.