House of Ram Part 1: King David, his Mother and his Priestly Lineage
- Ephraim D'Angelo

- Aug 29
- 20 min read
Updated: Oct 17
By Ephraim D’Angelo Hernandez de Mascarenhas
Started June 24th 2024 | Finished August 29th, 2025

Introduction
It’s late night (9:30pm) on a mild October evening, and our family received three powerful words from God. The first was September 27th, the second October 1st and the third October 2nd. Since then I have been living in this unknown spiritual expanse of seeking. So many things are being revealed even in the world at large. Dark acts are being discovered and Judgement looms over the Earth. I started this article in June while still living in New Mexico and now that I am in Colorado I have worked to finish and publish.
I have had this question about why King David’s mother is not mentioned in the bible whatsoever. David one of the most prominent historical characters of the bible and his Mother is not mentioned even once by name? I find that very hard to believe. It’s more likely that there is powerful understanding about King David that the religious powers that be did not want the people to know. King David ruled over the tribe of Judah and all Israel and was the most prominent of the Kings of Israel besides his son Solomon. The only Israelite family designated to rule was the tribe of Judah, so it has been clear that David was from that tribe.
In my 40 years of reading and studying the bible I have found that though nearly all bible teachers and preachers like to say that the bible is the complete “infallible” Word of God, that’s not entirely true now is it? You see, mankind is fallible, mankind is often driven by a desire for fame, power and fortune and because this is so the bible cannot be without some error. Whether it is error because those fallible men decided what not to include in it. Which would be like lying by omission, keeping certain truths from the masses (which clearly happened), or by intentional interpretation choices that open the door for mass error or by simply being human and making mistakes.
People wonder why there are over 42,000 Christian denominations in the world, now you know why. I have been studying Apocryphal books for quite a few years now and nearly all of them have given me deeper understanding of the bible. Below is a list of the books I have studied or at least read so far.
The Books of Enoch 1, 2, 3, and 4 The Book of Nicodemus
The Book of Jubilees The Book of Thomas
The Book of Jasher The Dead Sea Scrolls
The Book of Mary Magdalene The Book of Judas Iscariot
Some bibles include what most people still call apocryphal, but they are indeed Canon because they are included in some bibles such as the Jerusalem Bible all of these I have read and studied:
1st & 2nd Maccabees (Books 3 & 4 not included) The Book of Baruch
The Book of Tobit The Book of Wisdom
The Book of Judith The Book of Ecclesiasticus
The Search for David's Mother
The absence of David’s mother and Grandmother in his genealogical outline is a major omission that can be no mere accident. Anyone who wants to discover truth has to venture outside of what the church dictates as truth. There are clear indications in scripture that King David had Levite lineage and I aim to reveal this history and point out these indications. In order to understand the family of David and prove his Levite lineage I have to take you on a short journey of geography and genealogy. My search for David’s mother started in the hill country of Ephraim. According to biblical record Gezer was on the border in the Southern most edge of Ephraim. According to 1 Chronicles 6:67 we find that the city of Gezer(2) was designated to the Levites.
North of Gezer also in the hill country of Ephraim is Ramathaim-Zophim, this was where the prophet/priest Samuel’s father Elkanah was from and it seems according to scripture Elkanah was a Levite. Samuel himself could not have been a priest in the temple unless he was a descendant of Aaron himself. The following verses supports these facts of Gezer and the hill country of Ephraim.
“The towns you hand over to the Levites will be the six cities of refuge, ceded by you as sanctuary for men who cause another’s death; and you are to hand over forty-two in addition.” Numbers 35:6
Some of the Kohathite clans were given as their territory towns from the tribe of Ephraim. In the hill country of Ephraim, they were given Shechem (a city of refuge) and Gezer, Jokmeam, Beth Horon, Aijalon and Gath Rimmon, together with their pasturelands.
1 Chronicles 6:66-68
The Strong’s Lexicon also supports this fact:
Strong's Hebrew
"portion," a Levitical city on the border of Ephraim
There seems to be some controversy about whether Elkanah was an Ephraimite or a Levite because according to 1 Samuel 1:1 and 1 Chronicles 6:16-30 the genealogical accounts contradict. Dr. Joseph R. Nally, Jr. gives the following assessment of the situation, I agree with his assessment that both verses are correct and I hope to support his conclusion with a bit of my own evidence.
“Both are correct. Eli took Samuel into the temple as an apprentice (1Sam. 2:11: 1 Sam. 3:1; cf. 1 Sam. 1:11, 27-28). Samuel later carried out the functions of the priesthood, as only those belonging to the tribe of Levi could serve as assistants in the temple (Num. 8:5-26; 1 Chron. 23:28-32), Elkanah was from the tribe of Levi. Additionally, Elkanah lived in the mountains of Ephraim (1 Chron. 6:16-30, 33-37); the tribe of Levi was assigned to dwell in certain cities that were scattered throughout the tribes of Israel (Gen. 49:6-7; Num. 35:6). So, “Ephraimite” refers to Elkanah’s tribal descent (affiliation), not his tribal ancestry.”
The first Elkanah spoken of in Scripture is in the genealogy of Moses and Aaron, he was the son of Korah, who was the son of Izhar, who was the son of Kohath, son of Levi. I’d like to point out that up to this point all of the matriarchs of the pivotal families are named. Moses father being Amram who was also a son of Kohath, Izhar’s older brother. The text says:
“Amram married Jochebed, his aunt, who bore him Aaron and Moses.”
Exodus 5:20
The Levites received no land as inheritance with the rest of the tribes of Jacob. The Levites had been made over to YHVH in place of the firstborn Sons and became Gods earthly representation; God made himself their inheritance. For this reason, the Levites owned no property but lived in towns and lands that were designated for them in return for their service in the tabernacle and to the tribes at large. Gezer was one of those towns and this is where David’s mother was from.
“You must purify them and offer them with the gesture of offering because they have been made over to me from among the sons of Israel, as “oblates.” They are to replace those who open the womb, all the first-born; of all the sons of Israel, man and beast, do indeed belong to me; The day I struck all the first-born in the land of Egypt, I consecrated them to myself, and now, in place of all the first-born among the sons of Israel, I have taken the Levites.”
Numbers 8:16-18. See also Deut. 10:8,9
Evidence of David’s Levite Lineage
In 2 Samuel David is wearing the Linen Ephod this was a sacred garment and was only to be worn by sons of Aaron. He is also making offerings as He endeavors to transport the Ark of the Covenant back to the City of David. King David would not have been making offerings unless he was a Levite and this is because he was a descendent of both Aaron and Judah both through his Father Jesse and maybe mother too.
When those carrying the ark of the LORD had advanced six paces, he sacrificed an ox and a fattened calf. And David, wearing a linen ephod, danced with all his might before the LORD, while he and all the house of Israel brought up the ark of the LORD with shouting and the sounding of the ram’s horn.…
2 Samuel 6:13-15
The passage does not say that he relied on a priest to sacrifice and ox, it says he himself performed the sacrifice. If David was not known to be a descendant of Aaron by the Kohathites that were carrying the ark, they would not have allowed him to do so. As stated earlier Amram married Yochebed who was his aunt, his father Kohath’s’ sister, the next verse goes on to say the following:
“Aaron married Elisheba, daughter of Amminadab and sister of Nahshon, and she bore him Nadab, Abihu, Eleazer and Ithamar. The sons of Korah: Assir, Elkanah and Abiasaph. These are the clans of the Korahites.”
Exodus 5:23
According to Jewish tradition from the Talmud, David’s mother descends from Elkanah underlined in the passage above. And Nahshon, the brother of Aaron’s wife Elisheba (Exodus 5:23) was of the tribe of Judah according to Numbers when listing the heads of families for the census:
“For Judah, Nahshon son of Amminadab.”
Numbers 1:7
This clearly proves that Aaron’s wife Elisheba was of the tribe of Judah, not just this but since we know her brother was the head of the family of Judah at the time, we can conclude that her mother was likely from the Levite clan; likely Korah. This reasoning is based on the fact that family Hierarchy and lineage was passed on from father to son, i.e., Patriarchal. Since Nahshon was the head of the Judahite family that would mean his Father Amminadab was from Judah and his mother from Elkanah, her grandfather being Korah. This would also explain more clearly why the elders of Korah later rebelled against Aaron and Moses.
I find it interesting and still hard to believe that in the genealogical presentation of Yeshua the Messiah in Matthew Chapter 1, David’s Great- Grandmother (Ruth, wife of Boaz, mother to Obed) and Great Great-Grandmother (Rahab, wife of Salmon, mother to Boaz) are named, but again David’s mother’s name is mysteriously missing, as well as the name of his Grandmother Obed’s wife.
Ram was the father of Amminadab
Amminadab was the father of Nahshon
Nahshon the father of Salmon
Salmon was the father of Boaz, Rahab being his mother,
Boaz was the father of Obed, Ruth being his mother
Obed was the father of Jesse,
And Jesse was the father of King David
I am also beginning to realize that all of the towns that start with Ram are actually place-names for the descendants of Ram (Amram). Ramoth-gilead, Ramathaim-Zophim a.k.a., Ramah (Samuel the prophet’s hometown, 1 Sam. 1:1), Ramleh. Back to David’s mother, according to the following source, a name is provided and that name led me to Gezer. The following is that story:
“In Jewish tradition, David’s mother was Nitzevet, the daughter of Adael and the wife of Jesse. The Talmud relates a complicated story concerning Nitzevet: her husband, Jesse, began to doubt the purity of his ancestry, since he was the grandson of Ruth the Moabitess (Ruth 4:17). Due to his doubts, Jesse stopped having marital relations with Nitzevet after she had borne her seventh son. Instead, Jesse planned to marry his Canaanite servant and have children with her. The maidservant, however, had pity on Nitzevet and offered Nitzevet a plan: on the wedding night, Nitzevet and the maidservant could secretly switch places, and Nitzevet could sleep with Jesse one more time. The switch worked, much as Leah and Rachel’s switch had worked on Jacob, and Nitzevet became pregnant with David, her eighth son. Nitzevet never revealed to Jesse what she had done, even when her pregnancy was apparent; therefore, Nitzevet came to be despised as an immoral woman, and her son, David, grew up an outcast in his own family. Again, this is an extrabiblical legend, and there is no way to confirm the accuracy of the tale of Nitzevet.”
These theories could explain why David was not accepted by his family: “I am a foreigner to my own family, a stranger to my own mother’s children” (Psalm 69:8). David was left to tend the flocks when the prophet Samuel invited all of Jesse’s sons to a sacrifice (1 Samuel 16:5). God had told Samuel that He would choose one of the sons to be anointed king, but the family never even considered David as a possibility (1 Samuel 16:11). The theories might also shed some light on Psalm 51:5, “Behold, I was brought forth in iniquity, and in sin did my mother conceive me” (ESV).
According to Good Question:
“The Bible actually does not tell us the name of David’s mother, but there is a Jewish tradition that her name was Nitzevet. According to 1 Chronicles, this woman had seven sons (Eliab, Abinadab, Shimea, Nethanel, Raddai, Ozem, and David) and at least two daughters (Zeruiah and Abigail). There is some debate among biblical scholars as to whether Jesse was the father of Zeruiah and Abigail or whether their father was a man to whom Nitzevet was married before she married Jesse (she may have been widowed). In 1 Chronicles, after the sons of Jesse are listed, Zeruiah and Abigail are called “their sisters” rather than “his daughters.” The sons of Zeruiah (Abishai, Joab, and Asahel) seem in the biblical narrative to be about the same age as David, even though he is their uncle. So Zeruiah may indeed have been many years older than David and she may have married and started to have children around the time he was born.”
According to David's own words His mother was faithful to God even calling her God's maidservant. If she had children from a previous marriage, it could be that she was married to Jesse’s own brother, for all we know the two daughters are Jesse's nieces. Jesse was a descendent of Amram (Ram), who was the progenitor of the Priestly line he was the grandson of Levi by Kohath. This was a Levite family, descended from Aaron himself. According to the laws concerning Levites they were forbidden to marry a woman who was put away from another man except a deceased brother who had no son. The two girls were adopted like Abraham adopted Lot. Because of the Torah laws concerning Levites, it could be that Jesse was obligated to marry his own brothers widow who had no sons only the two daughters (Zeruiah and Abigail). Jesse than had a responsibility to father a child for his brothers’ namesake. That child would have been Eliab their firstborn.
If brethren dwell together, and one of them die, and have no child, the wife of the dead shall not marry without unto a stranger: her husband's brother shall go in unto her, and take her to him to wife, and perform the duty of an husband's brother unto her. Deuteronomy 25:5
As I read about David in the 1st book of Chronicles in Chapter 15, it is clear that David took charge of the Levitical families in a very personal way. He had knowledge of who was who, he knew the Levitical families intimately and that is because they were his family. His matriarchs and patriarchs made sure that their offspring had knowledge of all of his family and extended family. When David decided to bring the ark of God from Kiriath-jearim, He himself purposed to do this as if he understood that as a descendent of Aaron he had a responsibility to bring it back. And so, he attempted to do so even making sacrifices along the way but the first time without the Kohathites, whose responsibility it was to bear it upon their own shoulders. That first time he used a cart with oxen, and this was not acceptable to God.
Was Nitzevet ben Adel of Geshur the Mother of King David?
According to Jewish tradition from the Talmud David’s Mothers full name was Nitzevet ben Adael of Geshur (4), and according to ancestors.familysearch.com her father was Adael Ben Behram from Geshur. If you notice the name Behram, in Hebrew B (Bet) and H (Hay) are both used as prefixes. In Hebrew there are really no vowels like in English, there are vowel points and some letters may act like vowels but technically are not in the same sense that English speakers understand vowels. With that said, the B’ is a prefix that means in or with. The H is a prefix that means the, so it seems this name has a double prefix, the root name of this man is Ram (or descendent of Amram himself). Making the name; With the Ram. [See Hebrew Prefixes (5)]
The genealogical information I unearthed above states that Adael Ben Behram was a Geshurite from Geshur, but these people were Amorites not Israelites. As a matter of fact, David later takes a wife from the Geshurites (Maacah), but that does not give credence to Adael Ben Behram coming from Geshur. The name itself is Hebrew as I explained above, were there Hebrews living in that territory at the time of Adael Ben Behram? Well the tribe of Manasseh settle there so I’ll have to research the dates. It’s more likely that he was from Gezer which was in the hill country of Ephraim where the town was a dedicated Levite town.
The only Israelites using Ram’s horns were the Priests (Levites), for it was their duty to call the children of Israel to assemble, to warn them of their enemies’ advances, to be the watchmen and the rams’ horn was that instrument used for those purposes. A name like Behram clearly denotes the fact that he was a descendent of the Priestly families and so was his daughter Nitzevet.
As I stated early in this article Amram a.k.a, Am-Ram was the progenitor of the Priestly line, being the father of Aaron. This is why the descendants continued to use his name as an identifier for the priestly lineage as well as a place-name for certain towns. There should be no question here, if Nitzevet was indeed Jesse’s wife and David’s mother she was a descendent of the priestly Levite clan and like her husband Jesse a descendent of the royal tribe of Judah as well. As shown in the genealogical chart below Nahshon and Elisheba’s Grandfathers name was Ram, so you had two men named Ram in each side of the family tree at about the same time. This joining of the Rams is another significant reason that the name Ram became a place name. Amram of Levi being the first cousin to Ram of Judah. It was a place and family name specific to the bloodline of King David.
Samuel’s line had to connect to Aaron’s for him to be a Priest in the temple, though the genealogical record doesn’t show this connection. Somewhere up the line from Samuel, it had to have been his mother’s Father that qualified Samuel for the Priesthood. Or else there was an Elkanah from the direct Purple line that was his father. The same goes for David. As I will continue to show how the bible reveals that David was a descendant of Aaron.
The Israelites and in-particular the Aaronic & Judahite families were scrupulous in keeping records of their tribal affiliation and lineage. What would be the reason that somebody would omit the origin of King David’s Mother and Grandmother? Well, for one we now know that David was of Levite descent as well as Judah. Two, this means David was a King-Priest like Yeshua, he was a Melchizedekian King (King of Righteousness). As was revealed in my study the Seven Spirits of Yah (6), we find out that God commanded David to declare that He was God’s only begotten Son, not knowing consciously that he was the third incarnation of Adam; Yeshua being the last.
Psalm 2:
“As for me, I have set my King on Zion, my holy hill.” I will tell of the decree: The Lord said to me, “You are my Son; today I have begotten you.
Psalm 89
Verse 20: “I have found David My servant; With My holy oil I have anointed him,”
Verse 27: “I also shall make him My firstborn, The highest of the kings of the earth.”
The whole of Psalm 89 seems to be speaking of Yeshua the Messiah, but God clearly directs His promises toward David. Why is that? Like I stated before David and Yeshua are one and the same person. I know this is a big, “WHAT?” moment and I recommend you read my study titled the Seven Spirits of Yah blog post to see the scriptural argument I make for this idea.
Since it’s clear that God was calling David His first-born son and that designation had to do with David being an incarnation of Adam, that means that the position of the first-born son as it relates to the family of Jacob was still to be filled. God clarifies who of Jacobs sons has the right to that position in Jeremiah 31.
“Is Ephraim my first-born son? For since I spoke against him, I must remember him still.” I talk about this in another blog study that I will reference here later.
The Question of the Jewishness of David
As I awoke this morning Abba was speaking to my spirit, and I became conscious of the question of what defines Jewishness in regards to David’s ancestry. According to Rabbinic and Orthodox Judaism you are a Jew if your mother is Jewish. Jewish ancestry, according to them, is never determined by your Father, but by your Mother. If that is indeed true than by the time David was born, according to the genealogical record, David’s Jewishness would have been in serious question. Without any evidence in the biblical record of David’s mother or grandmother, what was David? Let’s look again at the genealogical reference:
“Salmon was the father of Boaz, Rahab being his mother,
Boaz was the father of Obed, Ruth being his mother
Obed was the father of Jesse,
And Jesse was the father of King David.”
This is yet another way that Orthodox Judaism has gone astray, clearly by these passages David’s Jewishness is determined by Patriarchal lineage. If it was in fact determined by Matriarchal lineage Obed, (David’s grandfather) would not be Jewish at all, he would be a Moabitish Canaanite. Ruth his mother being a Moabite, and Rahab his grandmother a Canaanite from Jericho, a harlot even.
What would be the right way to look at these passages? Well, Rahab was saved when she helped the men who were reconnoitering the land of Canaan (including Jericho where she resided) to hide from the authorities. By doing so, she secured a promise of protection and safe passage for herself and her family when the children of Israel came to conquer the land. There is no definitive reference to Rahab’s conversion to serving the God of Israel in scripture, but Salmon being a descendent of the tribe of Judah choosing her for a wife is enough to confirm this as more than likely. Most of us know the story of Ruth and her sincere desire to serve the God of Israel, her conversion is without question for it was written that she said to Naomi her mother-in-law.
"And Ruth said, intreat me not to leave thee, or to return from following after thee: for whither thou goest, I will go; and where thou lodgest, I will lodge: they people shall be my people, and thy God my god..." Ruth 1:16
However, a sincere conversion does not make her Jewish according to Orthodoxy, so their assertion that a Jewish mother makes one Jewish is clearly false if they hold to a Jewish mother being the determination of Jewishness and the father’s lineage is never a contributor at all. It’s utter nonsense and not biblical. On the other hand, there are scriptures that support the idea of being grafted in even before Yeshua taught us the idea of the olive tree. If you look at the genealogies that way than this lines up with scripture. Even the Torah teaches that if a foreigner decides to follow the God of the Israelites than he is to be considered an Israelite as long as he keeps the commandments, statutes and judgments i.e., the Covenant.
“The stranger who resides with you shall be to you as the native among you, and you shall love him as yourself, for you were aliens in the land of Egypt; I am the Lord your God.”
Leviticus 19:34
“The same law shall apply to the native as to the stranger who sojourns among you.”
Exodus 12:49
See Also: Lev. 24:22, 18:26; Num. 9:14, 15:14-16, 15:29; Deut. 1:16, 24:14; Exo. 12:19, 20:10
It even states that after a certain generation the descendants of those foreigners would be allowed to enter the temple.
“The children that are begotten of them shall enter into the congregation of the LORD in their third generation.” Deut. 23:8
It’s obvious that Salmon did not leave off serving his God and follow the god(s) of Rahab, she was grafted into the families of Israel following the God of Israel. We know that Boaz did not decide to become a Moabite and follow the god of the Moabites, Ruth was grafted into the families of the God of Israel.
Why is this important? Is it important at all? I say yes, it is important to know these things because it clearly reveals even more that Orthodox Judaism is in error. Those in power in the Knesset are still using this idea as a way to prove Jewishness in order for exiles to be allowed to make Aliyah. Aliyah is the word that is used to denote Jews returning home, it literally means, “to go up” (to Jerusalem) and is the terminology the Orthodoxy (Khazarian controlled Judaism and Zionism) have come to define the idea of returning Jews to our homeland.
In conclusion, David, through his father Jesse was a direct descendant of Aaron of the Priestly caste and Elisheba, Aaron’s wife was from the Royal family of Judah as documented in scripture. Thus, David was a King-Priest after the order of Melchizedek. His mother was Nitzevet ben Adael of Geshur whose father was Adael Ben Behram from Geshur (Gezer). As I revealed earlier Behram is a Hebrew name with a double prefix that means “with the Ram,” and denotes an unquestionable connection to the Levite and Judahite families, which means that Nitzevet also descends from the Ram designated bloodlines. This means that David’s parents were likely cousins themselves, maybe even near cousins. Marriage amongst cousins was not and unacceptable practice in those days and was more often than not the norm.
Speaking from the Heart
What is truly driving some of these articles of mine is a strong determination to know the truth and reveal the falsehoods that have established the controls that continue to keep the Sephardim from being able to return to our ancestral home. It’s no secret that descendants of Jewish families the world over have been returning to Israel by the droves for many decades. But the one group that has been consistently blocked by Rabbinic Orthodoxy from returning are the Sephardim; specifically, those from the United States. We have not been able to prove our Jewishness since being driven from Spain and Portugal and having gone into hiding; becoming what has been historically documented and widely known as the Crypto-Jews. I personally believe if you are Hispanic/Latino living in the Southwestern US, parts of Mexico and South America and you’ve been here since the establishment of New Spain, then you are Sephardi i.e., Spanish Jew, period. And according to some historical sources such as the Dogs of God; Columbus the Inquisition and the Defeat of the Moors by James Reston Jr., the Spanish Jews descend from the tribe of Judah. Stanley Hordes book The Ends of the Earth: The Crypto-Jews of New Mexico makes an excellent scholarly case of our Jewishness. This means we have a right to return to your ancestral home.
After reading this article to my wife, it didn’t take very long for us to realize why David’s Mother and Grandmother were struck from the scriptural record. The Khazarian takeover of Israel could not have been complete unless they removed the established authority out of the way. That established authority lay with the Ram (Levi-Judah) family and its descendants. My wife just pointed out that it was those same Khazarian infiltrators who were behind the killing of Yeshua. He was an obvious threat to their usurped authority, but God has already dealt with them and His will is being accomplished even now and His vengeance satisfied. Now that I see the truth, I can re-evaluate other possibilities. Could it be that the Khazarian’s were also behind the Spanish Inquisition?
I discovered after finishing this article and publishing it that the RAM name goes back farther than I had known at the time and for that history I refer you to part two of this study the House of RAM.
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(1) The Ultimate Guide: How Many Christian Denominations Are There in the World?
(2) Elkanah Ephraimite or Levite 1 Samuel 1:1 | 1 Chronicles 6:16-30
(3) Stack Exchange | Biblical Hermeneutics
(4) King David’s Mothers Full name
(5) Hebrew Prefixes:
(6) The Seven Spirits of Yah | by Ephraim D’Angelo Hernandez
(7) Dogs of God: Columbus, the Inquisition and the Defeat of the Moors by James Reston Jr.
(8) To the Ends of the Earth: the Crypto Jews of New Mexico by Stanley Hordes; NM State Historian




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