Jesus, the ‘Son of God’ – An Investigation into the Virgin Birth and its Meaning.
here is a detailed point-by-point debunking and counter-analysis of the arguments presented in "Jesus, the 'Son of God' – An Investigation into the Virgin Birth and its Meaning."
This critique addresses the article's claims from the perspective of mainstream Christian theology and historical biblical scholarship.
1. The Argument on Biblical Silence & Inconsistency
Article Claim: The article argues that the virgin birth is historically doubtful because only Matthew and Luke mention it, while Mark, John, and Paul are silent.
Counter-Analysis:
Argument from Silence Fallacy: The silence of Mark and John does not equal denial. Mark begins his gospel with Jesus’ adult ministry, skipping the birth entirely. John focuses on the pre-existence of Jesus as the eternal Logos (John 1:1), which conceptually supersedes the physical mechanism of birth.
Pauline Implicit Affirmation: While Paul does not explicitly narrate the nativity, he describes Jesus as "born of a woman, born under the law" (Galatians 4:4). His theology of Jesus as the "Second Adam" (1 Cor 15:47) who is from heaven strongly parallels the miraculous entry into the world described by Luke and Matthew.
Early Church Consensus: By the early 2nd century (e.g., Ignatius of Antioch), the virgin birth was a universally accepted core doctrine, suggesting it was well-established oral tradition long before the gospels were finalized, rather than a later invention.
2. The "Original Sin" & Biology Argument
Article Claim: The article asserts that if sin is inherited, Jesus must have inherited it from Mary. It argues that if he didn't, then Mary must also be sinless (Immaculate Conception), creating a logical regress. It further argues that if Jesus had no human father, he cannot be a true "Son of David".
Counter-Analysis:
The Nature of Sin: Mainstream Protestant theology generally views Original Sin as a federal or spiritual inheritance from Adam, the covenant head of humanity, rather than a purely biological "gene" passed through DNA. Therefore, being born without a human father (Adam's line) breaks the federal chain of guilt.
Divine Sanctification: Luke 1:35 explicitly states, "The Holy Spirit will come on you... So the holy one to be born will be called the Son of God." This indicates a unique act of divine sanctification at conception that preserved Jesus from sin, regardless of Mary's sinful nature.
Adoption into Lineage: In Jewish law, legal lineage could be passed through adoption. Joseph, as Jesus' legal father, confers the Davidic lineage (Matthew 1). Furthermore, many scholars argue Luke's genealogy (Luke 3) traces Mary's bloodline to David, securing a biological link.
3. The Isaiah 7:14 Translation ("Virgin" vs. "Young Woman")
Article Claim: The article states the Hebrew word almah in Isaiah 7:14 means "young woman," not "virgin" (betulah), and that the prophecy referred to a child in King Ahaz's time, not the Messiah.
Counter-Analysis:
Septuagint Evidence: While almah indeed means "young woman of marriageable age," the Jewish translators of the Septuagint (LXX)—centuries before Jesus—chose the specific Greek word parthenos (virgin) to translate almah in this verse. This shows that ancient Jews themselves saw a connotation of virginity in this specific context.
Dual Fulfillment: Biblical prophecy often operates on "typology" or double fulfillment. A near fulfillment (a child in Ahaz's time) does not preclude a distant, ultimate fulfillment (the Messiah). The "sign" of a young woman conceiving naturally is hardly a "sign" deep as Sheol or high as heaven (Isaiah 7:11); a true virgin birth fits the magnitude of the sign promised.
4. The "Parthenogenesis" & Natural Science Argument
Article Claim: The article suggests the virgin birth might be a natural phenomenon (parthenogenesis) or a rare biological quirk, comparing it to "children of the moon" or scientific anomalies, thus stripping it of its divine evidentiary value.
Counter-Analysis:
Biological Impossibility: Human parthenogenesis (reproduction from an ovum without fertilization) produces only genetic clones of the mother. Since the mother is female (XX chromosomes), the offspring would necessarily be female. Jesus was male. A natural virgin birth of a male child is genetically impossible without the introduction of a Y chromosome, requiring a divine creative act, not just a biological anomaly.
Category Error: The biblical claim is not that Mary "self-fertilized" (natural), but that the "power of the Most High overshadowed her" (supernatural). Reducing it to a scientific anomaly ignores the theological claim of incarnation—God becoming man—not just a man born unusually.
5. The "Transfer of Prophethood" Theory
Article Claim: The article concludes that the virgin birth signaled the end of the Israelite dispensation and the transfer of prophethood to the Ishmaelites (Line of Muhammad) because Jesus had no Jewish father to continue the patrilineal chain.
Counter-Analysis:
Theological Stretch: There is no biblical warrant for interpreting the virgin birth as a "divorce decree" from Israel. On the contrary, Matthew 1:1 calls Jesus the "Son of David, Son of Abraham," emphasizing his continuity with the covenant, not a break from it.
The "Eternal" Throne: The angel Gabriel promised Mary that God would give Jesus "the throne of his father David, and he will reign over Jacob’s descendants forever" (Luke 1:32-33). This explicitly contradicts the idea that his birth signaled the end of Jewish kingship; rather, Christian theology sees it as the fulfillment and eternalization of it.
Ishmaelite Connection: The attempt to link the virgin birth to a transfer to Ishmael is an external Islamic theological imposition (supersessionism) found nowhere in the text. The biblical narrative views the "mystery" of the Gentiles being grafted in (Romans 11) as an expansion of the Jewish promise, not a transfer to a different lineage (Ishmael).
Conclusion
The article presupposes Unitarianism and works backward to deconstruct the Incarnation. Its strongest points rely on historical skepticism common in liberal biblical scholarship (dating of gospels, translation of almah), but it fails to address the cohesive internal logic of the New Testament: that the Virgin Birth was not just a biological trick, but the necessary mechanism for the pre-existent Son of God to enter humanity without a new human person coming into existence (Hypostatic Union).