(Matthew 1:23) "Behold, the virgin shall conceive and bear a son, and they shall call his name Immanuel (which means, God with us)." (ESV)
The virgin birth or conception is a very important doctrine, it is one of the fundamentals of the faith. Secularists and liberal theologians deny the doctrine saying it could not happen. So can we believe in the virgin birth of Christ?
(Matthew 1:23) is a quote of the Old Testament passage (Isaiah 7:14). A question arises as to whether "virgin" is the correct translation of the Hebrew or if it should be translated as "young maiden". Most scholars say the Hebrew used in (Isaiah 7:14) almost always refers to a virgin woman. Also the translators of the Septuagint, the Greek translation of the Old Testament, used the word that means virgin nearly all the time. So the evidence supports "virgin" as the correct translation and not "young maiden". Most of all Matthew inspired by the Holy Spirit used the word "virgin" when he quoted (Isaiah 7:14). The birth of Jesus fulfills the prophecy of Isaiah.
Why is the virgin birth only mentioned in Matthew and Luke and not in the rest of the New Testament? It is likely that oral traditions about the birth of Jesus were widely circulated during this time. The rest of the New Testament actually gives little detail about the early years of Jesus before his ministry. The Gospel of Mark simply starts with the ministry of Jesus. While the Gospel of John focuses on Jesus as the Word, his preexistence.
What about Alexander the Great and Ceasar Augustus who were said to have been born of the gods? Some have suggested that the Biblical account was influenced by these stories. These stories actually bear little resemblance to the Biblical account of the virgin birth of Jesus. They are very different and there is no basis for this argument. Jesus fulfilled Old Testament prophecy of the miraculous birth or conception promised by God.
The virgin birth is an essential doctrine. The divinity and sinlessness of Jesus depend on it. Belief in Jesus as God's Son would be impossible without the virgin birth. He would have been conceived by mere humans and would have been a mere human himself. Also without the virgin birth Jesus would have inherited a sinful nature from Adam and would not have been without sin. If Jesus was not God and was not without sin he could not have saved his people from their sins. The doctrine of the virgin birth is essential indeed.
Belief in the virgin birth actually comes down to the presuppositions a person holds, that is the basic assumptions one holds. If you start by assuming that miracles cannot happen, you will conclude that miracles do not happen and deny the virgin birth of Christ. But if you are open to the possibility of a miracle you will conclude otherwise. If God is God he can certainly perform miracles, nothing is impossible with him. It is totally reasonable and rational to believe in the virgin birth of Christ. Most of all we should believe it because God has revealed it to us in his Word, the Bible.
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