The Reliability of the New Testament Record (con’t)
Luke 1:26-35.
Mark begins immediately with Jesus’ ministry in
accord with his stress on Christ as Servant (cf. 10:45). But we would
expect a physician, Dr. Luke to give attention to the circumstances of
the birth. He begins with the announcement of Christ’s birth of a
virgin:
In the sixth month, God sent the angel Gabriel to
Nazareth, a town in Galilee, to a virgin pledged to be married
to a man named Joseph, a descendant of David. The virgin’s name
was Mary. The angel went to her and said, "Greetings, you who are
highly favored! The Lord is with you. Mary was greatly troubled
at his words and wondered what kind of greeting this might be. But
the angel said to her, "Do not be afraid, Mary, you have found favor
with God. You will be with child and give birth to a son, and you are
to give him the name Jesus." . . "How will this be," Mary asked the
angel, "since I am a virgin?" The angel answered, "The Holy Spirit
will come upon you, and the power of the Most High will overshadow
you. So the holy one to be born will be called the Son of God."
[1:26-35]
The emphasized text again demonstrates that the
conception of Christ was supernatural: Mary was a "virgin" (parthenos),
"pledged to be married." Mary’s reaction of being "greatly troubled"
and being "afraid," as well as her astonished question, "How will this
be?" reveals that she was a virgin. The angel gave some description of
how the conception would happen through the Holy Spirit and "the power
of the Most High."
Luke 2:1-19.
When Luke records the birth he again stresses that
Mary was only "pledged to be married," which in that culture meant she
had not yet had sexual intercourse with Joseph. The supernatural
appearance of the angel and the heavenlv choir demonstrate that
something extraordinary had happened. Mary’s reaction was to
contemplate in awe the mystery of it all. Obviously she knew something
supernatural and holy had occurred (vs. 19).
John 2:2-11.
John stresses the overall divinity of Christ, and
doesn’t dwell on particulars. Nevertheless, there are a couple of
strong intimations in John’s Gospel that Jesus was virgin born. When
Jesus performed his first miracle at Cana of Galilee his mother was
obviously aware of his supernatural origin and confident that he could
do the supernatural. John wrote: "On the third day a wedding took
place at Cana in Galilee. Jesus’ mother was there, and Jesus and his
disciples had also been invited to the wedding. When the wine was
gone, Jesus’ mother said to him, ‘They have no more wine.’
‘Dear woman, why do you involve me?’ Jesus replied. ‘My time
has not yet come.’ His mother said to the servants, ‘Do
whatever he tells you."’ Indeed, the emphasized text reveals that
Mary seems not only to believe that Jesus could do a miracle but to be
requesting one, even though she had never seen him do one since this
was Jesus’ "first miracle" (vs. 11). Her understanding of his
supernatural ability came from her past relationship with Jesus,
including his birth.
John 8:41.
Even the insult of Jesus’ enemies shows that the
circumstances of his birth had stirred general gossip, as might be
expected if the story spread. Jesus said to them, "‘You are doing the
things your own father [Satan] does.’ ‘We are not illegitimate
children,’ they protested. ‘The only Father we have is God himself.’"
The Jews may have simply been responding defensively to Jesus’ attack
on their misplaced confidence in the fatherhood of Abraham. If so, it
is an odd rejoinder. But it makes perfect sense if they were turning
the argument back on Jesus’ own legitimacy. Even Joseph had needed an
angelic visitation to be convinced of Mary’s purity (Matt. 1:20). He
and Mary likely faced a continuing shadow on their reputations. But
Jesus faced the matter boldly in responding to his sniggering
accusers, "Can any of you prove me guilty of sin?" (John 8:46).
Galatians 4:4.
The Epistles are filled with references to Jesus’
sinlessness. In the context of teaching about the innate sinfulness
that adheres to each descendant of Adam (for example, Romans 5), these
teachings themselves indicate that God had done something different in
Jesus (2 Cor. 5:21; Heb. 4:15; 1 John 3:3). Paul’s reference to Jesus
as "born of a woman" is relatively explicit. He wrote, "But when the
time had fully come, God sent his Son, born of a woman, born under
law" (Gal. 4:4). This refers to Genesis 3:15. In a Jewish patriarchal
culture one is begotten of a male (the father). To bring attention to
being "born of a woman" is to show that something unusual is
occurring—in Jesus’ case a virgin birth.
The Charge of Mythology.
It is difficult to deny that the New Testament
teaches the virgin birth of Christ. The easier attack is to say that
it is a myth patterned after Greek and Roman gods and was not really a
historical event. For a full refutation of the charge that the Gospels
evolved over a few generations into a myth-filled legend of Jesus’
life, see in particular articles [in the Baker’s Encyclopedia of
Christian Apologetics on] on the New Testament, plus see
MITHRAISM, DIVlNE BIRTH STORIES, BIBLE CRITICISM, JESUS SEMINAR, and Q
DOCUMENT. In brief:
-Evidence is unassailable that the New Testament
was written by contemporaries and eyewitnesses (cf. Luke 1:1-4).
Second-century dating theories have now been thoroughly discredited
by archaeological and manuscript evidence, allowing no time for
legend.
-Virgin birth records do not show any of the
standard literary marks of the myth genre.
-Persons, places, and events of Christ’s birth
precise and historically substantiated. Luke in particular goes to
great pains to note historical detail (Luke 3:1-2).
-No Greek myth even remotely corresponds to the
literal incarnation of a monotheistic God in human form (cf. John
1:1-3, 14) by way of a literal virgin birth (Matt. 1:18-25). The
Greeks were polytheists, not monotheists.
-Stories of Greek gods become human via miraculous
events like a virgin birth postdated the time of Christ. Hence, if
there is any influence it is from Christianity on mythology, not the
reverse.
Conclusion.
Historical evidence that Jesus was supernaturally
conceived of a virgin is more than substantial. Indeed, there are more
eyewitness contemporary records of the virgin birth than for most
events from the ancient world. The records show no signs of myth
development. Indeed, they are surrounded by historical references to
real people, places, and times. Thus, there is no reason to believe
Jesus was not literally, biologically born of a virgin just as the
Bible claims he was. Only an unjustified antisupernatural bias is
ground for any conclusion to the contrary.
A particular battleground text is Isaiah 7:14, which
is cited by Matthew. Critics argue that it has no predictive value. At
worst the text refers to events in Isaiah’s time only, which were
applied typologically to Christ but have no predictive value. There is
reason to believe the text refers, in part or whole, to a prediction
of the virgin birth. In any case, there are other clear predictive
texts in the Old Testament.
Sources
F. E. Gaeberlein, The Expositors’ Bible
Commentary, vol.6
R. Gromacki, The
Virgin Birth: Doctrine of Deity
W. Hendriksen, New
Testament Commentary: Exposition of the Gospel According to Matthew
C. S. Lewis, Mere
Christianity
______ Surprised by Joy
J. G. Machen, The
Virgin Birth of Christ
Justin Martyr, Dialogue with Trypho,
chapter 84
J. Orr, The Virgin Birth
of Christ
R. D. Wilson, Princeton Theological Review,
no. 24 (1926)
E. Yamauchi, "Easter Myth, Hallucination, or
History?" (2
parts), Christianity Today (29 March 1974;
15 April 1974)
E. J. Young, "The Virgin Birth" in The Banner
(15 April 1955)