• Welcome to Religious Forums, a friendly forum to discuss all religions in a friendly surrounding.

    Your voice is missing! You will need to register to get access to the following site features:
    • Reply to discussions and create your own threads.
    • Our modern chat room. No add-ons or extensions required, just login and start chatting!
    • Access to private conversations with other members.

    We hope to see you as a part of our community soon!

What do you think of the virgin birth of Jesus ?

What's your opinion about the virgin birth of Jesus


  • Total voters
    46

jonathan180iq

Well-Known Member
So it wasn't a virgin birth. All these examples from world religion that people use to try to say that the story of Jesus is a rip off of other figures always turn out to be not the case upon closer examination. It's all based on shoddy "research".

Regardless of whether or not the mythologies line up directly, the point is still accurate that each of the supposedly miraculous births took place because a male deity involved himself somehow in the conception of an offspring with a mortal female. The Christians claiming virginity at the conception of Jesus is no different than the Greeks claiming golden showers upon Danae at the conception of Perseus, or Poseidon causing Pasiphae to fall in love with Mino's white bull and give birth to the Minotaur... It's all just magic and nonsense.
 

paarsurrey

Veteran Member
Aupmanyav said:
Well, for example, myself. My mother was a virgin when she married my father. Am I not born of a woman who was a virgin?

Well in that sense everybody is born of a virgin.
I agree with you.

In ancient times in many cultures people used to have many wives; some of them they married for the first times i.e., they were virgins while other's husband had died and they married such ladies, if they had children from such wives, these could not have been called from the virgins.

Regards
 

jonathan180iq

Well-Known Member
To lazy people that don't even bother to examine the subject, sure.

So those people that examine the subject over the course of decades and still come away thinking it's little more than mythological hokum are lazy, just because they don't have the same emotional connection it as you?

Correct me if I'm wrong, but you would agree that all other mythological birth stories are just mystical nonsense, right? Like, you would agree that Perseus wasn't conceived through Zeus raining down onto a woman locked away in a tower, right? Does your disbelief in Zues' golden shower make you lazy, or does it imply that you haven't bothered to examine the subject? I think not. You disbelieve it because you have no external pressure to maintain that it's true. I would argue that if you believed in the golden shower of Perseus, due to external societal and cultural pressures, that you would be lazy for not examining how ridiculous the claim is in light of all that you know about reproduction and conception... Surely you see the parallels.
 

ThePainefulTruth

Romantic-Cynic
Do you believe a woman can get pregnant without a man being involved ?
Does science support it ?

There are plenty of virgin births in pagan mythology. Paul melded the beliefs of the early followers of Jesus with Mithraism, where Mithras was the divine Sun God, born of a virgin on Dec 25th BTW, and who died a salvific death with worshipers consuming his symbolic flesh and blood at a banquet--among other like mythology. The Romans attributed their Mithraic Mysteries (the Mystery Religion known as Mithraism) to Persian or Zoroastrian sources relating to Mithra. The Wise Men, aka the Magi (from which we get the word magician), were Persian priests of Zoroaster from which Mithraism sprang.
 

Poisonshady313

Well-Known Member
However, even if it does mean "young maiden", it implies that said girl is a virgin since it implies that she's unmarried. Unless you want to say that the Messiah is to be born of a fornicator.

Almah implies youth. It neither implies virginity nor "unmarried". Nor is the child spoken of in the verse implied to be the Messiah.
 

Saint Frankenstein

Wanderer From Afar
Premium Member
So those people that examine the subject over the course of decades and still come away thinking it's little more than mythological hokum are lazy
Yes.

Correct me if I'm wrong, but you would agree that all other mythological birth stories are just mystical nonsense, right?
No. All myths have power and I personally love mythology in general. They are the heart and soul of a people. A people without myths is dead.
 

Saint Frankenstein

Wanderer From Afar
Premium Member
Regardless of how many unmarried virgins are referred to as almah, the word almah does not imply either viriginity or not being married. The word almah only identifies a young woman. You cannot build a case for the virgin birth on the word almah.
It obviously does, at least some of the time, if it's translated to mean that.

As I said, blame the Jews who translated the Septuagint, since they're the ones who translated "almah" as "parthenos".
 

Poisonshady313

Well-Known Member
It obviously does, at least some of the time, if it's translated to mean that.

As I said, blame the Jews who translated the Septuagint, since they're the ones who translated "almah" as "parthenos".

The Septuagint is the 5 books of Moses translated into Greek by Jews. Isaiah was translated much later, and you can't be certain by who. You don't know who translated almah as parthenos. So stop blaming the Jews.

BTW, one thing the Jews who translated the Septuagint did do is refer to Dinah as a "parthenos", even though she was not a virgin. So, either parthenos is also a word not designed to refer exclusively to virgins, or perhaps those Jews just couldn't come up with the right word for the moment. Seems a rather shaky thing to base your belief on.
 

jonathan180iq

Well-Known Member
Yes.


No. All myths have power and I personally love mythology in general. They are the heart and soul of a people. A people without myths is dead.

But actually physically believe that Jesus was born of a virgin, don't you?

Yet you don't actually and physically believe that Perseus was conceived from golden rain, or do you?
Do you believe that Perseus' birth was a legitimate historical even, as portrayed?
 

Saint Frankenstein

Wanderer From Afar
Premium Member
The Septuagint is the 5 books of Moses translated into Greek by Jews. Isaiah was translated much later, and you can't be certain by who. You don't know who translated almah as parthenos. So stop blaming the Jews.
Excuse me, but what are you talking about?
Septuagint - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Are you implying that it was early Christians that translated Isaiah in that fashion?

BTW, one thing the Jews who translated the Septuagint did do is refer to Dinah as a "parthenos", even though she was not a virgin. So, either parthenos is also a word not designed to refer exclusively to virgins, or perhaps those Jews just couldn't come up with the right word for the moment. Seems a rather shaky thing to base your belief on.
It's part of the cultural view of virginity of the time that a woman was still considered a virgin after rape.

I'm not concerned about the "shakiness" of my beliefs since here we are, two millenia later. We could argue around and around about this topic, but it won't really matter.
 

Saint Frankenstein

Wanderer From Afar
Premium Member
But actually physically believe that Jesus was born of a virgin, don't you?
Yes, because I'm a Christian.

Yet you don't actually and physically believe that Perseus was conceived from golden rain, or do you?
Do you believe that Perseus' birth was a legitimate historical even, as portrayed?
No, because I don't believe in nor practice Hellenismos. But I recognize the deep value and power in those stories to those who did/do believe in them. It's the same with other cultures I admire such as the Germanic, the Egyptian and the Aztec. Even cultures I don't feel necessarily drawn towards.
 

sojourner

Annoyingly Progressive Since 2006
The Septuagint is the 5 books of Moses translated into Greek by Jews. Isaiah was translated much later, and you can't be certain by who. You don't know who translated almah as parthenos. So stop blaming the Jews.

BTW, one thing the Jews who translated the Septuagint did do is refer to Dinah as a "parthenos", even though she was not a virgin. So, either parthenos is also a word not designed to refer exclusively to virgins, or perhaps those Jews just couldn't come up with the right word for the moment. Seems a rather shaky thing to base your belief on.
The LXX is more than just the Pentateuch. It contains all the books included in the RCC OT.
 
Top