The Virgin Birth: The Meaning of The Gospel Accounts
The Virgin Birth: The Meaning of The Gospel Accounts
The Virgin Birth: The Meaning of The Gospel Accounts
by OTTO A. PIPER
Mary the Virgin. Little does it matter that there were small groups in
the ancient church who denied the Virgin Birth, especially "Ebionite"
Jewish Christians3 and gnostics like Carpocrates or the author of the
apocryphal Gospel of Philip. It is obvious that in these instances the
disregard or denial did not rest upon historical doubts or evidences to
the contrary but rather on theological grounds.
nizes Jesus as his son. Thus historically and legally Jesus will have his
place in the family of Abraham and David.
While Joseph is said to have received knowledge concerning Mary's
pregnancy in a dream, the subsequent story of the visit of the Magi is
intended to provide evidence that his dream came from God and was
no delusion. Both the miraculous guidance enjoyed by those visitors and
the fierce yet futile rage of Herod underscore the historical and providen-
tial significance of the birth of Jesus. Unlike the Protevangel of James
and other apocryphal Gospels of the Infancy, Matthew uses the story of
the Virgin Birth as introduction to the Gospel itself, intimating thereby
that in his view the Gospel story will not be fully understood unless seen
in the perspective of the Virgin Birth. That further specific references
to this event should be lacking in Matthew's Gospel is not surprising.
The "omission" is in keeping with his pragmatic manner of Writing.
We must not allow the literary procedure of Matthew, however, to
conceal the ideological character of the Gospel story. While a master
of theological reflection the Evangelist presents the fruits of his thinking
rather than the principles of his reasoning. Yet no pericope in his Gospel
has its relevance in itself. Rather, the mere fact that something has been
mentioned in an earlier chapter implies that it is of special significance
for the things to be told subsequently.
In the composition of Luke's Gospel, the narrative of the Virgin Birth
occupies an entirely different place. It appears within a sequence of
stories in which the births of the Baptist and of Jesus are described as
intertwined events. John is chronologically and providentially the fore-
runner of Jesus. To a degree not found in Matthew, Luke accentuates
the significance of the baptism of Jesus and of the role of the Baptist.
The ministry of Jesus is thereby characterized as the miraculous outcome
of divine Providence. But whereas, according to Matthew, the realiza-
tion of God's saving plan is rooted in the very substance of Jewish history,
the latter serves in Luke as a mere illustration of a Heilsgeschiehte of
universal dimensions. The historical facts are not important in them-
selves, but they have a spiritual meaning.
Thus the angel announces the birth of Jesus to the shepherds as an
event by which the whole of mankind will be blessed. The "whole
people" (Luke 2:10) is not Israel (as in Matt. 1:21); rather, in the
light of Luke 2:14 it must be understood as the "new people" that God
is to form out of the human race. Connected with this aim of the
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deny the Virgin Birth. It expressed the legal position of Joseph and the
way in which people thought of his relationship to Jesus.
Another set of attacks against the Virgin Birth is based upon literary
criticism. In various ways scholars have tried to discredit the value and
reliability of the infancy stories in Matthew and particularly in Luke,
or at least the narratives of the Virgin Birth. Some have pointed to the
lack of homogeneity in the first two chapters of both Matthew and Luke,
but this is a phenomenon characteristic of all the Gospels in all their
parts. Throughout, the Gospels bear the marks of being gathered from
an oral tradition in which but few units had a definite position with
reference to the whole. (Suspicion of their authenticity would be
considerably increased, of course, if the Gospels resembled a modern
historical novel with a clearly elaborated plot or a psychological
development. )
Others, like Harnack and Lobstein, have turned their assaults against
the "legendary character" of the Virgin Birth, and in this respect Luke
in particular has come under fire. But is the only explanation for the
presence of the Virgin Birth stories the Evangelists' uncritical fondness
for the miraculous? Or are there specific features in the event which
prompted not only Luke but also his informants to consider it an essential
element of the Christian message? Form criticism contends that the
primitive church fabricated the story of the Virgin Birth, like many
other pericopes found in the Gospels. Yet the very fact that Matthew
and Luke, who obviously worked independently of each other and in
different sections of the church, not only tell the story of the Virgin
Birth but also locate it in Bethlehem (although for the rest they described
the event from entirely different angles) should make a critic hesitate to
talk glibly of literary fictions.
More serious are the attacks which historical scholarship has directed
against the Gospel records of the birth of Jesus. Attention is drawn,
for example, to the apparent incongruity that exists between the gene
alogies of Jesus and the account of the Virgin Birth. Did not the
genealogies presuppose Joseph as the physical father of Jesus, and thus
rule out the idea of a Virgin Birth? But even if it were granted that
these genealogies had their origin in Palestinian Jewish circles close to
the later Ebionite sect, and thus were concerned with the place Jesus
occupied in Jewish history, they were obviously not compiled for bio
graphical purposes. They have a legal and theological function and
The Virgin Birth 139
the Virgin Birth had never more than subsidiary significance for its
denial; they were only meant to buttress theological objections. That
was the case already with Trypho and Celsus, whose strict monotheism
was offended by the idea of a Son of God. Similarly, the Jewish Chris-
tians whom Justin mentions as not believing in the Virgin Birth were
not prompted by historical doubts. Rather, the event appeared to them
to be incompatible with their idea of a Jewish Messiah. Similarly,
modern Protestant critics who object to the belief in the Virgin Birth
do so because it seems to imply a "theological materialism" over against
the "spiritual" view of faith. Others fear lest through the Virgin Birth
Jesus should be robbed of his true humanity. Finally, there are those
who deny a priori that "nature miracles" can happen.
are weightier than those supporting the denial of their historicity. But
the historian is not able directly to prove the historicity of the Virgin
Birth. In consequence, it would seem that the Virgin Birth had to be
judged as one of the events in the life of Jesus which one might or might
not believe and which therefore could not be reckoned among those
saving events upon which our faith rests.
In view of this uncertainty, some theologians have reached the con-
clusion that the story of the Virgin Birth was not meant to be a historical
report but a symbol of the sinlessness, moral perfection, or spiritual
superiority of Jesus. While there would be nothing objectionable in
making such use of the stories, it is obvious, nevertheless, that neither
Matthew nor Luke intended the record to be understood in that way.
The whole tenor of their reports is messianological and eschatological
rather than Christological. According to Matthew 1:21, the birth of
Jesus will bring about the chosen people's redemption from its sins; and
in a similar way the Magnificat (Luke 1:46-55) hails the birth of
Jesus as that manifestation of God's power by which he will fulfill all
the promises given to Abraham and his seed. In turn, the unbroken
faith of Jesus is described in the Gospels as the result of his triumph
over temptations rather than as the manifestation of a sinlessness that
cannot be tempted.
Equally off the point is the reasoning of those who, while denying
the historicity of the Virgin Birth, are nevertheless prepared to keep
the story as a Christian "myth" describing the marvelous nature of the
Christian faith or the divine significance of the work of the man Jesus
of Nazareth. Deprived of its historicity the story of the Virgin Birth
would be a myth and, like any myth, it would be but the expression of
a human ideal or aspiration. More plausible, at first sight, is the
suggestion that the story signifies Jesus' awareness of his being the Son
of God. But what is there in the miraculous circumstances of the birth
of Jesus that would imply that the child was the Son of God rather
than a man destined for a special task for which he had been assigned
by God?
purpose to its conclusion. In Matthew the child that by the will of God
is to be born occupies his place in the genealogical list as God's Anointed
One, the Messiah (Matt, ι : 16), who by God's will is to save his people
from their sins (Matt. 1:21) and thus he is Emmanuel, "God with us"
(Matt. 1:23). In Luke, the angel proclaims to Mary that her child will
be called "Son of the Highest" (Luke 1:32) ; he will be holy and be
called "Son of God" (Luke 1:35). Jesus' birth is announced to the
shepherds as that of the Savior {sôtër), who is Christ the Lord (Luke
2:11). The language used both in the Matthean and Lukan tradition
does not point to a human being with extraordinary gifts but rather to
the presence of God's redemptive will and power in a human being
formed by God for that purpose.
Yet by bringing to the earth the Son of God, the Virgin Birth extends
its significance beyond the historical ministry of Jesus for, unlike the
prophets of old, Jesus is not a mere messenger of God. His very presence
and activity is revelation and realization of God's saving purpose. This
theme is particularly conspicuous in Luke, who in Acts describes the
post-Resurrection work of Jesus. The history of the church is human
history, yet one in which divine ends are accomplished. The fact is not
quite so obvious in Matthew. Yet he, too, wants to show that the
church is the effective continuation of Jesus' ministry. It is "his" church
(Matt. 16:18); that is to say, he is the head and convener of the
new people of God. Similarly, both Evangelists describe Jesus as the
giver of life or of regeneration. Life, as he imparts it, is not a magic
energy; rather, it is through historical contact with him that heavenly
life is engendered in people. While seemingly the miracle of the new
birth is not as conspicuous as the Virgin Birth, the difference lies merely
in the shortsightedness of our spiritual vista. For the "new life" is not
the result of a mental process only. Christ imparts new life to us and
thus gives us the power to transform this world and other people in
accordance with God's plans.
Just as in the Virgin Birth the divine feat would not have succeeded
except for the assent given to it by Mary and Joseph in acts of faith, so
it is with the new birth. Divine and human activity do not lie on
the same level, for it is God who takes the initiative. Apart from it no
miracle would happen. But in order to become a historical event, the
divine purpose needs human beings who are prepared in a representative
way to offer themselves to God as instruments. By means of faith, man
The Virgin Birth 145
is enabled to become God's fellow worker. Matthew illustrates this
requirement by placing Joseph into the foreground. As the representa-
tive of the Davidic line, he is willing to acquiesce in Mary's fate, no
matter how deeply his male pride may be humbled thereby. Similarly,
in Luke it is Mary as the "handmaiden of the Lord" who expresses her
readiness to be instrumental in God's redemptive work. With the
revelation of this requirement the concept of faith is radically modified
in the New Testament. From trust in God's ability and power to do
what is good for his people, faith is now transformed into man's willing-
ness to do and to accept whatever is God's will. Yet this human element
in faith, indispensable as it is, would remain without effect but for
the fact that it was a response to and acceptance of God's initiative.
The Lukan story illustrates this change with special clarity by pointing
out that all the conversions recorded in Acts presuppose the free opera-
tion of the Holy Spirit in the lives of the people concerned. Paul later
expresses the same idea by rejecting justification by works and by
insisting on the redemptive power of faith.
By making the birth of Jesus the starting point of God's good news,
Matthew and Luke indicate that the Virgin Birth is an eschatological
occurrence; that is to say, it is not just the rising of the curtain or the
first of a series of historical events in the life of Jesus; it is the originating
impulse by means of which all subsequent events in holy history have
been rendered possible and are directed toward the goal which God has
assigned to man. Unlike the modem critics who focus their attention one-
sidedly upon the miraculous mode of the birth of Jesus, the Evangelists
concentrate their interest upon the fact that God himself has provided
a Savior to mankind. In its Gospel setting, the story of the Virgin Birth
indicates that so great is the interest God takes in the salvation of man-
kind that, through the work of the Holy Spirit, a "man of holiness" is
born within a sinful mankind (Luke 1:35). Or, in the language of
Matthew, the Jewish people, which—on account of its hopeless predica-
ment—was prompted to engage in desperate endeavors of liberation, is
offered by God a helper who will relieve it from all its burdens (Matt.
1:21). The Virgin Birth is therefore no end in itself; it is the first stage
of the consummation of God's saving activity. In turn, it is the escha-
tological significance of the Virgin Birth which explains the composition
of the Gospels. The objective of the whole evangelical story is to tell
the realization of the divine announcement that was implied in the
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birth of Jesus. The Evangelists are anxious to show how God so guided
the life and ministry of Jesus that through his activities the divine plan
could be realized.
Pointing out the eschatological significance of the Virgin Birth is not
an attempt to "demythologize" what happened to Mary. There can be
no doubt but that in the Evangelists' minds the event which took place
in Bethlehem was the result of a divine interference and thus a miracle.
But viewing the event in its eschatological background will enable us to
interpret the miracle in the light of the purpose for which God per-
formed it. Understood as a temporary suspension of the order of nature,
a miracle is bound to give offense. It can only appear incredible, because
modern scientific thinking is built upon the axiom of an unchanging,
uniform, and universal order of nature. But this axiom implies a vexing
antinomy. When applied to a religious view of life and this world, this
axiom would demand either that this world is good and perfect as it is
and needs no substantial change, or else that it is utterly devoid of mean-
ing, because its evils are ineradicable. In that case the only escape left
to man is a mental attitude like Stoicism or non-Christian Existentialism,
by which the individual determines to endure the evils of life without
complaint.
The biblical view of God, while recognizing the universal reign of
order in nature, differs, nevertheless, from those attitudes in pointing
out that this world has a ideological structure. It moves towards the
goal set to it by God. In spite of its universal order, this world is not
only a changeable world, as is most clearly indicated by biological
evolution, but it also aims at a definite goal—its own redemption. This
goal could not be reached, however, if this world were left to itself, for
the prevailing conditions are beyond man's control. Through the Virgin
Birth, God gives evidence that he himself takes the initiative in the
redemption of mankind. In its novelty the Virgin Birth reveals that
this is not only a plastic world, but also one in which redemption follows
a recurrent and divinely set pattern.
In Jewish apocalyptic, whose motivating force is hope, the radical
change of the structure of this world and the abolition of all evils is
expressed in a manner which makes the better future look like the result
of an arbitrary activity of God or the fulfillment of man's wishful
dreams. But through the Virgin Birth the picture is completely changed.
The future bliss is now seen as the very objective that God had in mind
The Virgin Birth 147
in making this world; and by sending a Savior who is true man, God
discloses that man has been assigned a central place in the actualization
of God's purpose. Hence the Virgin Birth is not an isolated and incred-
ible "nature miracle." Rather, it is the event through which God reveals
to mankind the pattern of those redemptive acts by which salvation
becomes a historical reality. This fact is most conspicuous in the way
the New Testament describes the genesis of faith and the origin and
life of the church.
Faith as an act by which the individual enters into fellowship with
God does not originate in man's nature. What moves a person to believe
in the gospel is not the state of mind in which he finds himself, but
rather the power of spiritual truth implied in the gospel. When this is
proclaimed to a man, his heart is made to realize that, in Jesus, one
greater than men confronts him. Similarly, the origin of the church is
described in Acts as a divinely wrought miracle, as the work of the Holy
Spirit whom Jesus has sent down upon his disciples. While it is the
church's task through the centuries to preserve the revealed truth, people
do not believe because the church has the depositum fidei but, rather,
because the Spirit of God moves them to accept it.
Finally, although a divine miracle, the Virgin Birth takes place in
history. Not only was Jesus born of a Jewish woman, but his ministry
took place within that nation which in the past had been the special object
of God's care and education. Likewise, both faith and the church origi-
nate in the historical life of mankind, although they are not its outcome.
Just as, through his mother, Jesus was a Jew of Palestine and, through
Joseph, was received into the clan of David, so faith is an attitude of
the self; notwithstanding its spiritual origin, this faith will bear the
marks of the individual's personality and of his place in the culture and
the social setup of his environment. Similarly, it is a well-known fact
that in the more than nineteen hundred years of its existence the church
has been organically integrated in the history of the nations, apart from
which its doctrine and organization cannot be understood.
Of course, it is possible to describe the life of faith in purely psycho-
logical terms or to explain the activities of the church in a sociological
and historical way. But faith which lacks an ontological basis in God's
saving work is a purely subjective experience; seen in such a perspective
the church would serve merely the gregarious instinct of the "believers,"
while their craving for redemption from the conditions of this world
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