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"The living tradition of Catholicism is like the breath of a physical body. It renews life by repelling stagnation. It is a constant, quiet, peaceful revolution against death." - Thomas Merton

Virgin Birth

12/22/2016

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The teaching of the Virgin Birth is primarily a statement about who Jesus is. The Gospels of Matthew and Luke both tell that Jesus was born of a virgin. While Matthew’s story focuses on the character of Joseph, Luke’s focus is on Mary. Both narratives and the Creed reflect upon the human and divine origins of Christ.
 
Matthew describes how an angel appears to Joseph in a dream reminding him of Isaiah’s prophecy: “A virgin shall conceive and bear a son, and he shall be called Immanuel.” This prophecy from six centuries before Christ’s birth was originally understood to refer to a new king in David’s line. Matthew asserts that God’s prophecies have an importance that extends beyond the concerns of the present.
 
In Luke’s story of the Annunciation, the angel Gabriel appears to Mary, who freely gives her consent to God’s plan: “Behold, the handmaid of the Lord; may it be done unto me according to thy word.”  The Second Vatican Council insisted that Mary was “not a passive instrument (Lumen Gentium §56).” The miraculous conception of Christ was not something that was done to her, rather, she actively cooperated with Grace.
 
While the two narratives are very different, both Matthew and Luke sought to connect Christ to the Davidic dynasty, and key to both narratives was the Spirit’s role in his conception.  Jesus was one with God from the beginning.  He did not become God as time went on, nor was he merely an adopted Son.  Both stories make clear that God works in unexpected ways to advance the course of salvation history.  
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