Interesting thread…..
“The fact that Matthew can speak of Jesus as ‘begotten’ (passive of gennan) in 1:16,20, suggests that for him the conception through the agency of the Holy Spirit is the becoming of God’s Son.”
(Raymond E. Brown, The Birth of the Messiah, p. 140)
That’s precisely what a Jewish monotheist who is a 1st century disciple of Jesus believes.
Matthew is a Jewish monotheist, just like Jesus and the apostles are. The becoming of God’s Son is the beginning, the coming into being / existence, the genesis of God’s Son.
For all Jews up to the time of Jesus birth, and his presenting himself at the Jordan for baptism, and his being identified by John B as
“the Lamb of God who takes away the sin of the world”…..Messiah was to be a man of the tribe of Judah, and he was to be born in Bethlehem, of a virgin, according to prophesy.
A virgin birth would preclude the role of an earthly father. Joseph assumed that role in the full understanding that this child, though not his own, was special….from God, with a special reason for his birth. We can also assume that Joseph was an excellent family head as God chose the parents of his son carefully, raising him as a devout worshipper of his Heavenly Father.
It would not have entered a Jewish mind however, that Messiah was going to be God incarnate. Much of what the angel told Mary was taken at face value and Joseph was assured that it was OK to take Mary as his wife….the child in her womb was the product of Holy Spirit, and this child would go on to play a role that no other human could….the redeemer of the human race.
The concept of conception christology is anathema in Nicene Christianity. A person who has literally always existed - an essential component of Nicene theology - simply cannot begin to exist.
Jesus said that he had “come down from heaven” to do the will of his Father…..so his disciples heard him say these things, but it was not until receiving the Holy Spirit at Pentecost that they finally knew what he was talking about. His title as “the son of God“ was not the same meaning of the title that the later “church” leaders would give him. A title that does not appear in any passage of Scripture.
We’ve seen in other threads that Tertullian believed that there was a time when the Son did not exist with the Father. (If he sounds a little like Arius to you, then you’re on the right track). For Tertullian, the Son was begotten not circa 6 B.C. in Judea (not in time and place, not in the when and the where and the how, Gabriel told Joseph and Mary) but immediately prior to the Genesis creation and that it was the Son, not the Father, who created the heavens and the earth.
Nowhere does Scripture suggest that he was brought into existence immediately prior to the Genesis creation, but it may well have been eons prior to the Genesis creation. We have no idea how long the pre-human Jesus was by the Father’s side, learning all he could from him before he was used as the agent of creation. (Gen 1:26; Prov 8:30-31)
Paul’s statement in Col 1:15-17 tell us that the son was “the firstborn of ALL creation”, making him a part of that creation himself. He was “before all things” but not before the God who brought his son into existence as his first excursion into fatherhood. (Rev 3:14) Anyone who is “begotten” needs a ‘begetter’ who existed before them, and who caused them to exist.
The son alone bears the title “only begotten“ but we know that God has many “sons”…….so, what made his “firstborn“ different from all the rest? He was the first and only direct creation of the Father alone…..all other creation came through the son. (John 1:2-4)
What would Gabriel think about that? What would Joseph and Mary think about that? What would any Jewish monotheist think about that?
The begetting of the Son of God in Tertullian’s theology is moved back into pre-history, but not as far back into pre-history as it is in trinitarian, binitarian, and even most unitarian theology.
Biblical history confirms that the son was the very first of God’s creations. He has carried many names and titles in his lifetime, and, contrary to the Father, had a “beginning”. (Rev 3:14) If the son had a beginning, then he is not eternal. Only the Father is said to be eternal.
“The fact is the two ideas - preexistence and Virginal birth - cannot be reconciled.
Not to those who read the Bible with preconceived ideas about what it teaches.
Allowing the Bible to speak for itself answers all questions.
Scripture plainly says that the Son of God was conceived in the womb of the virgin. Gabriel couldn’t have been clearer about that. It’s a stake in the ground that can’t be moved.
No conception of the Son of God in the womb of the virgin = no fulfillment of Isaiah 7:14.
“Therefore the Lord himself will give you a sign. Behold, the virgin will conceive and give birth to a son and name him Immanuel.”
Conception christology is essential in Jewish monotheism.
It is reading with a clear picture of whom the scripture was written to, and the beliefs they held at the time of writing. e.g. Like Acts 1:6 where the apostles ask Jesus, as he was ascending into heaven….
”Lord, are you restoring the kingdom to Israel at this time?”…..reading this now with the understanding that they had even after three and a half years with their Lord and master…..they still did not grasp the heavenly nature of the Kingdom.
Jews always expected a human Messiah who would reestablish God’s Kingdom on earth, with natural Israel as his “kingdom of priests and a holy nation”.…..and yet after Pentecost, when they were given full understanding by the Holy Spirit of their role, they knew that when Jesus said he was going to ”prepare a place“ for them, they understood that the Kingdom would rule from heaven, and that they would have the privilege of forming the very foundations of that Kingdom.
They understood what being “born again” meant….it meant dying in the flesh like Jesus, and being “raised in the spirit” so as to be received into heaven in the presence of God.
Jesus taught Jewish monotheism, but the ancient understanding had to give way to the understanding of it once the Christ had come to give his life as the ultimate once for all time sacrifice.
Progressive understanding was always how God taught his people….what they needed to know…when they needed to know it.
From Gen 3:15 to Rev 21:2-4….was one story, but it took thousands of years of human history to unfold it.