A Sermon preached at Bloomsbury Central Baptist Church
23 December 2018
Luke 1.26-35
Matthew 1.18-25
There is a wonderful scene in the Monty Python film The Life of Brian,
where
Brian’s mother has been trying to convince the crowd
that
has gathered outside their house
that Brian
is not, in fact, the son of God.
She utters the immortal lines,
which you
can say along with me if you like,
‘He’s not
the Messiah, he’s a very naughty boy’.
And then something interesting happens,
one of the
men in the crowd says to her,
‘Excuse me, are you a virgin?’
Brian’s
mother replies, in a scandalised voice,
‘I BEG YOUR
PARDON???!!!’.
The man goes on, ‘Well, if it’s not a personal question, are
you a virgin?’
Brian’s
mother answers,
‘“If it’s
not a personal question?” How much more personal can you get???’
and
tells him, and the crowd, in no uncertain terms to go away.
As the window on the house bangs shut,
the crowd
start to mutter, ‘Bet she is’.
And so the story of Brian’s virgin birth begins.
It’s a genuinely funny scene from a brilliant film,
and it
raises some questions for us to consider this morning.
Firstly, it raises the question of the origin
of the
virgin birth stories that are told about Jesus,
and as we conclude our anti-lectionary series, at least for
now,
in which we
have been tackling from the pulpit
some issues
not normally preached on in church,
we’ll be spending some time today
thinking
about the virgin birth stories in the gospels.
But secondly, the Python film raises the question of gender.
You see, Brian’s mother is played by Terry Jones,
doing a humorous
squeaky girl’s voice.
And as I come to speak on this topic
I am very
aware that there are big problems
with
men speaking about, and for, women,
particularly
on issues as sensitive as sex and childbirth.
For example, is it OK for me to discuss, publicly,
questions
about the virginity of a teenage girl?
Even if that girl is Mary the mother of Jesus?
Well, I stand in a long line of men who have done precisely
that
over the
last two thousand years,
starting with the two men who wrote the two gospels
in which
the virgin birth traditions are found.
And it is uncomfortable, to say the least,
to reflect
that many of the issues we will be considering
are issues
that have emerged from the minds of men.
So as we turn to these passages,
we will
need to recognise that part of the problem before us
is
a long tradition of male-dominated readings
of
Mary’s life, sex life, and sexuality.
And so, to the topic of today’s sermon:
‘Is a
virgin birth inconceivable?’
In the interest of showing my working,
I’d like to
say how helpful I’ve found a couple of books in preparing this week.
Firstly, Kyle Roberts ‘A Complicated Pregnancy:
Whether
Mary was a Virgin and Why it Matters’,
and secondly Andrew Lincoln, ‘Born of a Virgin? Reconceiving
Jesus’.
I commend
both of these if you’d like to do some further reading.
Those of you who were here for my sermon on ‘Do miracles
happen?’
won’t be
surprised to know that I bring an interest in science and logic
to the
question of the miraculous conception of Jesus.
And here’s the thing: at a scientific level,
humans
don’t have virginal conceptions.
Some animals do - some insects, amphibians, and weirdly,
sharks -
have the
ability for a mother to become spontaneously pregnant,
with the
offspring being comprised entirely of DNA from the mother.
But this has never been observed in humans.
But let’s suppose that Jesus was, miraculously,
the first
and only human example of this happening,
he would have been comprised entirely of DNA from Mary,
which would
have meant that he had to have been female,
because the
male Y chromosome is not carried in women.
That is, unless Mary was a hermaphrodite,
which while
not impossible, is extremely unlikely,
particularly as there are no recorded cases
of a human
hermaphrodite having both types of functioning gonadal tissue.
So, in short, I don’t think there’s a ‘natural’ explanation
for the
story of Jesus’ virgin birth.
Either this is a miracle that violates the laws of nature, a
s David
Hume the eighteenth century philosopher defined ‘miracle’;
or it didn’t actually happen.
So, was Jesus born of a virgin?
Let’s
consider the biblical evidence.
The story of the virginity of Mary is found only in two
books in the Bible:
the gospels
of Matthew and Luke.
There is no mention of it in Mark or John,
and Paul
seems entirely unaware of it in his writings.
In fact, in the Pauline letters,
which are
some of the earliest documents we have in the New Testament,
Paul makes four references to the parentage of Jesus,
and in each
case seems to assume
that Jesus
was born by natural processes.
So in Galatians 3.16, he speaks of Jesus as the ‘seed’ of
Abraham,
which
infers descent through the male line.
In Galatians 4.4-5 Paul says that Jesus was God’s son,
born of a
woman under the law,
making no mention of her virginity
even though
it would have helped his argument to do so.
In Romans, he speaks of Jesus as the son of God
descended
from David according to the flesh
and
declared to be the son of God with power according to the spirit (Rom 1.3-4),
and 2 Timothy 2.8 again says
that Jesus
is a descendent of David.
I recognise that we must be wary of arguments from silence,
but Paul’s
silence on this issue is surely not insignificant.
In Mark’s gospel, the earliest of the four gospels,
and written
some years after Paul’s death,
there is no infancy narrative at all:
Jesus just
appears in the wilderness as an adult to be baptised by John.
We do, however, get a glimpse of Jesus’ mother and his
brothers
in a couple
of places in Mark.
In chapter 3.31-35 Jesus seems to disown them,
and in 6.3
people take offence at Jesus and belittle him,
saying, ‘is not this the carpenter, the son of Mary
and brother
of James and Joses and Judas and Simon,
and are not
his sisters here with us?’
Matthew, probably the next gospel to be written after Mark,
introduces a
short infancy narrative, which we had read to us earlier,
where the main point seems to be
that God
has broken into the world in a new way
to bring
the long awaited salvation for Israel.
Matthew, typically, ties this back in with the Old
Testament,
by quoting
Isaiah 7.14, ‘Look, the young woman is with child
and
shall bear a son, and shall name him Immanuel.’
Which
Matthew tells us means ‘God with us’.
Interestingly, a bit later in his gospel, in chapter
13.54-56,
Matthew
repeats Mark’s story about people taking offence at Jesus
and naming
his mother, brothers and sisters.
It’s quite likely that Matthew just copied this directly
from Mark’s gospel,
which
scholars think he had in front of him
as he wrote
his version of the story of Jesus.
John’s gospel does its own, mystical version of the
incarnation,
telling us
that ‘the Word became flesh and lived among us’ (1.14),
and saying that all who believe in Jesus’ name
can receive
the power from God to become children of God.
Again, no mention of a virgin birth.
And so we’re down to just our two passages
from
Matthew and Luke’s gospels.
And actually there is a debate to be had here
about
whether they describe a virgin birth, or a virginal conception.
You might think this is splitting hairs,
but trust
me, a lot of ink has been spilled on this one.
From as early as the second century,
the
doctrine of Mary’s perpetual virginity has been ‘a thing’.
Origen, the early church father,
went so far
as to suggest that Jesus’ siblings were actually his half-siblings
because he
believed that Mary remained a virgin until her death.
You may not have heard of it before,
but Mary’s Perpetual
Virginity has been the dominant view
of
the Roman Catholic church, the Eastern Orthodox church,
and
some protestant traditions including Martin Luther,
Thomas
Cranmer, and John Wesley!
The idea here is that Mary not only conceived Jesus
miraculously,
but also
gave him birth miraculously,
thus
preserving her virginity.
By this understanding, Jesus did not have a ‘normal’ birth,
but was
miraculously removed from Mary’s womb
when
the time came for him to be born.
You kind of get the impression that she could have done it
with her legs crossed.
This might all seem like a tangent,
but it
actually speaks quite strongly
about traditional Christian attitudes
towards
sex, sexual purity, virginity, and sex outside of marriage.
Even to this day, many Christians are obsessed
with what
goes where, and when, and with whom.
From debates around same sex marriage,
to
singleness and celibacy, to divorce and remarriage,
I sometimes get the impression
that the
church is more concerned about sex
than it is
about ‘justice, mercy and faith’, as Jesus put it (Mt. 23.23).
Within patriarchal Christianity,
virginity
has often been seen as a valuable ‘product’,
to
be preserved and traded,
as fathers
give their so-called ‘respectable’ daughters to their husbands,
along
with an appropriate dowry as an assurance of good faith.
And consecrated virginity has become an ideal,
with
celibate priests, monks, nuns and sisters
being held
up as the paragon of the spiritual life.
The dominant view has been that those who have sullied
themselves with sex,
even sex
within marriage,
are not
suited for the most holy orders.
The pathway to holiness has historically been virginity,
and no-one
has been more virginal or holy than Mary.
I note that in the church more recently, there has been a
shift on this,
with a
married clergy leading to an idealised form of family life,
while those who are child-free, child-less, unmarried, or
divorced
being
regarded as in some way secondary.
And all of this comes to us from a Christian tradition
obsessed
with sex as sinful,
to be accommodated within marriage for the procreation of
children,
but
definitely not the kind of thing a nice girl like the Blessed Virgin Mary
would
ever get up to,
even if she
did have to bear a child.
Part of this traditional squeamishness about mixing sex and
religion
is to do
with Augustine’s doctrine of original sin,
the idea that sin passes down the generations through sexual
reproduction,
from Adam
to the present day.
The logic runs that if Jesus is to be born sinless,
then there
has to have been a break with the inherited sinfulness of man,
and so if he is born of a virgin, with no earthly father,
he is
spared the inheritance of original sin on his father’s side.
But, for Jesus to be truly free of original sin,
he also has
to be free of it on his mother’s side too,
and so the doctrine of the immaculate conception of Mary
emerged,
which is
the belief that Mary’s mother
was also a
virgin at the time of Mary’s birth,
having herself experienced a miraculous conception.
Whilst this belief goes back to the church fathers,
Pope Pius
IX decaled it to be an infallible truth
for the
Roman Catholic church in 1854.
You may not have realised it, but if you visit a church
called
something like ‘The Immaculate Conception’,
they’re not actually talking about the conception of Jesus,
but his
mother…
Anyway, we have some decisions to begin to make here.
Does it matter to us if Mary is perpetually virginal,
or is it OK
from our point of view that Jesus was born in the normal way,
through
the birth canal,
and that
Mary went on to have sex with her husband
and
give birth to further children.
If we’re OK with that, we’ve already disregarded
some key
aspects of the virgin birth
as far as
historical orthodox Christianity is concerned.
Also, does it matter to us if Mary was herself conceived
miraculously,
with her
mother being a virgin when she gave birth to Mary?
Because if we’re OK with that, we’re disagreeing with an
infallible statement
of the Pope
on a core doctrine of the virgin birth.
Also, do we accept or reject the idea of original sin?
Are
children born sinful because of Adam,
or
are sins what we learn to do as we learn to rebel against the God
who
makes each one of us in our mother’s womb?
If we accept Original sin, we should probably start
baptising babies again,
just in
case they die in a state of damnation,
but if we reject it, we are rejecting an essential aspect
of
Augustine’s theology of the virgin birth.
Anyway, moving on…
Medical science has revealed some wonderful things,
not least
amongst them an understanding
of how
human reproduction works at both a practical and a genetic level.
The discovery of DNA, and the notion of X and Y Chromosomes
determining gender,
have
revolutionised processes such fertility treatment.
However, at the time of the birth of Jesus, people were not
so enlightened.
They
thought that the woman’s body already contained within it
all
that was necessary for a new life to begin.
The role of
the male in the process was simply to ‘activate’ the pregnancy,
to
trigger the process.
So, stories such as we find in Matthew and Luke’s gospels,
which suggest
that a woman becomes pregnant by the Holy Spirit,
are simply suggesting that the Spirit of God
provides
the spark to activate the process,
instead of
a man doing it.
It’s still a miracle, but from their point of view,
it wouldn’t
have been seen as a biological contradiction.
Early theologians saw the Virgin birth as the mechanism for
full incarnation,
it was the
process by which God became fully human.
They didn’t see it as a biological problem
which makes
Jesus less than human.
It would simply not have occurred to Matthew and Luke
that the
logic of the incarnation of God in the flesh of Jesus
might be
undermined by the idea of a virginal conception.
And here we have a problem.
The incarnation is the belief that God became fully human in
Jesus.
But a
modern understanding of human reproduction
puts
a miraculous conception in conflict
with
the idea of Jesus being fully human.
If half his
DNA came from God, then is he fully human?
And
if he’s half-God half-man,
rather
than fully-God and fully-man,
we
are in the difficult territory of some of the heresies
addressed
by the early church.
The council of Chalcedon in 451 considered two of these
heresies,
known as
Docetism and Adoptionism.
Docetism was the belief that Jesus was fully God,
but not
truly human;
and Adoptionism was the belief that Jesus was fully human,
but not
truly God.
Docetism taught that Jesus as a kind of phantasm, or
projection, of God.
He looked
human, but in his true essence he was all God.
A bit like
a kind of souped up version of Princess Leia’s hologram in Star Wars.
Indistinguishable
from reality, but still not really real.
Adoptionism on the other hand taught that Jesus was fully
human,
and that he
was adopted by God at some point in his life,
either at
conception, or birth, or at his baptism.
In this way, Jesus is more like a specially chosen human
than he is
God incarnate in human flesh.
Both of these views had their origins in platonic dualism,
which was a
pre-Christian idea from Greek philosophy,
that everything has two natures -
a physical
nature, the substance,
and a
non-physical nature, the shadow.
The Council of Chalcedon asserted that Jesus was
both fully
God and fully human, both at the same time,
and so rejected the dualism of Docetism and Adoptionism,
and
orthodox Christianity ever since has held to this line.
The language of the virgin birth proved helpful at this
point,
and has
continued to do so until more recent times,
in articulating this understanding
of the
incarnation of God in the person of Jesus.
However, I want to ask the question this morning
of whether
it remains helpful language for us to continue to use?
What do we think is going on when read those two passages
from scripture
that
describe the virgin birth?
Let’s try a thought experiment.
What if Jesus was Joseph and Mary’s son,
conceived
in the normal way between husband and wife?
What difference does it make?
Certainly, it makes no difference to any of Paul’s writings,
nor does it
make any difference to Mark’s gospel or John’s gospel.
It actually makes no difference to the rest of Luke and
Matthew’s gospels
once we get
past the first couple of chapters.
It makes no difference to the Book of Revelation, or to
Hebrews,
or the
other non-Pauline epistles.
It starts to make a difference to the early creeds,
as they
sought ways of articulating their understanding
that Jesus
was the son of God.
It makes a difference to the Council of Chalcedon’s
negotiation
of the pull
towards Docetism or Adoptionism.
It makes a difference to the doctrine of Original Sin,
and to the
Doctrine of the Perpetual Virginity of Mary,
and to the
Doctrine of the immaculate conception of Mary,
but we’ve already established
that these
don’t matter so much to us Baptists.
And I would just note that we don’t say the creed in our
tradition either.
It might start to make a difference to the way we think
about sex,
and
sexuality, and singleness, and celibacy, and love and marriage,
which might
not be a bad thing.
It might challenge those who have a literal reading of the
Bible,
and for
whom taking any part of the biblical story
as
metaphorical or poetic is a problem.
But again, some of us might think that not such a bad thing.
It might not be so far-fetched to see the traditions about
the Virgin birth as stories
that came
into circulation in the decades after Jesus’ earthly life,
partly at least in response to similar stories
from the
Egyptian and Graeco-Roman mythologies,
and partly in response to scandalous speculation about his
early years,
and that
these traditions were taken by Matthew and Luke,
and
incorporated into their versions of the life of Jesus.
So, let’s assume for a moment that Jesus was Joseph and
Mary’s son,
conceived
in the normal way between husband and wife.
What then is this story of the virgin birth trying to tell
us?
Do we just
throw it out, or do we learn to read it differently?
Can we move from a literal to a literary reading
of these opening
chapters from Matthew and Luke’s gospels.
I would suggest that there is great narrative beauty,
symbolic
power, and theological meaning to be found here.
These stories challenge us to think deeply
about what
it means for God to be renewing humanity from within humanity.
They challenge us to see in the person of the baby Jesus
the action
of God in initiating the in-breaking of a new world, a new creation,
with implications not just for individual salvation or
personal spiritual renewal,
but for the
transformation of the world politically and economically,
as those
who are oppressed find liberation
through
the life, death, and resurrection
of
the child who is God lying in a manger.
The story of a young woman, chosen by God ahead of all male
agency,
to bring to
birth the transformation of the world for good,
has the potential to be hugely liberating for women
in any time
and circumstance of oppression or subjugation.
We are invited to hear Mary’s song again,
with its
challenge to the rich and the powerful,
and its
promises of new hope to the poor and the homeless.
We are invited to allow Mary to interpret the significance
of her own child to us,
rather than
simply allowing the voices of men
to overlay the miracle of the incarnation
with
speculation about the state of her virginity.
So whilst I would not argue that we should disregard the
language of the virgin birth,
I think we
need to know what we mean, and what we don’t mean,
when we use
it in our songs and our liturgies.
It roots us in our historical theological community
and takes
us back to the early centuries of Christian theology.
So, similarly, with the council of Chalcedon
I would
want to continue to assert
that Jesus
is both fully God and fully human.
And I do this because divinity and humanity
are not the
same order of thing,
competing
for space in the body of a baby.
The integrity of humanity is not violated
when
divinity makes its home there.
Rather, this is Jesus, God with us,
in the
midst of life, and death,
and
rejoicing, and suffering.
This is Immanuel. God with us.
This is the
baby in the manger,
the
baby in Mary,
the son of
God, and the son of Man.
1 comment:
Thank you Simon!!
I enjoyed the pun in the title of your sermon. I can't believe that there have not been many comments already!
This is an excellent sermon which gives the 'concept' (pun intended) of the Virgin Conception and Birth a modern literary, not literal meaning which can make sense in the 21st Century.
Particularly striking is the explanation that a virgin conception could not give rise to a male child because there would then be no Y Chromosome.
Progressive Christianity is growing as modern science disproves traditional theology. Many blessings for your future, vitally important ministry.
Geoffrey Williams
Bowral, NSW
AUSTRALIA
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