By Mikel Del Rosario
Did The Virgin Birth Really Happen?
What would you say if someone asked you if the story of Jesusâ virgin birth was real, or if it was copied from other religions? In this post, you see how to think through a few challenges to the historicity of the Virgin Birth. First, weâll answer the question âWas the Virgin Birth copied from myths?â Then, weâll think through the idea that the first Christians just made the whole thing up.
Where should we start when we hear about a supposedly parallel account in some old myth? The first thing to do is check out the myth for yourself and see if thereâs really a parallel virginal conception there.
The Virgin Birth wasnât Copied from Myths
For example, here are the top three stories that tend to come up in my conversations about the virgin birth..and check out my hand-drawn illustrations, tooâthatâs not stock art!
Horus â No Virgin Birth Story
When Peter Josephâs conspiracy film, Zeitgeist, came out in 2007, I had a student come up to me after I taught one of my World Religion classes at a local college. As we were walking out to the parking lot together, he told me about this film and wanted to know if the story of Jesus was really based on pagan myths. For example, the video asserted that Jesusâ virgin birth was parallel with the birth of an Egyptian god named Horus. But does the myth itself really say that Horus was born of a virgin?
In Egyptian mythology, Horusâ mother, Isis, was already married to the god Osiris for some time before his conception. But more than this, the best Egyptian account of the myth tells us that that Horus was not born of a virgin. It actually says that Isis âtook in his seed and created the heirâŠOsirisâ son, Horus, stout of heart, justified, son of Isis.â[1] So the idea that the first Christians copied the story of Jesusâ virgin birth from Horus doesnât work right off the bat. Why? Because thereâs no virgin birth story there to copy. In fact, there is no ancient evidence of a story about Horus being born of a virgin.
Mithra â No Virgin Birth Story
But other people have heard something about Jesusâ virgin birth being copied from the story of a god named Mithra. I remember hearing about this one Christmas in 1997, when I was just an undergrad at Biola. Honestly, I had no clue what to think. I wish someone would have encouraged me to see if there were any ancient stories saying that Mithra was literally born of a virgin. Because there arenât any. Not one.
There are actually a few versions of how Mithra was created, but none of them have anything like Jesusâ virginal conception. For example, in the Roman version, Mithra was born as a full-grown adult coming out of the side of a rock. Thereâs actually an ancient inscription that says Mithra was âborn from the rock.â[2] So, in Mithraâs story, not only is there no virgin, but thereâs not even a woman! So, unless you want to call a huge rock a âvirgin,â thatâs not gonna work. No parallel there.
Caesar Augustus â No Virgin Birth Story
I remember one Christmas, seeing an ABC News special on Jesus where a scholar by the name of John Dominic Crossan compared the story of Jesusâ virginal conception to the idea that the Roman Emperor Caesar Augustus was believed to be the son of Apollo. He was kind of suggesting these stories were âall over Greek and Roman mythology.â But does Augustusâ story actually talk about a virginal conception?
According to the Roman historian Suetonius, Augustusâ mother had already been married for years before a snake suddenly showed up while she was sleeping. She discovered this strange mark on herself and 10 months later, Augustus was born.[3] But again, in this story, there is no virginal conception at all. Augustusâ mom already had a kid with her husband before Augustus was born. He even had an older sister![4]
Checking out the ancient sources for alleged parallels is a good place to start when thinking through the idea that the Virgin Birth was borrowed from pagan mythology. In this case, we can be confident that the story of Jesusâ virgin birth wasnât copied from Horus, Mithra or Augustus because none of them was said to be born of a literal human virgin in any ancient myth.
But if the virgin birth wasnât copied, does that mean the church just made the whole thing up? How should we think through the claim that church made up the story of Jesusâ virgin birth?
The Virgin Birth wasnât Made up by the Church
Here are three reasons why it doesnât look like the early church made up the story of Jesusâ virgin birth.
The Virgin Birth Raised Suspicions
Making up a fake story about Jesusâ virgin birth wouldnât make Christianity more attractive to the Jews. It would actually make people suspicious about Jesus. Who was the real dad? Did Mary hook up with a Roman soldier? That kind of thing. Why make it more difficult to accept the Christian message? The ancient church wouldnât have taught that Jesus was born of a virgin unless they had good reasons for believing he actually was.
The Virgin Birth Wasnât Emphasied
But other people say the Virgin Birth story would make Christianity seem more attractiveâmaybe not to the Jews, but to the to Greeks and Romans. They were into emperor worship. They were cool with thinking of their leaders as gods. But thatâs just one part of the story.
When we see the gospel preached in the New Testament, the church doesnât emphasize the Virgin Birth story at all. Why wouldnât the earliest Christians make more of Jesusâ virgin birth if they invented it to make the faith seem more attractive to the people who werenât Jewish? Why wouldnât they talk it up if the made it up?
The Virgin Birth is Different from Myths
People who thought of certain human rulers as gods only thought they were lower gods in the context of polytheismâa belief in many gods. For example, no one thought Caesar Augustus was the one, true God who made the heavens and the earth. More than this, thereâs no snake sneaking up on Mary in the gospels accounts. Jesus is just conceived in her womb as miracle of God and the Bible doesnât say much about how that actually happened.
In the end, itâs pretty unlikely that the first Christians would make up the story of the Virgin Birth because it wouldnât help advance the Christian cause. If they thought it would help their case, why didnât they emphasize this story in their preaching? And if the virgin birth was patterned after myths, why doesnât it look like these myths?
Itâs Reasonable to Believe the Virgin Birth Happened
So  the church didnât get the Virgin Birth story from somewhere else and they didnât create it out of theological reflection; That meansâas unusual as it soundsâthe Virgin Birth story must have come from a real event. In other words, if the Virgin Birth wasnât copied from myths and it wasnât made up, the remaining option is that the Virgin Birth is real.
If there really is a creator God who made the heavens and the earth, and if Jesus left heaven to come to earth, itâs reasonable to believe that the virgin birth happened.
Notes
[1] The Great Hymn To Osiris From Dynasty 18 (Stela Louvre C 286) Mentions Isisâ Impregnation By Her Brother-Husband, Osiris, In This Myth: âIsis The PowerfulâŠTook In His Seed And Created The Heir, Who Suckled The Child In SolitudeâŠOsirisâ Son, Horus, Stout Of Heart, Justified, Son Of Isis, Heir Of Osiris.â Jan Assmann, Death And Salvation In Ancient Egypt, 24-25.
Françoise Dunand And Christiane Zivie-Coche Explain Horusâ Birth Succinctly In Their Publication With Cornell University Press: âAfter Having Sexual Intercourse, In The Form Of A Bird, With The Dead God She Restored To Life, [Isis] Gave Birth To A Posthumous Son, Horus.â Gods And Men In Egypt, 39. See Also All About Horus â An Egyptian Copy Of Christ? For More Scholarly Sources Refuting The Zeitgeist Movieâs Claims About Horus.
[2] âMithra Was Known As The Rock-Born God. The Inscriptions Confirm This Nomenclature: One Even Reads D(Eo) O(Omipotenti) S(Oli) Invi(Cto), Deo Genitori, R(Upe) N(Ato), âTo The Almighty God Sun Invincible, Generative God, Born From The Rockâ. Manfred Clauss, The Roman Cult Of Mithra: The God And His Mysteries, 62-63.
[3] âWhen [Augustusâ Mother] Atia Had Come In The Middle Of The Night To The Solemn Service Of Apollo, She Had Her Litter Set Down In The Temple And Fell Asleep, While The Rest Of The Matrons Also Slept. On A Sudden A Serpent Glided Up To Her And Shortly Went Away. When She Awoke, She Purified Herself, As If After The Embraces Of Her Husband, And At Once There Appeared On Her Body A Mark In Colors Like A Serpent, And She Could Never Get Rid Of It; So That Presently She Ceased Ever To Go To The Public Baths. In The Tenth Month After That Augustus Was Born And Was Therefore Regarded As The Son Of Apollo.â Suetonius âTwelve Caesarsâ Augustus 94:4, Accessed Online At Http://Penelope.Uchicago.Edu/Thayer/E/Roman/Texts/Suetonius/12caesars/Augustus*.Html
[4] Octavia Was Augustusâ Full Sister. Http://Www.Britannica.Com/Ebchecked/Topic/424838/Octavia
Recommended resources related to the topic:
Miracles: The Evidence by Frank Turek DVD and Mp4
Two Miracles You Take With You Everywhere You Go by Frank Turek DVD, Mp3 and Mp4
Jesus, You and the Essentials of Christianity – Episode 14 Video DOWNLOAD by Frank Turek (DVD)
Mikel Del Rosario helps Christians explain their faith with courage and compassion. He is a doctoral student in the New Testament department at Dallas Theological Seminary. Mikel teaches Christian Apologetics and World Religion at William Jessup University. He is the author of Accessible Apologetics and has published over 20 journal articles on apologetics and cultural engagement with his mentor, Dr. Darrell Bock. Mikel holds an M.A. in Christian Apologetics with highest honors from Biola University and a Master of Theology (Th.M) from Dallas Theological Seminary where he serves as Cultural Engagement Manager at the Hendricks Center and a host of the Table Podcast. Visit his Web site at ApologeticsGuy.com.
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