- Oct 5, 2020
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If you think His own family didn't believe Him then why do you? Is that because Jesus Christ is a nice guy with good vibes?I updated my post. The text does not tell us if Mary remained a virgin until Jesus was born or for the rest of her life. In Greek, the words don't make it clear. What we do know is that Gabriel did not instruct her or Jospeh to keep her a virgin. It would have been normal and natural for them to go on and have children of their own and to provide Jesus with siblings. To claim that Mary had to remain a virgin is making a supposition not taught in Scripture. As to why Jesus left Mary to John's care, the most likely reason is that at that time none of his siblings believed in him as Messiah. We know that eventually James and Jude came to believe. We don't know about his other siblings and how many there were. It was usually a son that would have cared for their widowed mother.
Christ didn't turn away from His Jewish Tradition, He fulfilled it.Mary was clearly one of the disciples and was traveling with them at least at times. Why would Jesus leave his believing mother in the care of an unbelieving son probably cut off from the disciples she had been in the company of? There is the suggestion that John may have been a cousin in which case he was related. Did not Jesus teach that to follow him you must be willing to give up sister and brother and mother and father? If his siblings (half-siblings) were unbelievers Jesus would be right to put his believing mother in the care of one of his closest disciples to keep her among the disciples. Keeping to Jewish tradition would not have been Jesus' concern. He turned many Jewish traditions on their heads. He would have prioritized Mary's spiritual care ahead of any Jewish expectations.If the sibling was a son of Mary's and didn't believe, being a demigod wouldn't the sibling create His own following?
Well OK, there are no planes, trains, and automobiles in Scripture. Can I assume you're going to be on foot now? Well let us assume then that only a Protestant would have taken her after Christ's death as her own family seemed to disavow her according to you. Wouldn't Jesus' family know Him better?Bottom line...there is nothing in Scripture that proves Mary remained a virgin. There is nothing that disallows them to have other children. The RC Church assumed Mary's perpetual virginity based on other doctrines they were trying to build but Scripture itself does not prove their case. This is an example of RC tradition becoming dogma. Scripture itself does not prove she remained a virgin and allows for her to have other children. She was not commanded to remain a virgin nor was Joseph commanded to keep her a virgin. To teach she was "ever virgin" is speculation driven by a conclusion looking for support.
JoeT
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