"But when the fullness of the time came, God sent forth his Son, made of a woman, made under the law,"
Galatians 4, 4 [KJV]
γενόμενον ἐκ γυναικός is translated "born of a woman" in all Protestant Bible versions save Darby and Young's Literal Translation which have "come of a woman". The Catholic DRB has this as well. The translation "made of a woman" was what Thomas Aquinas preferred to "born of a woman".
It's a bit odd to find this Valentinian argument that was put to bed some 1800 years ago. Valentine was arguing for an abnormal birth with no blood, no afterbirth, and maintained virginity. So odd to find people still embrace that docetic view.
"But Paul, too, silences these critics
72167216 Grammaticis. when he says, “God sent forth His Son, made of a woman. ... But by saying “
made,” he not only confirmed the statement, “The Word was made flesh,”
72187218 John i. 14. but he also asserted the reality of the flesh which was made of a virgin. ... Here is a third point. Now let us carefully attend to the sense of these passages. “Thou didst draw me,” He says, “out of the womb.” Now what is it which is
drawn, if it be not that which adheres, that which is firmly fastened to anything from which it is drawn in order to be sundered? If He clove not to the womb, how could He have been drawn from it? If He who clove thereto was drawn from it, how could He have adhered to it, if it were not that, all the while He was in the womb, He was tied to it, as to His origin,
72237223 i.e. of His flesh. by the umbilical cord, which communicated growth to Him from the matrix? Even when one strange matter amalgamates with another, it becomes so entirely incorporated
72247224 Concarnatus et convisceratus: “united in flesh and internal structure.” with that with which it amalgamates, that when it is drawn off from it, it carries with it some part of the body from which it is torn, as if in consequence of the severance of the union and growth which the constituent pieces had communicated to each other."
http://www.ccel.org/ccel/schaff/anf03.v.vii.xx.html
We all know you can't change your mind, but at least try to see the irony of your arguing for Valentine's position.
C/u around.