by jimwalton » Thu Dec 13, 2018 3:30 pm
In their era, it was much easier for them to accept. They followed Aristotelian biological ideas where males provided the life force and women the bodily substance (the incubator) for it. They knew it took a man and a woman, but it was easy for them to postulate that God provided the life force in Mary's "oven."
In our era, we know about sperm and eggs, and X and Y chromosomes—things that make us go "Hmm..." for a virginal conception. Our modern understanding requires God to have acted biologically to provide part of the genetic material necessary for conception to have taken place. Both Matthew and Luke are firm on this, though: Mary had never had intercourse—that Jesus was conceived without the participation of a human male. We are left to the conclusion of a veritable miracle: God, who is able to create out of nothing (Heb. 11.3), created a sperm in her.
As to Jesus's genetic makeup, Dr. Jeff Hardin, embryologist, said, "It’s all speculative, and ultimately an unproductive discussion. How did he end up with a male embryo without a sperm? It’s a miracle. We didn’t have the technology when Jesus was born to genotype Him."
I once emailed Dr. Stephen Schaffner (Ph.D. in Particle physics from Yale, now working with the Broad Institute of Harvard and M.I.T.) about it. He replied, "If Jesus' DNA is a product of direct divine miracle, then it could look like absolutely anything since there are no constraints on God's action here, and no obvious reason for thinking he would do one thing rather than another. He could make the DNA look like Mary's with a slight modification, or like Mary’s + a random male's, or exactly like George Clooney's. It's only naturally inherited DNA that's constrained to look like parental DNA. This is why science can't handle non-naturalistic processes."
In their era, it was much easier for them to accept. They followed Aristotelian biological ideas where males provided the life force and women the bodily substance (the incubator) for it. They knew it took a man and a woman, but it was easy for them to postulate that God provided the life force in Mary's "oven."
In our era, we know about sperm and eggs, and X and Y chromosomes—things that make us go "Hmm..." for a virginal conception. Our modern understanding requires God to have acted biologically to provide part of the genetic material necessary for conception to have taken place. Both Matthew and Luke are firm on this, though: Mary had never had intercourse—that Jesus was conceived without the participation of a human male. We are left to the conclusion of a veritable miracle: God, who is able to create out of nothing (Heb. 11.3), created a sperm in her.
As to Jesus's genetic makeup, Dr. Jeff Hardin, embryologist, said, "It’s all speculative, and ultimately an unproductive discussion. How did he end up with a male embryo without a sperm? It’s a miracle. We didn’t have the technology when Jesus was born to genotype Him."
I once emailed Dr. Stephen Schaffner (Ph.D. in Particle physics from Yale, now working with the Broad Institute of Harvard and M.I.T.) about it. He replied, "If Jesus' DNA is a product of direct divine miracle, then it could look like absolutely anything since there are no constraints on God's action here, and no obvious reason for thinking he would do one thing rather than another. He could make the DNA look like Mary's with a slight modification, or like Mary’s + a random male's, or exactly like George Clooney's. It's only naturally inherited DNA that's constrained to look like parental DNA. This is why science can't handle non-naturalistic processes."