Quote:
Originally Posted by Roy5
As for her perpetual virginity, I don’t see that as essential, and Matt. 1:25 suggests that she and Joseph may have lived quite normally as husband and wife.
Matthew 1:24-25 (Young’s Literal Translation)
24 And Joseph, having risen from the sleep, did as the messenger of the Lord directed him, and received his wife, 25
and did not know her till she brought forth her son – the first-born, and he called his name Jesus.
Seems to me that any normal reading of verse 25 implies that Joseph and Mary did the things husbands and wives normally do. Is there someplace else in the bible that supports perpetual virginity, or does that come from Tradition?
EDIT: Look at the third definition for the word “know” per “Strong’s G1097 - ginōskō”.
blueletterbible.org/lang/lexicon/lexicon.cfm?Strongs=G1097&t=KJV
That is because of poor exogesis on your part. The Blessed Mary could not have any marital relations with Joseph because Joseph was no dummy. He was an upright and just man He also knew the OT. He knew what happened when the ark of the covenant was defiled by men. Blessed Mary is the arc of the New Covenant. Just as the old ark was the tabernacle that contained the manna, the stone tablets and the rod of Aaron signifying the bread from heaven, the word of God and the priesthood The blessed Virgin Mary is the tabernacle that contained Christ who was the Bread from Heaven, The Word and the eternal High Priest. Furthermore The Blessed Mary says twice in scripture that she is the handmaid of the Lord. She says it to the angel Gabriel [Luke 1:38] and she says it to Elizabeth [Luke 1:48]. That word has significance that we tend to ignore because it is not a word that we are accustomed to using today. But in the ancient world of the first century a handmaid was a female servant dedicated to serving one person and only that one person. Many times the handmaid was a slave. The word is translated from the Greek
doule[feminine] or *doulos *[masculine] and according to the KJV lexicon it means:
- a slave, bondman/bondwoman, man/woman of servile condition
a. a slave
metaph., one who gives himself up to another’s will
b. those whose service is used by Christ in extending and advancing his cause
among men
c. devoted to another to the disregard of one’s own interests
- a servant, attendant
The term denotes either one is the property of another as in being a slave or that one is devoted to another to the exclusion of any other interests. The Blessed Virgin Mary, by calling herself God’s handmaiden is saying that she is devoted to God to the exclusion of anything other other than Jesus. And that exclusion means she had no other children. The early church was correct when they called the Blessed Virgin Mary “ever virgin”.
Jerome in his writing against the heretic Helvidius wrote:
“… Might I not array against you the whole series of ancient writers? Ignatius, Polycarp, Irenaeus, Justin Martyr, and many other apostolic and eloquent men, who against [the heretics] Ebion, Theodotus of Byzantium, and Valentinus, held these same views and wrote volumes replete with wisdom. If you had ever read what they wrote, you would be a wiser man” (Against Helvidius: The Perpetual Virginity of Mary 19 [A.D. 383]).
Helvidius was a heretic who claimed Mary had other children by Joseph. Jerome defends the teaching of the church that she was ‘ever virgin’ by referring to men of the first and second centuries like Polycarp and Ignatius who claimed that The Mother of God was “ever virgin.” What makes these men [Ignatius and Polycarp] important is that they were the disciples of the Apostle John into whose care Jesus gave his mother. They literally learned the faith at the feet of the Apostle. Now if anybody in the first century would know if The Blessed Virgin Mary had other children it would be John. So why did this Apostle tell Polycarp and Ignatius she didn’t? Is it unreasonable to think that Ignatius and Polycarp wrote what John had told them? It’s a rhetorical question.