The Bible says in Isaiah that God would give us
a sign: "The virgin shall conceive and bear a
Son" (Isaiah 7:14). The word in Hebrew that we
translate as "virgin" is almah, and it can
mean "virgin or young woman." The word has
been translated "virgin," however, because
there is nothing unusual about a young woman giving
birth, so that would be no sign at all.
But in the New Testament, the word that is used for
the Greek translation of almah is parthenos, and that
clearly means virgin. It has no other meaning except
virgin. The Bible tells us that there was a young
virgin named Mary. The angel of the Lord came to Mary
and said, "The Holy Spirit will come upon you,
and ... Overshadow you" (Luke 1:35). He went
on to tell her that a child would be formed in her,
and she would give birth to the Messiah.
This is the way God entered into humanity to bring
a second Adam. God the Son enfleshed Himself--the
Holy Spirit bringing about conception, parthenogenesis,
the virgin beginning--without the intervention of
the normal reproductive cycle of man. That is why
Jesus is called the Son of God. He was not the son
of Joseph, and He was not the son of a Roman soldier.
He was not the son of any human father. He was conceived
by the Holy Spirit. God brought about virtually a
second creation, a second man, without the original
sin of the male line from Adam.
Linking Jesus into the family tree of Mary, however,
made him a descendant of David and Abraham, which
fulfilled the various promises that God had made to
them. Further, it was from His mother, Mary, that
the Lord received His human nature. So Jesus Christ
was unique, conceived by the Holy Spirit, but of "the
house and lineage of David" (Luke 2:4).