Showing posts with label Birth. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Birth. Show all posts

Wednesday, December 12, 2018

#9 The Wise Men Visit

#9 The Wise Men Visit
Please Read: Matthew 2:1-12

The family now remains in Bethlehem to fulfill the responsibilities of the law. Mary’s days of purification are accomplished (40 days for a male child, 80 days for a female) and Jesus as the first-born male must be redeemed from a life of Levite priestly service to the Lord by payment of five shekels. This they do. While in the Temple the Holy Ghost reveals to Simeon and Anna, a Priest and Priestess, that Jesus is the Messiah and they testify to this truth. We now turn to the visit of the Wise Men (Magi).

Apostle James E. Talmage:

“Some time after the presentation of Jesus in the temple, though how long we are not told, possibly but a few days, possibly weeks or even months, Herod, king of Judea, was greatly troubled, as were the people of Jerusalem in general, over the report that a Child of Prophecy ... one destined to become King of the Jews ... had been born.” There came to Jerusalem certain men from afar, wise men they were called, and they asked, ‘Where is he that is born King of the Jews? for we have seen his star in the east, and are come to worship him.’ Herod summoned ‘all the chief priests and scribes of the people,’ and demanded of them where, according to the prophets, Christ should be born. They answered him, ‘In Bethlehem of Judea; for thus it is written by the prophet.’

“Herod sent secretly for the wise men, and inquired of them as to the source of their information …  Then he directed them to Bethlehem, saying: ‘Go and search diligently for the young child; and when ye have found him, bring me word again, that I may come and worship him also.’ As the men set out from Jerusalem on the last stage of their journey, the new star they had seen in the east was again visible. They found the house were-in Mary was living with her husband and the Babe, and as they recognized the royal Child they fell down and worshiped him: and when they had opened their treasures, they presented unto him gifts ... Preparing to return home, they would have stopped at Jerusalem to report to the king as he had requested, but “being warned of God in a dream that they should not return to Herod, they departed into their own country another way.”

“...the appearance of a new star was a predicted sign recognized and acknowledged among the people of the western world as witness of Messiah's birth.”

The following excerpt is from an article entitled “The Christmas Star” that appeared in The Church News in December 25, 1983:

“The Wise Men saw the Christmas star in the east. It led them to Bethlehem. Somehow they had been taught about the Messiah. In some way they knew that the star was His and that it would guide them to His presence, so they followed it. They went first to Herod's palace, for evidently God wanted him to know of the Savior's birth, and chose this way to tell him.

“When the wise men left the palace to continue their journey, God warned them against further contact with Herod, and again provided the star to lead them to the place where the young Child and His mother lived. The scriptures say, “And lo, the star which they saw in the east went before them, till it came and stood over where the young child was. When they saw the star, they rejoiced with exceeding great joy.” (Matthew 2:9-10)

“Obviously, the star was not a part of some constellation millions of miles away in the heavens, nor was its light from any unusual alignment of planets in the skies. It was down to earth with them. It led the way and “stood over where the young child was.” A star in a galaxy millions of miles away could not stand over a particular house. It would not move like a beacon along the road to Bethlehem. This was a special light provided to guide these devoted wise men who brought their gifts to the young King.

“A star was seen in America, too. This was a sign to the faithful Nephites who had waited for this affirmation of the birth of the Lord, for whom they had suffered severe persecution. It was a joy to them as it was to the wise men of the east. How far above the earth this star was no one knows, but it was so different from all other heavenly bodies that the Nephites recognized it as the divine sign that Christ was born. Yes, the Christmas star was a reality in both hemispheres.”

Reynolds and Sjodahl:

“Other nations in the mid-east areas had religious leaders and wise men who were highly regarded and honored by their people as was the tribe of Levi in Israel. These were individuals “who had charge of religion, arts, and the higher culture generally.” The wise men who thus came to pay homage to Jesus could very well have been from among these personages.”

Frederick Farrar:

“Religious leaders and wise men, learned men, were well known in the east in antiquity. Their visits to western nations would not be an unfamiliar occurrence. Throughout the entire east at this time there was an intense conviction, derived from ancient prophecies, that ere long a powerful monarch would arise in Judea, and gain dominion over the world.

“The appearance of a new star in the heavens would fit right into the event of Jesus' birth. The Greeks and Romans of this time believed that heavenly signs signaled the birth and/or death of great men.”

In “The Life and Teachings of Jesus and his Apostles” from the CES Seminaries and Institutes of Religion:

“The wise men were familiar with the prophecies that foretold of the birth of Christ and recognizing the signs that had been given journeyed to Jerusalem to pay homage to the “King of the Jews.” They would merit an audience with king Herod.  Also, they received revelation warning them not to return and tell Herod where to find the Child.”

Apostle Bruce R. McConkie:

“In contrast to shepherds, and temple workers Simeon and Anna, we now learn of witnesses who could command an audience with kings. It would appear they were true prophets, righteous persons ... to whom deity revealed that the promised Messiah had been born among men.

“They were aware of ancient prophecies telling of the rise of a new star at his birth and were led by that star in their journey to where Jesus was. They found and worshiped the Christ child and received revelation to not disclose the Child's location.

“The probability is they were themselves Jews who lived, as millions of Jews then did, in one of the nations to the East. It was the Jews, not the gentiles, who were acquainted with the scriptures and who were waiting with anxious expectation for the coming of a King. And that King was to come to them first; he was to deliver his message to them before it went to the gentile world, and his first witnesses were to come from his own kinsmen, from the house of Israel, not from the gentile nations.”

The LDS Bible Dictionary provides the following information about the Wise Men:

"Magi. Called ‘wise men.’ Their identification is not made known in the scriptures, but it is certain that they were righteous men sent on an errand to witness the presence of the Son of God on the earth. Their spiritual capacity is evident: They were able to see the star when others could not; they knew its meaning, and brought gifts to the young child; and they were warned of God in a dream to return to their home by a safe route. Their knowledge was precise and accurate. It seems likely that they were representatives of a branch of the Lord's people somewhere from east of Palestine, who had come, led by the spirit, to behold the Son of God, and who returned to their people to bear witness that the King Immanuel had indeed been born in the flesh ... If they were serving in the capacity of witnesses, there would of necessity have been two or three.

“Wise Men of the East. Matthew 2:1-12 states that wise men (how many is not recorded), guided by a new star, came to Bethlehem to worship Jesus sometime after his birth. Who these men were we are not told, but it is certain they were not ordinary men. That they were privileged to search out the Son of God and give him gifts, and that they were spiritually sensitive and knowledgeable, suggests that they were actually prophets on a divine errand. The customary identification of them as astrologers is a gross misrepresentation. They evidently were holy men from a land east of Palestine. 

“The Jews were not the only people who had expectations of a deliverer. Even the emperor Augustus was viewed by some as a hero-ruler who would bring peace to the land. Such beliefs were not just throughout the middle east, but also in lands around the Mediterranean.   Astrology also had its influence here. Many peoples: Stoics, Babylonians, Romans, Seleucids, Greeks, Arabs, were much involved in this quasi-science.”

Albright and Mann:

“Astrology and the prevalence of magi as a professional class are both very well attested in the contemporary literature. In spite of the frequent condemnation of astrology in the O.T., in the inter-Testamental literature, and in the rabbinic writings, Judaism was deeply affected by the phenomenon. Josephus writes that the veil of the temple was adorned with stars and many excavated synagogues in Rome and Palestine have been found to have the zodiac depicted in them.

“Historically, there is nothing in the least improbable about magi traveling from Babylon west, or anywhere else in the Mediterranean world. They would find welcome audiences anywhere, from royal courts to market places. Consultation of magi by kings and prominent persons is well attested. “Messianism” of one kind or another was in the air almost everywhere. The news of magi coming to seek a king would guarantee Herod’s calling for them … Herod was constantly concerned with real or imagined usurpers after his throne.”

Glenn R. McGettigan
January 2012; Revised September 2018



#8 The Birth of Jesus

#8 The Birth of Jesus
Please first read: Luke 2:1-20; Matthew 2:1-12

Apostle James E. Talmage:

“There is meaning as deep as the pathos that all must feel in the seemingful parenthetical remark by Luke ... “But Mary kept all these things, and pondered them in her heart.” It is apparent that the great truth as to the personality and mission of her divine Son had not yet unfolded itself in its fullness to her mind. The whole course of events, from the salutation of Gabriel to the reverent testimony of the shepherds concerning the announcing angel and the heavenly hosts, was largely a mystery to the stainless mother and wife.”

Matthew 1:23: “A virgin shall be with child.” This significant phrase shows a fulfillment of a prophecy given by God in the Garden of Eden. He told Satan that there would be enmity between his seed and the seed of the woman; Satan could bruise the heel, but the woman’s seed would have power to crush Satan’s head. (Genesis 3: 15)

Have you ever thought that in all history only one person could be called the seed of the woman? All others are the seed of a man and a woman. Interesting how this changes the message we perceive.  (Church Educational System, “The Growing Edge” December 1981)

“I have wondered if this young woman, something of a child herself, here bearing her first baby, might have wished her mother, or an aunt, or her sister, or her friend to be near her through the labor. Surely the birth of such a son as this should have commanded the aid and attention of every midwife in Judea. We all might wish that someone could have held her hand, cooled her brow, and when the ordeal was over, given her rest in crisp, cool linen. But it was not to be so. With only Joseph's inexperienced assistance, she herself brought forth her firstborn son, wrapped him in the little clothes she had knowingly brought on her journey, and perhaps laid him on a pillow of hay.” (Elder Jeffrey R. Holland, “No Room for Them in the Inn” Luke 2: 7)

The Joseph Smith translation of Luke 2: 7 reads a little differently: “And she brought forth her first-born son, and wrapped him in swaddling clothes, and laid him in a manger, because there was none to give room for them in the inns.” (King James version: “no room for them in the inn.”)

Apostle Bruce R. McConkie:

“Inns were square buildings, open inside, in which travelers commonly put up for the night; back parts of these erections were used as stables. Mary's condition probably required slow travel so that the inns were all filled upon their arrival in Bethlehem, necessitating their use of the stable for shelter. It was the traveling host of Judah generally, not just the innkeeper or an isolated few persons, who withheld shelter from Joseph and Mary. Though her state was apparent, the other travelers, lacking in courtesy, compassion, and refinement, would not give way so she could be cared for more conveniently and commodiously. This rude rejection was but a prelude to the coming day when these same people and their children after them would reject to their eternal sorrow the Lord who that night began mortality under the most lowly circumstances.”

Apostle Jeffrey R. Holland:

 “There was no room for 'them' in the inn. We cannot be certain, but it is my guess that money could talk in those days as well as in our own. I think if Joseph and Mary had been people of influence or means, they would have found lodging even at that busy time of year. They did not know the right people.”

Under these circumstances there would be no privacy for Mary to give birth to the baby ... many people crowded into one room to eat sleep and stay. Joseph may have been very grateful to accept the offer of a stable, its privacy, and possible greater solitude.  Maybe the innkeeper, seeing Mary's condition, was not being hard-hearted when he suggested the use of his stable.

Jesus’ Earthly Family and Times

Virtually all who knew the family considered Joseph to be the reputed and legal father of Jesus.  Probably Zacharias and Elizabeth were the only others who would have known otherwise. Jesus would grow up being so regarded. From Mary he would get all earthly talents. From God he would get all Godly powers; one immortal and glorified, one human.

All the necessary requirements of the law were meticulously carried out. He was circumcised at eight days of age and given a name. This brought him under the obligation of the Jewish laws pertaining to a male Jew. He would thus observe all required sacrifices, ceremonial observances and ordinances. At age twelve Jesus would become “a son of the law.” He would have a position in the congregation and be recognized as a member of his community. His vocational, secular and religious studies all moved to an advanced level and practice, and at this age parents could no longer sell their son as a bond servant.

Joseph Smith, in his inspired version of the Bible, added the following: “Jesus grew up with his brethren, and waxed strong, and waited upon the Lord for the time of his ministry to come. And he served under his father, and he spake not as other men, neither could he be taught; for he needed not that any man should teach him.” (Matthew 3: 24-25)

Hebrews 5: 8 “... though he were a Son, yet learned he obedience by the things which he suffered.” In addition, Jesus needed the earthly experience of growth. President Joseph Fielding Smith said that Jesus, when He came here, forgot everything (a veil was drawn) and He had to grow from grace to grace.                    
                                 
Some of the people of Jesus' time considered him to be another Moses. There are parallels between the two. Moses was considered a physical savior of the Jewish nation; God gave them a new covenant through Moses, and Moses gathered them to freedom. It appears that many followers of Jesus expected him to repeat this against the Romans. However, Jesus came in the meridian of time to be our spiritual savior.

Bethlehem

The Jews had known for many years from their prophets that the Messiah would be born of the lineage of David; and that his birth and coming would take place in the town of Bethlehem, a small town in Judea that was also the birthplace of their ancestor David. People were anticipating and praying for this to occur. Mary and Joseph lived in Nazareth of Galilee, nearly 100 miles north of Bethlehem, and would have to travel there for the baby's birth regardless of any other reason.

At this time the Roman Emperor, Caesar Augustus (Octavian) issues an order for all subjects of the empire to register in a census so they can be taxed. The Jews had paid tribute to Rome since Pompeii and Rome had taken tax census's before, so this was not new to them. The Roman way of doing this was to take the census in the town where subjects resided, but Jewish custom for this was for everyone to register at their ancestral home. Joseph and Mary will have to travel to Bethlehem. For some reason they did not leave early enough, and they are late in arriving. It is Passover time and there will be huge crowds spilling over from Jerusalem to Bethlehem. They are poor, and this will be a hard trip for Mary being great with child. Many others likewise had to journey there and thus the town is. overcrowded at this time. All short-term accommodations are long gone even in this land which has a great reputation for citizens sharing hospitality. Sheep and oxen will make room and be the companions for Jesus at his birth. Against this backdrop of humility our Father-God causes some great signs and events to take place throughout the world.

Witnesses

From its inception Bethlehem was a community mostly engaged in agricultural and pastoral activities. It was now springtime and shepherds were in the fields with their sheep. Because of the closeness of Jerusalem, these sheep were especially selected for sacrifice at the temple there. The scriptures seem to indicate that the lowly shepherds were the first to know of the birth of the Messiah and to testify of his arrival on earth. Doesn't this seem fitting in a way? ... Jesus, who is destined to be sacrificed for all of us, is first made known to those tending sheep destined for sacrifice in the temple.

Wise men from eastern lands ... they came asking, “Where is he that is born king of the Jews?”  They probably knew of ancient prophecies telling of the rise of a new star at the birth of the Messiah. When this occurred, they responded and made plans to find the Messiah who would be king. They received revelation to come, and revelation to not return to Herod when they left to go home.

Additional points of interest:

Many nouns in the Hebrew language were given names...Bethlehem meant “house of bread.” Jesus identified Himself as the “true bread of life.”
  
“Jesus” was a common name at the time of Christ, as also was “Mary.”         

Male babies were named and circumcised on the eighth day of life; this was also to be a reminder to parents to prepare their children for accountability at eight years of age.   
                                
Jesus came to fulfill the law of Moses, and through His circumcision He became subject to the law and required to obey all its requirements ... which He did.
  
Mangers in the East were built in the shape of kneading troughs and were commonly used as cradles.

Glenn R. McGettigan
December 2011; Revised October 2014
                           
References:

“Doctrinal New Testament Commentary.” McConkie
“The Life of Christ.” Farrar
“The Life and Teachings of Jesus Christ.” Holzapfel-Wayment
“Life and Teachings of Jesus and His Apostles.” CES NT Manual
“The Gospels.” Jackson-Millet
“The Mortal Messiah” McConkie
“Bible Review Journal.” February 1985
“Our Lord of the Gospels.” Clark
“The Four Gospels.” Ludlow
“Life of Christ.” Geikie

                                


                                       





























                                


                                       






























#7 Joseph, Husband of Mary


#7 Joseph, Husband of Mary
Please first read: Matthew 1:18-25

Annunciation to Joseph

After the visit of the angel Gabriel, Mary left her home and went to visit her cousin Elizabeth. She now returns home and is probably showing her three-month pregnancy. Joseph has not yet been visited by the angel and told of the circumstance involved. Is Joseph possibly being tested? No doubt Joseph is crushed and decides to break their betrothal.  Because he loves Mary he plans to have her put away privately, (a divorce procedure) which under Jewish law he has the right to do. This will spare Mary public ridicule and embarrassment, plus there is the potential of a serious crime having been committed. Under Jewish law unfaithfulness (adultery) by the bride-to-be during this time was punishable by death. Marriage occurs in two separate ceremonies: 1. betrothal (engagement) which is considered as binding as marriage, and 2. the actual solemnizing of the marriage itself. The period between these may be long as one year.   The woman usually continues to live with her family during this time.

The angel now comes to Joseph in his grief and explains the situation. (Matthew Chapter 1): “But while he thought on these things, behold, the angel of the Lord appeared unto him in a dream, saying, Joseph, thou son of David, fear not to take unto thee Mary thy wife: for that which is conceived in her is of the Holy Ghost. And she shall bring forth a son, and thou shalt call his name JESUS: for he shall save his people from their sins.” We cannot imagine the flood of joy that swept over Joseph with those words!

 Mary’s conception is of the Holy Ghost … He will be the Son of God, and his name is to be ‘Jesus’… Joseph proceeds and makes Mary his legal wife. Under Jewish law this will make him her guardian and give legal protection to both Mary and the baby. Joseph was no doubt aware of the prophecies of Jewish prophets about the birth of a Messiah and how this was to occur. We would expect that he received this news with great joy and recognized the choice blessing that had come to Mary, and now to him.

Only a few things are written in the scriptures about Joseph. We know that he was a just man, a strict observer of the law, and that he had great love for Mary. We also get some small bits of information from a few latter-day prophets and apostles, but that's it. However, there is much known about the world, history, and culture within which he spent his life. When we look at, and place, Joseph within these settings, we can gain a fairly- good look at who and what kind of person he was. To me it is a picture of a very good, faithful and choice son of our Father in Heaven. When we carefully make assumptions that Joseph was much like his "good" peers of that day, about whom quite a bit is known historically, we can begin to understand basic characteristics about him.
                                          
At the time of the Savior’s birth, Israel was ruled by alien monarchs. The rights of the royal David family were unrecognized, and the ruler of the Jews was an appointee of Rome. Had Judah been a free and independent nation, ruled by her rightful sovereign, Joseph the carpenter would have been her crowned king, and his lawful successor to the throne would have been Jesus of Nazareth, the King of the Jews." (Apostle James E. Talmage, "Jesus the Christ".)  Joseph inherited his legal status as Son of David from his father and Jesus would be the lawful successor to the throne.

All the nation knew that its' Savior would be born through the royal line of David. Both Matthew and Luke give accounts of the royal lineage. Matthews' is generally accepted as that of Joseph, establishing the order of sequence of successors to the throne of David. Joseph was recognized by Jewish law as the legal father of Jesus thus making Him the rightful heir after Joseph to be king.

The account by Luke is generally accepted as that of Mary. Many scriptures confirm Mary as a descendent of David. The blood line of David would, of course, come to Jesus through Mary alone. During His ministry Jesus was repeatedly referred to as Son of David. He never repudiated this title, and we have no evidence that He was ever challenged about His Messiah-ship because of His lineage.

Daniel H. Ludlow:

“Robert J. Matthews, Dean of the Religion Department at BYU wrote about the fact that Joseph was chosen in the preexistence to serve as the earthly father to Jesus. He was a choice son of God to be thus selected. Jesus was instructed and taught by God the Father as He grew and matured, but it stands to reason that Joseph would teach and counsel correct principles and set an example for Him. Joseph would demonstrate moral, intellectual, and social qualities, and observe the requirements as they pertained to the Baby, the Child, and the Young Man. “’Joseph was a just man, a strict observer of the law, yet no harsh extremist; moreover, he loved Mary ...’”  

Alfred Edersheim:

“At five years of age, reading of the Bible; at ten years, learning the Mishnah; at thirteen years, bound to the commandments; at fifteen years, the study of the Talmud; at eighteen years, marriage; at twenty, the pursuit of trade or business (active life); at thirty years, full vigor; at forty, maturity of reason; at fifty, for counsel; at sixty, commencement of aged-ness; at seventy, grey age; at eighty ,advanced old age; at ninety, bowed down; at a hundred, as if he were dead and gone, taken from the world.”

Apostle Bruce R. McConkie:

“We are left to conclude that Joseph was certainly not older than twenty years when he took Mary as his wife and she was at least fourteen, perhaps fifteen or sixteen years of age.”
                                
Joseph received four separate “dreams” from the Lord in a short period of time, instructing him regarding the birth and protection of Jesus and Mary. Joseph Smith, in his translation of Matthew, corrects the term “dreams” to “visions.”                         
                                
There is a course of study at BYU entitled “The Life and Teachings of Jesus and His Apostles.” The study manual reminds us that Mary returned to Nazareth, to Joseph. Three months pregnant, and Joseph proceeded with steps to protect and care for Mary before the angelic visitation telling him who the father of Mary's baby was. Joseph is truly a special Priesthood brother and son of the Father. He was “foreordained to the honored station that he held.”

The Prophet Joseph Smith:

“Every man who has a calling to minister to the inhabitants of the world was ordained to that very purpose in the Grand Council of Heaven before this world was.”

Joseph's trade was that of a carpenter. Given the traditions and culture of the time, his father was probably a carpenter and taught his son that skill, as Joseph so taught Jesus. The term “carpenter,” translated from Hebrew and Greek texts, had a little different meaning than our word “carpenter” today. It included furniture, cabinetry, wood carving and more general wood handicraft than we think of today when we think of a “carpenter.”

Glenn R. McGettigan
December 2011; Revised September 2018

References:

“Our Lord of the Gospels.” Clark
“The Mortal Messiah.” McConkie
“Jesus the Christ.” Talmage
“Life and Teachings of Jesus and His Apostles.” CES NT Manual
“The Four Gospels.” Ludlow
“Doctrinal New Testament Commentary.” Volume 1. McConkie
“The Gospels.” Jackson-Millet
“Mormon Doctrine.” McConkie
“The Life and Teachings of Jesus Christ.” Volume 1. Holzapfel-Wayment
“The Life of Christ.” Farrar
“The Life and Times of Jesus the Messiah.” Volume 1. Edersheim
“Doctrines of Salvation.” Volume 1. Joseph Fielding Smith  












                                                                                


#6 Mary, the Mother of Jesus


#6 Mary, the Mother of Jesus
Please first read: Luke 1:26-38

The Annunciation to Mary

Some six months have transpired since the angel’s visitation to Zacharias in the temple.   Elizabeth is with child. God the Father now sends the angel Gabriel to Mary in Nazareth, who is betrothed (engaged in the Jewish tradition) to marry Joseph.

Mary, like many young Jewish maidens of her time, would be aware of the prophecies regarding the coming of their Messiah. The one so chosen would be of the tribe of Judah and a descendant of David. Jesus would come through this the Royal Line which also happens to be the ancestry of both Mary and her husband-to-be Joseph. What incredible joy and excitement would the mother of the Christ experience when that great event occurred! What a blessing for the Jewish nation and all involved! How much longer must they suffer and wait for the Lord to come and restore the nation to its former grandeur?

And then,

“Hail, thou that art highly favoured, the Lord is with thee: blessed art thou among women,” the angel Gabriel greets the virgin.

Could this be? Mary knew of her lineage, her unmarried status and her virgin condition. Startled, and before she can respond, the angel continues:

“Fear not, Mary, for thou hast found favour with God. And behold thou shalt conceive in thy
womb, and bring forth a son, and shalt call his name JESUS. He shall be great, and shall be called the Son of the Highest: and the Lord God shall give unto him the throne of his father David: And he shall reign over the house of Jacob for ever; and of his kingdom there shall be no end.”

“Then said Mary unto the angel, How shall this be, seeing I know not a man? And the angel answered and said unto her, The Holy Ghost shall come upon thee, and the power of the Highest shall overshadow thee; therefore also that holy thing which shall be born of thee shall be called the Son of God. And, behold, thy cousin Elizabeth, she hath also conceived a son in her old age: and this is the sixth month with her, who was called barren. For with God nothing shall be impossible.”

Mary’s response is almost child-like: “Behold the handmaid of the Lord; be it unto me according to thy word,” and the angel departs as quietly as he had come. (Luke 1:28-38)

The time is at hand, the Savior is coming to the earth!

Mary was chosen and foreordained in the preexistence to be the earthly mother of our Lord. She was the greatest, or one of the greatest, spiritual daughters of our Father in Heaven. Just as God chose the greatest of His sons to be the Christ, it is reasonable to think that He would make a similar selection for the earthly mother of that Son. Mary was known to many Old Testament and Book of Mormon prophets. They prophesied her name would be “Mary,” she would be the earthly mother of the Savior, and Jesus would be the only begotten Son of God the Father on the earth.

In the 8th Century BC Isaiah wrote, “Therefore the Lord himself shall give you a sign behold, a virgin shall conceive, and bear a son, and shall call his name Immanuel.” (Isaiah 7:14)
                                    
Nephi, in about 600 BC, stated “And I beheld the city of Nazareth; and in the city of Nazareth I beheld a virgin, and she was exceedingly fair and white” ...  And I looked and beheld the virgin again, bearing a child in her arms ...  And the angel said unto me: Behold the Lamb of God, yea, even the Son of the Eternal Father.” (1 Nephi 11:13, 20, 21)

King Benjamin prophesied in 124 BC “And he shall be called Jesus Christ the Son of God, the Father of heaven and earth, the Creator of all things from the beginning; and his mother shall be called Mary.” (Mosiah 3:8)

Around 83 BC Alma wrote that Christ “shall be born of Mary, at Jerusalem ... she being a virgin, a precious and chosen vessel, who shall be overshadowed and conceive by the power of the Holy Ghost, and bring forth a son, yea, even the Son of God.” (Alma 7:10)

Christ's coming to the earth in a mortal body had been prophesied among the Jews for centuries. These prophecies were contained in their Old Testament scrolls and other inspired writings. They had revered and taught from them for ages. The prophesies were numerous, included the law of Moses, and at the time of Jesus' coming were considered authoritative in current Jewish worship. They knew that through the fall came death ... Satan and his followers were loosed on earth to oppose God and inflict man; to be the opposition to righteousness. They also knew from prophecy that good would eventually triumph over evil and death, but an atoning sacrifice by a Savior God would be necessary to bring this to pass. Of all our Fathers sons and daughters our Elder Brother, Jesus the Christ was the only one who met all the requirements.  He was a God in the preexistence before the creation of the worlds. He is the first-born spirit son and the only begotten of the Father in the flesh and is second only to the Father in power and authority. He alone has an immortal Father (God) and a mortal mother (Mary.) He alone was given the power to lay down His life and take it up again, which He did in atoning for our sins.

The Jewish nation had long hoped and prayed for God to hasten His coming. They expected Him to come in power and glory ... to vanquish their foes ... make them free again ... and restore them to power and glory. Much of their history was a record of oppression and enslavement, as it was at the time of Jesus' birth. Deep was their longing for God to come, vanquish their oppressors and restore them to power as in the days of David.

We may assume that Mary's parents would be righteous and faithful in keeping and observing the law of Moses and the other requirements of Jewish worship. She would grow up in a normal religious home of that day. The culture, traditions, and societal practices of that day would shape and guide her maturing. From her mother she would learn necessary homemaking and family skills and plan for the time when she would marry a proper Jewish husband. Her work would include the family field and orchard.

Her husband would be the head of the family and the responsibility of providing for them would fall to him. He would lead in the various practices and rituals for worship, prayer, service in the synagogue, and observance of holy days. She would see his faithful performance to God in the religious teaching of his children, and in his keeping the commandments and the law of Moses.

Mary and Joseph, her husband to be, were cousins. Although they were poor they were of royal descent. The lineage of both goes back to David and Abraham. That the Savior would be of the house of David had been widely prophesied. The ancestry of both Mary and Joseph fulfilled this requirement.

The Apostle Joseph E. Talmage:

“The consensus of historians is that Matthews' account is of the royal lineage, establishing the order of sequence among the legal successors to the throne of David; while the account given by Luke is a personal pedigree, demonstrating descent from David without adherence to the line of legal succession to the throne. The all-important fact to be remembered is that the Child promised by Gabriel to Mary would be born in the Royal Line.”

President Joseph Fielding Smith “Our Savior was a God before he was born into this world, and he brought with him that same status when he came here. He was as much a God when he was born into the world as he was before.” (Doctrines of Salvation, vol. 1)

Glenn R. McGettigan 
December 2011; Revised September 2018

References:

“Our Lord of the Gospels.” Clark
“The Mortal Messiah.” McConkie
“Jesus the Christ.” Talmage
“Life and Teachings of Jesus and His Apostles.” CES NT Manual
“The Four Gospels.” Ludlow
“Doctrinal New Testament Commentary.” Volume 1. McConkie
“The Gospels.” Jackson-Millet
“Mormon Doctrine.” McConkie
“The Life and Teachings of Jesus Christ.” Volume 1. Holzapfel-Wayment
“The Life of Christ.” Farrar
“The Life and Times of Jesus the Messiah.” Volume 1. Edersheim
“Doctrines of Salvation.” Volume 1. Joseph Fielding Smith