The young woman: Hebrew ‘almah designates a young woman of marriageable age without specific reference to virginity.
The Septuagint translated the Hebrew term as parthenos, which normally does mean virgin, and this translation underlies MT I:23 Emmanuel: the name means “with us is God.” Since for the Christian the incarnation is the ultimate expression of God’s willingness to “be with us,” it is understandable that this text was interpreted to refer to the birth of Christ. It is this translation most often used by the Apostles and the Gospel authors.
The original reference of Matthew is Isaiah 7:14 from the Jewish perspective. "Christianity" was an invention of Paul's later Gentile church.
Nice try but, the 'beast' is not the Church, it is the Roman empire under which Christians were persecuted.
The "beast" of Revelation 13:3, refers to the 5th head of the beast, Caesar, but the "beast with two horns like a lamb" refers to the 7th head of the beast, which was Constantine, upon whom the daughter of Babylon (Revelation 17:3-7) sits. The two horns like a lamb, are the two Christ like shepherds (Zechariah 11), Peter and Paul. Peter being a "stumbling block to me" (Matthew 16:19), and Paul trying to negate the covenant made with the peoples through Abraham (Zechariah 11:10). As for Yeshua, he was an anointed, just as the kings, prophets, judges, and high priest of Israel, were anointed with the Spirit of God. We are now in the era of the 8th head of the beast, of which the pope is one of the 10 horns. Babylon, the woman sitting on the beast, is destined to fall (Revelation 18:2). According to Isaiah 22:25, all hanging onto her prominent daughter, the Roman church, will be "cut off",
The concept of Mary's perpetual virginity is a product of 'The Protoevangelium of James, basically a work of fiction.
Most of the dogma of the "Christian" church is "fiction", although "Photoevangelium" was supposedly written in 150 A.D. it apparently wasn't written by James, who supposedly died in 62 A.D.
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