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Question: According to the author
of Luke, Joseph came to Bethlehem "because he was of
the house and family of David, in order to register,
along with Mary, who was engaged to him, and was with
child" (Luke 2:4-5). Does this verse show that Mary
was a descendant of David?
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Answer: There is nothing in these verses to show that
Joseph and Mary were both of Davidic ancestry and, therefore,
going to the same town to register. As his future spouse,
one might stretch credulity to the maximum and presume
that Mary, in an advanced stage of pregnancy, accompanied
Joseph on the journey, but are we to believe that she
went to Bethlehem because she too had to register as
a descendant of David? This would suggest that married
and unmarried women, not fortunate enough to have a
spouse or fiancé traveling in the same direction, were
out on the road with no one to protect them.
Credulity is stretched to the limit by the intimation
that young and old, the healthy and the invalid, married
and unmarried took part in this mass movement of population
and the historical records remain silent about its occurrence.
The author of Luke utilized the historic fact that
the Romans took a census about a decade after the birth
of Jesus. He then connected this census to the time
of the birth of Jesus and exaggerated its registration
requirements in order to have Mary accompany Joseph
to Bethlehem. Luke emphasizes what he believes to be
Joseph ancestry, not Mary's. |