Yes. It's in the Gospel. In the beginning of Mathew I and Luke I. See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Virgin_birth_of_Jesus.
No, she didn't, she gave birth to Jesus and married Joseph, a carpenter but she didn't write a bible.
Christian beliefs such as the inerrancy of the Bible and the virgin birth of Mary are features of uncritical faith. They demonstrate willing acceptance of what role models told the believers, usually in childhood.
No-one - Jesus is the only one.
The significance of the virgin birth in the Bible is that it fulfills a prophecy in the Old Testament and emphasizes the divine nature of Jesus Christ. It is a miraculous event that sets Jesus apart as the Son of God and demonstrates his unique role in salvation history.
A:The Bible certainly portrays the virgin birth of Jesus as a fact, although John Shelby Spong (Born of a Woman: A Bishop Rethinks the Birth of Jesus) and a great many New Testament scholars say that neither of the nativity stories contains any historical truth.
Isaiah 7:14
The angel that appeared to the Virgin Mary in the Bible was Gabriel.
No, a virgin did not give birth in Isaiah's time, nor did Isaiah even prophesy that a virgin would give birth.In the Hebrew Bible, Isaiah 7:14 said that "the young woman" would give birth, and the young woman in question did have a child a few verses later in Isaiah. However, the Septuagint (An early translation of the Hebrew Bible into the Greek language) incorrectly translated this to say that "a virgin" would conceive and bear a child. The author of the Gospel of Matthew relied on this mistranslation to show that it was prophesied that Jesus would be born of a virgin.
The combined words "Virgin Mary" are not mentioned in the Christian bible.
George Herbert Box has written: 'Early Christianity and its rivals' -- subject(s): Religion, Christianity and other religions, Church history 'The virgin birth of Jesus' -- subject(s): Virgin birth 'The Book of Isaiah' -- subject(s): Bible
The first Christmas verse in the bible is found in Isaiah 7:14. The verse is written as 'Therefore the lord himself will give you a sign: The virgin will be with child and will give birth to a son'.
In the Gospels.