Yes. Only Jesus was conceived by divine intervention.
Additional scriptural references:
It can be assumed that she did. She and Zechariah, though well along in years, were married, and this was not a 'virgin' birth, like it was in the case of Mary. In Mary's case she was unmarried, and was told that it would be 'God's spirit that would overshadow her...and the one she gave birth to would be God's son".(Luke 1:27,34 & 35)
In Elizabeth's case, Zechariah was told : "your wife Elizabeth will become mother to a son to you, and you are to call his name John"(Luke 1:5-13) And The Bible calls Zechariah, John's father (Luke 1:67)
St. John the Baptist.
St. John the Baptist.
John the Baptist and Jesus were cousins. Their mothers, Mary and Elizabeth, were related, making them cousins as well. John the Baptist was born to Elizabeth and Zechariah, while Jesus was born to Mary and Joseph.
the son of Elizabeth and Zechariah that was sent by God was Yahya. He is also known as John the Baptist.
Elizabeth (who was pregnant with John the Baptist).
He is the father of St. John the Baptist & distant relative of the Blessed Virgin Mary.
John. Luke 1:13 John. Luke 1:13 john the baptist
If you are referring to Elizabeth the cousin of the Blessed Virgin Mary, her son was St. John the Baptist.
Mary visits Elizabeth in the biblical narrative when she is pregnant with Jesus and Elizabeth is pregnant with John the Baptist.
Barachiah (or Barachias), who was the father of Zechariah (or Zecharias), who was John the Baptist's father. Zechariah (Zecharias) wrote the Book of Zechariah in the Old Testament (Zechariah 1:1) and was martyred as stated by Jesus (Matthew 23:35). John the Baptist's great grandfather was the prophet Iddo.
A:Luke chapter 1 says that a priest named Zechariah was the father of John the Baptist, and that he was related by marriage to Mary, mother of Jesus. It does not say who Zechariah's father was. Many scholars have noticed similarities, not only of name, to Zachariah in the Old Testament, but the author of the Book of Zachariah lived centuries earlier.Uta Ranke-Heinemann (Putting Away Childish Things) believes that Luke's story of John the Baptist's infancy is not literally true, and that Zechariah and Elizabeth were fictional characters created by Luke's author.
Elizabeth (Elisabeth) was not a prophetess. She did belong to a rather noteworthy family. She was a descendant from Aaron, wife of Zachariah the priest, mother of John the Baptist. She was a cousin of Mary, the mother of Jesus.