VG,
Boy, you can sure pack a lot of wrong into one reply. As briefly as I can then:
Examples of where you were wrong, just on this thread alone:
You were wrong to conclude that it was clear there was no consent based on limited information in a Bible story for multiple reasons.
No he wasn’t. There could have been no valid consent by modern Western standards because of the basic constituents
of the story as presented. Why? Because of the (likely) underage part, because of the (explicit) asymmetric power dynamic part, and because of the no alternative part.
It's a stupid argument to try to shoehorn consent as a legal term into a Bible story about a supernatural being. Try bringing a case against a supernatural being and you may find that legal experts will tell you that the law only applies to human beings.
No it isn’t. The events described being “supernatural” changes nothing about the basic critique of the morality of the
story. The
story is presented as morally good – just as the lessons learned from visitations by ghosts in Dickens’ A Christmas Carol is presented as having a morally beneficial effect on (the also fictional) Ebenezer Scrooge. So what?
It is not a story about sexual acts, nor is it a story about acts taking place between 2 people, so legal concepts that govern consent to sexual relationships between people are irrelevant to a story with a supernatural being in it.
Good grief. It’s a
story about a (likely) underage girl by modern standards beings told she “will” be impregnated and carry to term a baby whose father is an all-powerful god. Whether the conception
in the story happened sexually or by some other means is about the least important part of that
story.
Imagine that, say, one day someone invented a sperm pill that if ingested would cause women to conceive – would it be fine and dandy for them to be given no choice in the matter because no sex was involved in your view? Why not?
Even if you are trying to argue that legal rules about consent can be applied to supernatural entities, the Bible story was not written for the purposes of demonstrating the existence of consent so concluding there was no consent from the lack of detail about consent in the story is illogical.
I’ve corrected you on this error already, so why are you repeating it here? It doesn’t matter why the bible was written – all that matters is the content of the story as told being presented as morally good when seen through the lens of modern sensibilities. You’ve told us that you have children, so I assume they studied English and had to do some literary criticism? Imagine then that, say, they were asked to write post-feminist analysis of Hamlet’s treatment of women in the play. Would they have answered, “but I can’t answer that because Shakespeare had never heard of post-feminism”, or maybe “I can’t answer that because there’s a supernatural ghost in the play”? Why not?
The story is hearsay and we have no idea if it is authentic.
So what? Whether it’s written as reportage or written as complete fiction its
content can still be analysed though any subsequent lens we wish to apply – including that of modern Western sensibilities.
There is no evidence to determine Mary's age. So you can't argue that she was a minor for the time period in which she supposedly lived.
Probabilistically yes you can. The story likely concerns an underage girl by modern standards. Whether there ever was a Mary and whether she was older than the mean for the time makes no difference at all – it’s the
story that’s being analysed, not verifiable historical facts.
If you are arguing that the consent is not in relation to a sexual act but is consent to pregnancy without sex ie a medical procedure, there is not sufficient evidence in the story to conclude that Mary could not have refused to go along with God's plan of pregnancy. Calling herself a servant of God is not sufficient evidence to conclude that she was coerced. Submission to God is a voluntary act based on belief and can be revoked at every decision a theist makes. If parental input into a child's decision to be circumcised does not automatically invalidate the child's informed consent to circumcision, then it can be argued that someone calling themselves a servant of someone or something does not automatically invalidate their consent if there it is not proved that the someone or something had undue influence or coerced them.
Wrong again. By contemporary Western standards the story as written means that “Mary”
could not have given valid consent. By those standards, it was just impossible.
If you are arguing that the word "will" is proof that Mary had no choice - again it's not possible to conclude that given the different possible interpretations of the word "will" in the context of the story, and that Mary had said "Let it happen", which could be interpreted as Mary agreeing or consenting to God's plan.
Nope. The story uses “will” (unfailingly so too we’re told), which allows for no possibility
at all of a different outcome.
So it is not possible based simply on the words of the text to prove that consent was given or not given as the text is ambiguous.
Yes it is possible, and no it’s not “ambiguous” – see above. The
story is the
story no matter how much you try to pare it into bite-size pieces for special pleading.
Any story – A Christmas Carol and Hamlet included – can raise questions about the intentions of the authors, what their purpose was, uncertainty about historical veracity and no doubt many other issues too. For this purpose though
none of that matters. All that matters is that the Biblical conception story, A Christmas Carol and Hamlet alike
as they are presented can all be analysed on their own terms through any subsequent moral lens we happen to choose.
It would help if you’d try to understand this.