No.
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.
Prophecy Isaiah 7:14 ... a virgin conceived and bear a son and called is name Immanuel The event Luke 1,2,3... Christ born to a virgin
Isaiah 7:14, Matthew 1:13
AnswerVirgin birth was commonly attested by many religions in ancient times, but there is no reference to a virgin birth in the Old Testament1. The New Testament has references to the virgin birth of Jesus in both Matthew's Gospel and Luke's gospel.Footnote1The author of Matthew's Gospel believed that he saw a reference to a virgin birth in the Book of Isaiah (Isaiah 7:14), which says that "the young woman" would have a child, and the young woman in question did have a child a few verses later in Isaiah chapter 8. However, the Septuagint, an early Greek translation of the Hebrew scriptures, mistranslated this to say that a virgin would have 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. Whether or not Matthew knew the translation he relied on to be faulty, he does seem to have knowingly taken it out of its proper context.
A:Isaiah wrote long before the time of Mary and Jesus, and therefore knew nothing of them. However, Matthew's Gospel says that Isaiah 7:14 was a prophecy that Jesus would be born of a virgin and, if true, this would be a statement about the virgin Mary. Matthew relies on the Septuagint, a flawed early Greek translation of the Hebrew scriptures. Although not actually mentioning Jesus, the Septuagint does say: "Therefore the Lord himself shall give you a sign; Behold, a virgin shall conceive, and bear a son, and shall call his name Immanuel." However, what the prophet Isaiah actually wrote in the original Hebrew was, "Therefore the Lord himself shall give you a sign; Behold, the young woman shall conceive, and bear a son, and shall call his name Immanuel." The young woman in question did have a child just a few verses later in Isaiah's book, and Isaiah never wrote of a virgin or of the virgin Mary..Catholic AnswerThe prophet Isaiah, prophesied the birth of the Messiah, the Immanual prophesy in Isaiah 7:14. The prophecy had immediate meaning to King Ahaz, but it also forecast the later scriptural revelation in St. Matthew 1:20-23 and the Incarnation. As such, the prophet is not saying anything about the Blessed Virgin other than as mother of the Messiah. The protestant contention that the Septuagint was a flawed translation ignores the fact that the Septuagint was the Bible used by Our Blessed Lord, and canonized by the Church as inerrant, not the Hebrew. In it the Isaiah prophecy contains virgin, and this has been the belief of the Church for twenty centuries.
Lo! Emmanuel, the Lord, is born, whom Gabriel foretold, the Lord- the Lord is our savior. Here he lies in a manger, the Lord- wondrous boy, the Lord- the Lord is our savior. This light, the Lord, has dawned this day from the Virgin Mary. The Lord is our savior.
Isaiah Rynders was born in 1804.
Isaiah Shavitt was born in 1925.
Isaiah Shachar was born in 1935.
Isaiah Oggins was born in 1898.
Isaiah Oke was born in 1940.
Isaiah Bowman was born in 1878.