No Old Testament book literally refers to Jesus, and there is no actual prophecy of his birth. But Burton L. Mack describes a trick that can be used to make any Old Testament book say what you want it to say. By this means, books such as Genesis and Isaiah have been made to prophesy Jesus. Mack says in Who Wrote the New Testament that at first the study of a text may not seem to support a traditional Christian conviction, or the answer one hopes to find in The Bible. But with a little ingenuity, one can set up the comparison again with other emphases and make the answer come out right. This trick seems to come naturally when studying the Bible, and Mack sees it happen all the time in the classrooms of the School of Theology at Claremont.
It also helps to choose the Bible you wish to use to find prophecies, and even more so, to take material from the Old Testament out of context. The author of Matthew's Gospel. Matthew, a Greek-speaking Jew, was looking for a biblical reference he could use to prove that Jesus was prophesied to be born of a virgin. The Septuagint (an early translation of the Hebrew Bible into the Greek language) incorrectly translated Isaiah 7:14 to say that a virgin would conceive and bear a child. The correct translation would have been "the young woman", and the young woman in question did have a child a few verses later in Isaiah. The author of the Gospel of Matthew relied on this mistranslation, taken out of context, to show that it was prophesied that Jesus would be born of a virgin. In any case, Isaiah never mentioned the name of Jesus, so if this was a prophecy it could have referred to any other Jew, perhaps one not yet born.
Following these simple rules, you can have as many prophecies of the birth of Jesus as you wish.
No prophet literally predicted the birth of Jesus. There is nothing anywhere in the Old Testament which, if read in context and as written, mentions Jesus at all. However, from earliest times, Christians have sought to use the Old Testament to validate the new faith and defend it from criticisms as being a mere novelty.
Matthew, a Greek-speaking Jew, was looking for a biblical reference he could use to prove that Jesus was prophesied to be born of a virgin. The Septuagint (An early translation of the Hebrew Bible into the Greek language) incorrectly translated Isaiah 7:14 to say that a virgin would conceive and bear a child. The correct translation would have been "the young woman", and the young woman in question did have a child a few verses later in Isaiah. The author of the Gospel of Matthew relied on this mistranslation, taken out of context, to show that it was prophesied that Jesus would be born of a virgin.
Christmas is a celebration of the birth of Christ, and was not founded in Bible times. The birth of Christ can be referred to as the Nativity or just The Birth of Christ.
Paul mentions Jesus Christ's name 230 times in the Bible.
The word christ appears 532 times in the KJV bible.
Jesus' birth was mentioned 50 times in the bible.
Christmas is not mentioned once.Christ's birth, and the coming of the Messiah is mentioned numerous times, both in the prophetic Old Testament books and in the Gospels, but Chritsmas was not called Christ's Mass, or Christmas, for many centuries after Jesus's birth and after the books of the Bible were written.
198 times in King James Version (189 verses)
Acording to the Holy Bible, Satan tempted Christ 3 times using scripture and Christ rebuked him each time through scripture!
166
The phrase "body of Christ" is mentioned multiple times in the Bible, specifically in the New Testament. It is used to refer to the community of believers who are united in Christ, with Jesus as the head of the body. The concept of the body of Christ emphasizes the interconnectedness and unity of all believers in the church.
Christ says "Do Not Fear" 365 times in the Bible. Glad to help!
Christ has been worded in the King James Bible 555 times.
I suggest you get counting :)