From a strict Tanakh-only perspective, this entire Marian framework collapses, not because Mary was insignificant, but because later theology retrofitted her into roles the Hebrew Scriptures never assign.
First, the foundational claim rests on Isaiah 7:14, where the Hebrew word עַלְמָה (alma) appears. Alma does not mean “virgin.” It means young woman of marriageable age. If Isaiah intended “virgin,” the Hebrew word בְּתוּלָה (betulah) was available and used elsewhere in Tanakh. Jewish translators and commentators—long before Christianity—never read Isaiah 7 as a messianic virgin-birth prophecy. The verse addresses a specific historical sign to King Ahaz, not a future redeemer centuries later. The virgin reading enters only through the Greek Septuagint, not the Hebrew text, and that mistranslation becomes the seed of later doctrine.
Second, the Tanakh explicitly rejects the idea of a “Queen of Heaven.” In Jeremiah 7:18 and 44:17–25, worship connected to the “Queen of Heaven” is condemned as idolatry. Applying that title to Mary—however spiritually framed—directly collides with prophetic warnings. God does not recycle condemned pagan categories for holy purposes.
Third, the claim that Mary is the “Ark of the New Covenant” is foreign to Tanakh theology. The Ark was a physical object, constructed according to explicit divine command, containing the tablets of the covenant. No human being is ever redefined as the Ark, and the covenant itself is never relocated into a person. The covenant remains bound to Torah, not incarnation.
Fourth, appeals to early Church figures such as Irenaeus of Lyons, Ambrose of Milan, and John Damascene do not strengthen the case from a Tanakh standpoint. These men lived centuries after Sinai, outside the prophetic tradition, and operated within Greco-Roman philosophical categories. Their authority is ecclesial, not scriptural. Tanakh never grants interpretive authority to later theologians, regardless of sincerity or eloquence.
Fifth, even the title “Mother of God” is theologically incoherent in Tanakh terms. God in the Hebrew Scriptures is eternal, uncreated, and non-generated. He has no origin and no mother (Deut 32:40, Psalm 90:2). Any theology that requires God to be born necessarily departs from biblical monotheism as defined in the Shema (Deut 6:4).
Finally, Mary herself—Miriam bat Israel—would have understood her role within Israel, not above it. Elevating her into a cosmic intercessor obscures the Tanakh’s central truth: God alone forgives, saves, reigns, and mediates (Isaiah 43:11; Hosea 13:4). No righteous individual, male or female, is ever assigned a salvific or mediatorial role.
In short, this Marian system is not an organic outgrowth of the Hebrew Scriptures. It is a post-biblical theological construction, built on a mistranslated word (alma), reinforced by Greek philosophy, and sustained by ecclesial authority rather than covenantal text. From the standpoint of the eternal covenant, it is not elevation—it is deviation.