That's one interpretation.
Hidden in plain sight? God's revelation in nature and conscience strikes me as a powerful argument, whether we assign it the name God, the Tao, or Brahman.
Bart Ehrman on Whether Christians Have to Believe in the Virgin Birth
The reality is that the virgin birth is mentioned by only two authors of the New Testament, Matthew and Luke. And only in their opening narratives. But Matthew nowhere says that you “have to” believe that Jesus was born in Bethlehem or that Herod slaughtered the innocents or you can’t be a Christian. He doesn’t say that about the virgin birth either. And neither does Luke.
If the Virgin Birth was so important – vital! – to these authors, why don’t they make a bigger deal of it? Why, for example, don’t they ever (not once!) refer to it again later in their Gospels? And if it’s an “essential” part of the faith, why doesn’t Paul show the slightest knowledge of it? Or John? Or James? Or Peter? Or anyone else? If someone were to ask Paul “Do I have to believe in the Virgin Birth to be saved?”, what do you imagine he’s say? I myself imagine he’d say “believe in the … what??”
In no passage of the NT does it say that anyone “has” to believe in the Virgin Birth
To claim you “have” to believe in a literal virgin birth to be a Christian, I would argue, is empirically wrong. Most of my friends who are Christian do not believe in a literal virgin birth. You could say they aren’t “really” Christian, but they could respond that *you* aren’t “really” Christian. And at that point, we’re at a standoff. No one has been given the authority to make that kind of pronouncement….