I have been Catholic for almost 3 years after being Protestant for 40 years. I now do not accept the doctrine of the Immaculate Conception. The lack of Scriptural references and considering how long it took for the dogma to form have me unconvinced that it is true. Now I wonder if I can still consider myself a Catholic.
Also a convert. First, we have to keep remembering that
Christianity precedes Scripture. That is, the Church was around for quite a while before the New Testament was in place. We’re so used to going to the Bible for answers, and we do use Scripture so much as Catholics, we can find it hard to go with the teaching and Tradition. So, I get the difficulty we converts can have as moderns. But I also recall that for 1500 years, every Christian on earth did not have this problem. That it was only in the last few hundred years that there were Bibles around for Christians to read and enough literacy to be possible.
Personally, I think we lead ourselves astray and thank You, Lord for a 2000 year-old retention of the Truth. So, on to Mary’s Immaculate Conception. I’ll tell you how I understand it, maybe someone will say I have it wrong, but here’s what makes sense to me.
“Immaculate Conception” means created without Original Sin. The effect of Original Sin is separation from God’s will. We want to have our own will be in charge. So, after that doesn’t work a lot, we freely must consent to submit to God. Not a good scenario for the Mother of God.
God is going to Incarnate as a human. Fully human. That means starting as a completely helpless zygote and infant. For Jesus to be really be fully human, He would have to be able to be subject to the same junk all kids get from imperfect parenting. So He needed a perfect parent who always knew and acted in conformity with His Father’s will in order to become both the human savior as well as our Saving God. That is, God as infant, like all infants unaware of His own nature and identity, had to be able to be His own Parent, through a woman who perfectly acted in His Will.
I really don’t see any other way for God to have effected His Incarnation. There must be, I suppose, as my understanding is nothing compared to God’s power, but this seems to me, to really be the only way it could have worked.
Now, the Assumption is another matter. Though, I suppose if Elijah went that way…
