** 4. When Paul mentions in Galatians that Christ was ‘born of a woman’ that doesn’t (in my view) add to the argument that Mary should be venerated as she is today.** That was Paul’s opportunity to add more in recognition or praise of Mary, which apparently he chose not to do. He didn’t even mention her by name.
First of all, in his pastoral letters, Paul is addressing the specific concerns of certain communities in primary matters of faith and morals. The contexts of his letters do not necessarily require the apostle to refer to the person of Mary. Second, Luke implicitly presents Mary as a type of new Eve (
woman of promise) in his Infancy narratives, which the early Church Fathers of the 2nd century, Justin Martyr and Irenaeus, cite in their explications of the text, as they elaborate on this traditional belief of the early Christians expressed by the evangelist in literary form. Luke was a companion of Paul and recorded what the apostle intended to preach about Mary.
Irenaeus was a disciple of Polycarp. who was ordained Bishop of Smyrna by the apostle John. So he, too, was well acquainted with what the apostles preached about Mary when he developed more fully in a theological capacity the motif of the New Eve found in Luke’s gospel. In fact, the Church Father perceived a link between Paul’s Letter to the Romans and the Gospel of Luke. It was in the context of the recapitualtion of all things in Christ, the New Adam, that he further clarified the role of the Blessed Virgin Mary in God’s plan of salvation in and through Christ by referring to the Eve-Mary parallel that germinated with Luke and was more informally treated by Justin Martyr about thirty years earlier.
“Adam had to be recapitulated in Christ, so that death might be swallowed up in immortality, and Eve in Mary, so that the Virgin, having become another virgin’s advocate, might destroy and abolish another virgin’s disobedience by the obedience of another virgin.”
Proof of the Apostolic Preaching, 33
“In accordance with this design , the Virgin Mary was found obedient when she said, ‘Behold your handmaid, O Lord; let it be done to me according to your word’ (Lk 1:38)…And so the knot of Eve’s disobedience was untied by Mary’s obedience. What Eve bound by her disobedience, Mary loosed by her faith.”
Against Heresies, 3:22 [inter A.D. 180/190]
"I swear by myself declares the LORD, that because you acted as you did…all the nations of the earth shall find blessing – all this because you obeyed my command."
Genesis 22, 15-18
If Abraham had refused to sacrifice his son Isaac, the Annunciation would not have happened. In the order of redemption, active and faithful human participation is a requisite by the will of our heavenly Father in his infinite wisdom. And let us bear in mind that it is in his mercy that God desires all human beings to be saved, although in his justice God does not necessarily have to save us from the consequences of the sin of Adam and Eve if he so pleases. But by the Divine pleasure we have been granted the opportunity to work out our salvation “in fear and trembling” by cooperating with God’s
infused grace in our lives. Individuals who accept Jesus as their Lord and Saviour too personally see themselves as passive spectators in the economy of salvation and as having been exonerated of their sins by Christ who was “punished” in our place, sending God’s mercy to exaggerated heights. The result of these false and unbiblical Protestant notions, grounded on human despair and the gnostic sense of being totally corrupt in nature as anything consisting of matter is, naturally leads them to subscribe to the equally exaggerated doctrine of
sola Christu.
In strict justice, Christ has redeemed the world, but by right of friendship with God we can, so to speak, redeem ourselves by proving ourselves worthy before God and bringing the merits of Christ’s Passion and Death to completion in our own lives - now that Christ has made
atonement for our sins. Mary helped save the world by being the anti-type of Eve in her collaboration with the Holy Spirit and divine grace. Like Abraham, she had the freedom to refuse, but instead sincerely felt not to through God’s sufficient grace. Thus Mary deserves to make satisfaction for us, just as we deserve to receive even greater graces in our lives through our sincere efforts to please God with the help of his actual grace, in and through Christ as our
co-Redemptrix by right of friendship with our heavenly Father.
“All are said to have a share who have deserved to be sanctified by his grace.”
Origen, First Principles, l: 1,3 [A.D. 230]
PAX :heaven: