God is a Spirit.
Just because God came in the form of a man does not make the one who gave birth to the man the mother of God. That is blasphemy. The woman merely provided a host for the form that has the abidance of God.
Wow.
Isn’t that pretty close to the heresy of Nestorianism? (Which is that Jesus was two persons: a human being, and God - and that Mary gave birth only to the human being, and then God “possessed” it in much the same way that a demon might possess someone. Is God like a demon?)
Did God take away the life of a normal boy, by possessing him, and using his body as a “man costume”?
I think that would be a pretty horrifying God to believe in, myself.
Put it another way, by your same logic. The president of USA decided finally that he shall try his hand at plumbing. In order to do so, he had to find out more about plumbing from a lady plumber who also washes toilets. After 2 hours of learning, he finally comes out and able to service his toilet problems.
So, being someone’s mother is a “job” like being a plumber?
Now, does that make the toilet washer the Teacher of the President? And will henceforth all who sees her Hail her as the President’s Lecturer?
She actually probably
would receive some kind of compensation or honour for doing this. I doubt that the President would allow people in his presence to stomp her in the face and grind her down, or insult her, or say that she is “just like anyone else.” Obviously, after all, even if she is “only” a plumber, she has some stand-out quality that attracted the President’s attention - they don’t just randomly pick people off the street to work with the President, you know.
So, she is the Queen of the American Presidency?
What is the relevance, here? A Queen is one of two things; either a female King (as in the case of Queen Elizabeth II), or the wife or mother of a King (as in the case of Queen Mary (aka Queen Mother), Elizabeth II’s mother).
Just so we’re clear, in Catholicism, Mary is not considered to be a female King; rather, she is considered to be
the mother of a King.
In Davidic times, and in the time of Jesus, it was typically the King’s mother who was crowned Queen. That’s why when we say that Jesus is King, we show that we aren’t just blowing smoke or speaking flattery, by saying that Mary, his mother, is His Queen - this shows that His Kingship is for
real; not just something we say to flatter Him.