Dear brother Mickey,
Permit me to correct your misconception.
Here is your original statement to which brother Dvdjs replied, “
I never gave any indication I believe this”:
Mickey:
So you also believe that the IC is purely spiritual? There was no physical aspect? Can you show where the doctrine states this?
The dogma of the IC itself refers only to her spiritual conception. But there are other beliefs regarding the IC that have never been dogmatized, or, more specifically, is not covered by the dogma as proclaimed in 1854 (as brother Dvdjs had correctly informed you earlier).
One of these is the idea that the spiritual conception affected her physical conception in an altogeher mysterious manner, causing her flesh itself to be holy.
This idea that Mary’s flesh, being the flesh that Christ would acquire, was
created holy and new is attested to by many Eastern Fathers, among them St. Gregory Palamas. On the other hand, there are also some Eastern and Oriental Fathers who assert that Mary’s flesh, for the sake of being acquired by Christ, was transformed at the Annunciation. Brother Dvdjs, as an Eastern, would likely follow St. Palamas in the belief that God made Mary with flesh that was new. I, as an Oriental, believe that Mary’s flesh was transformed at the Annunciation.
I could be wrong. He could be wrong. I could be right. He could be right. It doesn’t matter.
Either view is acceptable from the Catholic perspective. Either view is consistent with the dogma of the IC, because the only thing that the dogma asserts is that Mary was (ever and always) united
spiritually to God, from the first moment of her existence (to her death and beyond).
Blessings,
Marduk