W
Wesrock
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Oops, I can no longer edit my post, but to be perfectly clear, Mary is included in what I said. Her sinless life is only possible by divine aid, and is not something she could have done without God’s help.
But, since Mary was sinless, they believe God does do it. Do they believe he has done it with anyone besides Mary?It would only be possible by divine aid/grace.
I am not arguing for the veracity of this point. I just want to understand the Catholic perspective better. Again, please don’t anyone think I’m promoting or supporting a Protestant theology. I am just discussing the differences from my background so I can learn the Catholic view. I won’t list my anti-Protestant or pro-Catholic credentials again, just trust me that I’m not a Protestant sympathizer. I’m just not fully Catholic yet.Jesus answered him, “Why do you call me good? No one is good but God alone." (Mark 10.18 NABRE)
Hi Auctoris.But, since Mary was sinless, they believe God does do it. Do they believe he has done it with anyone besides Mary?
I ask because I’m coming from a Protestant background where there is a very strong belief that Jesus was the only sinless person to ever live. It is essentially heresy to assign sinlessness to any other person since they believe that only God is sinless.
Part of it is based on:
I am not arguing for the veracity of this point. I just want to understand the Catholic perspective better. Again, please don’t anyone think I’m promoting or supporting a Protestant theology. I am just discussing the differences from my background so I can learn the Catholic view. I won’t list my anti-Protestant or pro-Catholic credentials again, just trust me that I’m not a Protestant sympathizer. I’m just not fully Catholic yet.
Thank you
No, except that the Church teaches that St. John the Baptist was born (not conceived) without original sin because St. Elizabeth was filled with the Holy Spirit when she saw Mary, who was pregnant with Jesus, and believed Mary was the mother of the Messiah. St.JB’s birthday is celebrated for this reason–his, Jesus’ and Mary’s are the only birthdays the Church celebrates.But, since Mary was sinless, they believe God does do it. Do they believe he has done it with anyone besides Mary?
Having come from a similar background, I understand this completely. Indeed, I have a B. A. in Bible from an Assemblies of God Bible college, so I have a good handle on this teaching and why it is believed. The teaching is meant to exclude Marian teachings–really there is no other good reason for it.I ask because I’m coming from a Protestant background where there is a very strong belief that Jesus was the only sinless person to ever live. It is essentially heresy to assign sinlessness to any other person since they believe that only God is sinless.
Part of it is based on:
I am not arguing for the veracity of this point. I just want to understand the Catholic perspective better. Again, please don’t anyone think I’m promoting or supporting a Protestant theology. I am just discussing the differences from my background so I can learn the Catholic view. I won’t list my anti-Protestant or pro-Catholic credentials again, just trust me that I’m not a Protestant sympathizer. I’m just not fully Catholic yet.
Again, I understand your hurdles quite well. The evening I went to my first RCIA session I literally shook with fear because of the anti-Catholic things I’d been taught in my former sect. Even Scripture was poison to me because every passage I read was colored by what the sect had interpreted them to mean. I had to switch gears completely to see Scripture from the Catholic perspective (which I found the truest one not merely because the Church says so, but it was the only way Scripture made sense). It’s one of the hardest things for converts to do–to switch off false teaching (there’s a lot of good teaching in Protestantism, don’t get me wrong) in order to absorb true teachings. Getting just a few things decidedly wrong skews even the true ones, sad to say. It’s what makes it so hard to know which are true and which aren’t.Thank you
You’re welcome!I’m going to try one more time.
If you were going to make a case to the Orthodox, Coptic, or Anglican church to adopt the Marian dogmas as divine truth, what reasons would you give them? How would you make a case that these are incontrovertible truths necessary for all Christians to believe in order to belong to their churches? Is there any way to make that case to these churches that does not rely solely on an appeal to the authority of the Catholic Church (which I believe it has)?
Thank you
That brings up another question. Do Catholics believe Mary was simply sinless through the grace of God or was she perfect. Other than divine nature, how did she differ from Jesus?In that passage it looks like Jesus is objecting to being called good, which is totally absurd since we know he is perfect.
I don’t have that problem. From nursery school through middle school I went to a private fundamentalist independent Baptist school. Great education, bad theology. So we were taught Kings James Only, young earth creationism, the pope is the anti-christ, the Catholic church is the whore of Babylon, etc. But I went to a good church and my parents taught me how the school had some messed up theology, so it never stuck to begin with.The evening I went to my first RCIA session I literally shook with fear because of the anti-Catholic things I’d been taught in my former sect.
She was perfectly human.That brings up another question. Do Catholics believe Mary was simply sinless through the grace of God or was she perfect. Other than divine nature, how did she differ from Jesus?
Thank you
I don’t have a problem with it. To my knowledge the Marian dogmas and just one other issue are the only things left that I need to get my head around better. As I mentioned before, I’ve read most of the full catechism, the compendium, and YouCat so I think I’ve covered most everything.Auctoris, not to derail the thread but how do you feel about the Churches’ teaching on the Eucharist?
I should clarify that I have no problem understanding these beliefs should be true. And I do not believe I would have problem accepting that they are true. I just haven’t given it a commitment yet.OTOH, the teaching on Transubstantiation/Eucharistic adoration…well, if they are wrong about that then they are violating multiple commandments and may be endangering their very souls.
I was taken out of my Episcopal Church when my father died, by my mother, who became enamored of Pentecostalism. I was a very impressionable young teen when I caught the the anti-Catholic fever from the sect’s anti-Catholic rhetoric, which bordered on mania. I’m so glad I had that background in the ECUSA or I might never have been able to tear myself away from the sect. As an Anglican C. S. Lewis helped me realize the things my sect taught were skewed, but it was reading J. R. R. Tolkien’s Lord of the Rings that really turned my heart around. Each of us is led as God wishes, using our natures, our strengths and weaknesses to bring us to the truth. It’s why we need to trust that he is leading us, especially when we are privileged to learn so much that so many others will either never hear or never be able to accept.I don’t have that problem. From nursery school through middle school I went to a private fundamentalist independent Baptist school. Great education, bad theology. So we were taught Kings James Only, young earth creationism, the pope is the anti-christ, the Catholic church is the whore of Babylon, etc. But I went to a good church and my parents taught me how the school had some messed up theology, so it never stuck to begin with.
If there were any remaining Catholic fear, I’d say that was long gone about five years ago. I’ve been so absorbed in all things Catholic, I could probably teach RCIA. I’ve even been to most of the Catholic Churches in Israel.
Thanks
I’m in agreement with Della.That brings up another question. Do Catholics believe Mary was simply sinless through the grace of God or was she perfect. Other than divine nature, how did she differ from Jesus?
Thank you
Definitely consecrated to her immaculate heart!!!I don’t have a problem with it. To my knowledge the Marian dogmas and just one other issue are the only things left that I need to get my head around better. As I mentioned before, I’ve read most of the full catechism, the compendium, and YouCat so I think I’ve covered most everything.
I won’t mention the other issue right now since that could send us off in an entirely different direction. I’ll post it in a separate thread when I get past this one. It’s not a big deal.
We’ll just keep this thread exclusively for Mary. Does that means it’s consecrated?I have no idea what that means, but I hear it all the time–“consecrated to Mary”.
Thanks
Authorized version, 1611!!!I don’t have that problem. From nursery school through middle school I went to a private fundamentalist independent Baptist school. Great education, bad theology. So we were taught Kings James Only, young earth creationism, the pope is the anti-christ, the Catholic church is the whore of Babylon, etc. But I went to a good church and my parents taught me how the school had some messed up theology, so it never stuck to begin with.
If there were any remaining Catholic fear, I’d say that was long gone about five years ago. I’ve been so absorbed in all things Catholic, I could probably teach RCIA. I’ve even been to most of the Catholic Churches in Israel.
Thanks
That sounds like the school I went to. They wouldnt even allow the teachers to use textbooks that had quotes from bible translations that werent the KJV. And they fed us so much misinformation about the Church, science, and ignored or mocked anything that conflicted with their beliefs. Thankfully their misinformation only made me more curious and inquisitive about the Church. So their plan to turn me into a fundamental baptist completely backfired.I don’t have that problem. From nursery school through middle school I went to a private fundamentalist independent Baptist school. Great education, bad theology. So we were taught Kings James Only, young earth creationism, the pope is the anti-christ, the Catholic church is the whore of Babylon, etc. But I went to a good church and my parents taught me how the school had some messed up theology, so it never stuck to begin with.
If there were any remaining Catholic fear, I’d say that was long gone about five years ago. I’ve been so absorbed in all things Catholic, I could probably teach RCIA. I’ve even been to most of the Catholic Churches in Israel.
Thanks
I hear that so much from the Baptists that I grew up around and live around. One of my friends and his parents believe that the translators of the NKJV were punished by God and that all other translations are works of the Devil. His mother even believes Latin is the language of the Devil.Authorized version, 1611!!!
Man they are staunch with that. I used to listen to a minister on the radio from one of those churches. He was always harping on avoiding “those funny bibles” lol.
Pax
Was it in Florida?That sounds like the school I went to.