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NotWorthy
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Justasking4, what are your thoughts on this question?In regards to “All have sinned”, Jesus was fully Man, was he not?
Justasking4, what are your thoughts on this question?In regards to “All have sinned”, Jesus was fully Man, was he not?
It can, actually. “Whatever is loosed on Earth shall be loosed in Heaven” and “the Gates of Hell shall NOT prevail against it” are pretty clear in Matthew 16:18-19.The only authority any church has is from Christ is to teach the truth. No church has the authority to teach anything it wants and claim its true if there is no evidence for it.
Luke 1:52. “Hail Mary, full of grace, the Lord is with thee.” The phrase “kecharitomene,” which translates to “full of grace,” was only used to refer to God in other passages of the Bible. So if it means it’s possible to sin in this state, that means God might have also sinned, which is impossible.There is not one verse in Scripture that even comes close to saying she was without sin.
I would agree. He expierenced the full limitations of being human yet without sin. He did not “inherit” original sin or the “sin nature” from Adam. However this does need to be qualified in the sense He had a birth that was supernatural i.e. no human father and He was also fully God although He emptied Himself as in Philippians 2:6-7Originally Posted by NotWorthy
In regards to “All have sinned”, Jesus was fully Man, was he not?
Justasking4, what are your thoughts on this question?
I am responding to the whole post by Jerry Jet and Old Scholar…for some reason, it did not all come up as a quote for me… In reference to Jesus Christ being sinless…He indeed is…He is God after all…and Jerry did say he believed Christ to be sinless but that the passage that says All fall short would include Jesus?? I would share then Hebrews 4:15-16 that plainly states that He is without sin, and also Hebrews 7:26-28 which also shows Christ’s sinlessness**From where does it get that authority? You say Scripture is not true…
Would you be so kind as to give us the Scripture that says Jesus gave the authority to the Catholic Church to interpret Scripture???**
I am aware of what the Catholic Church teaches.According the catechism of the catholic church they to are sinners or born into sin. Here is what it says:
1250 Born with a fallen human nature and tainted by original sin, children also have need of the new birth in Baptism to be freed from the power of darkness and brought into the realm of the freedom of the children of God, to which all men are called. The sheer gratuitousness of the grace of salvation is particularly manifest in infant Baptism. The Church and the parents would deny a child the priceless grace of becoming a child of God were they not to confer Baptism shortly after birth.
Mary did need a savior and this is the teaching of the Catholic Church. You make a straw man argument by claiming otherwise.Paul said that “All have sinned” and that included Mary. That’s why Christ came to earth, to save the sinners.
In addition, Mary said: Luke 1:46 And Mary said, My soul doth magnify the Lord, 47) And my spirit hath rejoiced in God my Saviour.
Mary had to have sinned to need a saviour.
No Christian would believe that Mary wasn’t blessed. Even though Christ never treated her special. He called her “woman” most of the time and did not show any special respect for her. She was simply the vessel that brought Him to earth in human form but she was a strong supporter and gained more prominence after He was crucified. When she died, however, she just died. There is nothing to indicate she was assumed into heaven. No one has gone to heaven as of yet, except Christ who came down from heaven. That is what Christ taught.
To think that Mary did not sin is merely speculation and assumption. Scripture tells us that all have sinned and it doesn’t exclude Mary or anyone else. Those who believe Mary was sinless are simply believing what they want to. It is not Scriptural and they won’t find it in the writings of the early church fathers of the first couple of centuries either. That is a much later fabrication of the church. Personally I believe Mary was blessed and deserves special recognition, but not the pedestal Catholics want to put her on.
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Exactly.This is a nice try, but we are asking for your theology, for you seem to believe that “all” always means “all”.
Do you hold to the doctrine of original sin, or do you believe that “all have sinned” means that all have sinned?
This is a nice try, but we are asking for your theology, for you seem to believe that “all” always means “all”.
Okay, so you believe infants have personal sin. Or do you believe in original sin as well?That is correct.
Do you hold to the doctrine of original sin, or do you believe that “all have sinned” means that all have sinned?
Nor is it one the Catholic Church tries to “get around”.Romans 5:12 is one of the clearest statements on this. There is no getting around all men need salvation which means all are sinners.
I know that the “all doesn’t always mean all” defence fails to convince Protestants, for there could be references in Scripture where “all” (pas) does mean all: each and every one. Yet if “all” can have different meanings, then the Catholic exception for Mary is not exegetically impossible. We find ourselves in the same conundrum over the perpetual virginity of Mary by racking our brains out arguing over the conjunction “until” (heos) in Matthew 1,25. Church doctrines and dogmas are not based on grammatical exponents found in the written word, and so grammatical exponents can never ultimately serve to determine whether a Church teaching is true or false. Sacred Tradition did historically exist before Sacred Scripture. We do not write something merely to prove to ourselves or to others what we intended to write. However, it would be wise of us to examine, in the face of Protestant opposition against the Church’s Marian doctrines, in what context St.Paul uses the word “all” (pas). We do in fact find a non-literal usage of the word “all” elsewhere in Romans: In v.1,29 the KJV reads “being filled with all unrighteousness…”, whereas the NRSV is more specific and to the point: “…every kind of wickedness”. In Romans 11:26, the Apostle writes: “All Israel will be saved.” But we can safely assume not every single individual will be saved. And in 15,14 St.Paul describes the Roman community as “filled with all knowledge.” (cf. 1 Cor 1,5 KJV), which, of course, cannot be taken literally since only God is all-knowing. I’m afraid there is no solid ground for a Protestant to stand on by citing St.Paul’s Epistle to the Romans as a means to refute Church doctrine on the sinlessness of Mary. It appears, by the Apostle’s use of the word “all” (cf. Rom 3,23) Mary could very likely be an exception to the norm. After all, she was conceived without Original Sin, just as Jesus was, on account of the One she would conceive and bear. Let us not judge authoritative Church proclamations (cf Mt 16, 18-19) on what we as individuals perceive grammatical particles to signify. At any rate, we know that there are human exceptions: Adam and Eve; although our ancestral parents, having been created in a state of sanctifying grace, fell short, unlike the new Adam (Jesus) and the new Eve (Mary) who contradicted our human legacy. That said, ‘pas’ can have different meanings according to its different functions in the New Testament: it can denote a great number: “all Jerusalem” or “all the sick” (Mt 2,3; 4,24). Likewise, Thayer’s ‘Greek-English Lexicon of the New Testament’ gives “of every kind” as a possible meaning of “all” in some contexts. Hence, the Greek word ‘pas’ does not necessarily mean “no exceptions” and so it is untenable to cite Romans 5,12 or 3, 23 in an attempt to refute Church teaching on the sinlessness of Mary and her Immaculate Conception.That is correct.
Romans 5:12 is one of the clearest statements on this. There is no getting around all men need salvation which means all are sinners.
Please go back and read the post which you have responded to. I would post, but Old Scholar has put it perfectly and I cant add anything any better than what he stated about Mary. I will also say, I do not mean any disrespect to Mary as the mother of the earthly Jesus. God did chose a human vessel to bare God’s son because Jesus Christ is God in the flesh… He is the Son of God, yet…the Son of manNo she didn’t sin. She was already saved to begin with. The sacrifice of the cross transcends time and space. God preserved her from sin. She has no original sin nor personal sin.
All sin doesn’t always means necessary all. You would have to include infants who aren’t capable of committing personal sin.
She was more than a vessel. She was the true Ark of the Covenant. Just like the Ark, Mary is also pure.
This is not speculation. The ECF believed in it, whom they received. It is a part of Divine Revelation. The Church is guided in all truth by the Holy Spirit. Therefore, when the Church declare Mary to be without sin. She is without sin. This has been a part of our Living Sacred Tradition. It is Scriptural. To be Scriptural is to be obedient to God’s commandment. Mary live up to those commandments. She did not sin period. God hate sin, and to think he would allow a dirty sinful woman to be the Mother of his Son, would insult the Word of God.
I already responded to Old Scholar’s post and refuted it. I do not believe that God himself would allow Mary to be in the state of sin in order to bring forth the Son of God. Jesus is true God, and true Man. “All have sinned.” doesn’t often necessary means all because you have to include infants who are incapable of comitting personal sin.Please go back and read the post which you have responded to. I would post, but Old Scholar has put it perfectly and I cant add anything any better than what he stated about Mary. I will also say, I do not mean any disrespect to Mary as the mother of the earthly Jesus. God did chose a human vessel to bare God’s son because Jesus Christ is God in the flesh… He is the Son of God, yet…the Son of man
you simply misunderstood the verses you stated…Paul said that “All have sinned” and that included Mary. That’s why Christ came to earth, to save the sinners.
In addition, Mary said: Luke 1:46 And Mary said, My soul doth magnify the Lord, 47) And my spirit hath rejoiced in God my Saviour.
Mary had to have sinned to need a saviour.
No Christian would believe that Mary wasn’t blessed. Even though Christ never treated her special. He called her “woman” most of the time and did not show any special respect for her. She was simply the vessel that brought Him to earth in human form but she was a strong supporter and gained more prominence after He was crucified. When she died, however, she just died. There is nothing to indicate she was assumed into heaven. No one has gone to heaven as of yet, except Christ who came down from heaven. That is what Christ taught.
To think that Mary did not sin is merely speculation and assumption. Scripture tells us that all have sinned and it doesn’t exclude Mary or anyone else. Those who believe Mary was sinless are simply believing what they want to. It is not Scriptural and they won’t find it in the writings of the early church fathers of the first couple of centuries either. That is a much later fabrication of the church. Personally I believe Mary was blessed and deserves special recognition, but not the pedestal Catholics want to put her on.
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Yes, but He did not sin, which of course, I agree with. But since Jesus is fully Man, then apparently “All” does not mean “All”, as in “then came down to him all of Judea and Jerusalem to be baptized”. I’m pretty sure every person in Judea did not get baptized by John.I would agree. He expierenced the full limitations of being human yet without sin. He did not “inherit” original sin or the “sin nature” from Adam. However this does need to be qualified in the sense He had a birth that was supernatural i.e. no human father and He was also fully God although He emptied Himself as in Philippians 2:6-7
How would you answer this question?
You can claim this all you want. The Roman Catholic church did not even exist then.NotWorthy;3118652]
Quote:
Originally Posted by justasking4
The only authority any church has is from Christ is to teach the truth. No church has the authority to teach anything it wants and claim its true if there is no evidence for it.
NotWorthy
The only authority Christ gave is to the Catholic Church. No other church has any Christ-given authority.
If you look at the passage in which this occurs it was given to Peter and not the church. There is no reference here for this being given to the church.The specific authority that Christ gave was to “bind and to loose”.
Mary’s assumption would certainly qualify as would the claim she was kept from sin. Both of these as you know are not taught in Scripture nor is there any real historical evidence for them.NotWorthy
With that being said, no, the Church can not make things up out of thin air, and thank God that hasn’t happened. The Holy Spirit has guided the Church to teach the Truth, and still does so today.
Then its not apostolic either.Quote:justasking4
Not so. There is not one verse in Scripture that even comes close to saying she was without sin.
NotWorthy
You are so very correct.
The Bible does not claim to have all Truths but that it alone is inspired-inerrant. There is nothing like or comes close to its authority or power.NotWorthy
It must be sad to be stuck in this “Sola-Versura” trap for where does Scripture say that all Truths are to be found in single verses? The Bible is NOT a Catechism, or else it would read like Leviticus.
Reading the Bible as a whole in support of the marian doctrines fails on the details. In may look right and good when viewing the claims made about Mary but when you go to look for the support in Scripture for them they fail in the details. The 2 examples i mention above are but 2 of many examples.NotWorthy
JA4, you have been shown time and time again that Catholics are not saddled with these incorrect chains, but that we came to know the truth of Mary by reading the Bible as a whole.
There is absolutely no evidence that “Mary was saved in anticipation of her contracting original sin, and was born without it”. There is just is not one shred of Scripture that could be used to come even close to support this assertion.MariaG;3119017]I am aware of what the Catholic Church teaches.
And if you’ll notice, it is completely consistent since the sin that we believe is being referred to in Romans “all have sinned” is original sin. Mary was saved in anticipation of her contracting original sin, and was born without it. Thus “all have sinned” in this verse actually includes Mary, because we do in fact believe she needed to be saved from original sin by a miracle of God. We call this miracle the Immaculate conception.
Its not a “personal sin” that is the problem but that they are children of Adam they “inherit” his sin. They share in Adam’s nature. We also know this is true that if a baby is allowed to grow to adulthood she-he will have sin many times.You however believe those verses refer to personal sin. You claim Mary must have sinned because “all have sinned”.
So again, what personal sin does an infant have?
Merry ChristmasGod Bless,
Maria
Pray tell, then; when did it exist? We know the early church had bishops (Acts 20:17 & 28, Titus 1:7, 1 Timothy 3:1, 1 Peter 2:25, Philippians 1:1), priests (John 20:22-23, 1 Timothy 5:17, Titus 1:5, James 5:14) and deacons (1 Timothy 3:8, Philippians 1:1); at what point did they cease to exist, but our “fakers” did?You can claim this all you want. The Roman Catholic church did not even exist then.
Peter was a member of the Church.If you look at the passage in which this occurs it was given to Peter and not the church. There is no reference here for this being given to the church.
It is known from Apostolic Tradition that she was assumed. 2 Thessalonians 2:15 told us to hold onto beliefs like that. It is referenced in Song of Songs 2, Psalm 45 and Psalm 131:8, though.Mary’s assumption would certainly qualify
THAT can be proven directly from scripture, though. You didn’t address my citations of Exodus 25:10, Luke 1:52 or the entire book of Judith.as would the claim she was kept from sin.
We have Church Fathers as early as the 2nd century talking about both of them. What do you constitute as historical evidence?nor is there any real historical evidence for them.
Wrong. The Church overpowers the Bible in terms of authority. Paul says that the Church, NOT the Bible, is the pillar of truth in 1 Timothy 3:15.The Bible does not claim to have all Truths but that it alone is inspired-inerrant. There is nothing like or comes close to its authority or power.
No Catholic belief contradicts scripture, as the Catholic Church wrote the Bible to document its beliefs. If it’s the Church versus the Bible, the Bible is wrong; we don’t have the original manuscripts, so they could potentially have been altered, but we still have the infallible Church.ideas of men that contradict the scriptures.
I can show you Exodus 25:10 until my face turns red, but that won’t mean a thing if you refuse to actually read the Bible.There is absolutely no evidence that “Mary was saved in anticipation of her contracting original sin, and was born without it”. There is just is not one shred of Scripture that could be used to come even close to support this assertion.
Probably not until the later centuries.EphelDuath;3119538]
Quote:justasking4
You can claim this all you want. The Roman Catholic church did not even exist then.
EphelDuath
Pray tell, then; when did it exist?
There were no “priests” as such in the NT. That was never an office in the church. Secondly the leaders in NT could be and were married. In the Roman church today a man is disqualified from real leadership by the mere fact he is married.EphelDuath
We know the early church had bishops, priests and deacons; at what point did they cease to exist, but our “fakers” did?
That may be but the keys were given only to him.Quote:justasking4.
If you look at the passage in which this occurs it was given to Peter and not the church. There is no reference here for this being given to the church.
EphelDuath
Peter was a member of the Church.
Quote:justasking4.
Mary’s assumption would certainly qualify
The only apostolic writings we have are the scriptures. There were no aposltes after the last one died.It is known from Apostolic Tradition that she was assumed.
Not so. Is not Paul referring to his “traditions”?EphelDuath
2 Thessalonians 15 told us to hold onto beliefs like that.
I checked and i don’t see it. There is no Psalm 131:8. Do you mean something else?EphelDuath
It is referenced in Song of Songs 2, Psalm 45 and Psalm 131:8, though.
I don’t have the book of Judith so i can’t respond to that. Are you saying that the Exodus and Luke passages have something to do with Mary and the ark?Quote:justasking4.
as would the claim she was kept from sin.
EphelDuath
THAT can be proven directly from scripture, though. You didn’t address my citations of Exodus 25:10, Luke 1:52 or the entire book of Judith.
Lets take the her assumption. Do you have eyewitness accounts of it like Paul lays out for the resurrection of Christ in I Corinthians 15?Quote:justasking4.
nor is there any real historical evidence for them.
EphelDuath
We have Church Fathers as early as the 2nd century talking about both of them. What do you constitute as historical evidence?
Do you consider you church inspired-inerrant?Quote:justasking4.
The Bible does not claim to have all Truths but that it alone is inspired-inerrant. There is nothing like or comes close to its authority or power.
EphelDuath
Wrong. The Church overpowers the Bible in terms of authority. Paul says that the Church, NOT the Bible, is the pillar of truth in 1 Timothy 3:15.
I gave you a few examples above where your church does indeed circumvent the Scriptures.Quote:justasking4.
ideas of men that contradict the scriptures.
EphelDuath
No Catholic belief contradicts scripture, as the Catholic Church wrote the Bible to document its beliefs.
EphelDuath;3119541]
Here is the verse:Quote:justasking4.
There is absolutely no evidence that “Mary was saved in anticipation of her contracting original sin, and was born without it”. There is just is not one shred of Scripture that could be used to come even close to support this assertion.
EphelDuath
I can show you Exodus 25:10 until my face turns red, but that won’t mean a thing if you refuse to actually read the Bible.
You can claim this all you want. The Catholic Church existed there as She exists today!!You can claim this all you want. The Roman Catholic church did not even exist then.
In regards to this passage, binding and loosing, try Matthew 18 (the Church) in addition to Matthew 16 (Peter).If you look at the passage in which this occurs it was given to Peter and not the church. There is no reference here for this being given to the church.
They are taught in Tradition and supported in Scripture.Mary’s assumption would certainly qualify as would the claim she was kept from sin. Both of these as you know are not taught in Scripture nor is there any real historical evidence for them.
Now you’ve got me confused. When in the Bible does it say only what is said in a single verse can be taught.Then its not apostolic either.
And yet it says “Take it to the Church” and it refers to the Church as the “Pillar and Bulwark of Truth”: This is what I mean when I say it is taught in Tradition and supported in Scripture.The Bible does not claim to have all Truths but that it alone is inspired-inerrant. There is nothing like or comes close to its authority or power.
As I feel for people who are straining to justify that theirs is the Church of Acts when there is only one.I actually feel for catholics who are told to believe things that are not only taught in scripture but things that either have no historical support or the ideas of men that contradict the scriptures.
You’ve been down that read many a time, and yet it still rings as true as our Glorious Church has taught it.Reading the Bible as a whole in support of the marian doctrines fails on the details. In may look right and good when viewing the claims made about Mary but when you go to look for the support in Scripture for them they fail in the details. The 2 examples i mention above are but 2 of many examples.