M
Marybeloved
Guest
With all due respect Hesychios, there’s no question of “changing facts” here.The problems with this are several (I am at work presently, so I have to work fast). I can only share a few thoughts.
There doesn’t seem to be any historical evidence of the conditions of the Saviour’s birth, so it is possible to have a multitude of opinions of the subject. The idea that the birth was painless was a popular legend. It may be true.
Let us assume for arguments sake that it is true. Saint Mary, the Holy Theotokos did not give birth to any other children so (if the account were accurate) we cannot know if this was due to a special condition inherent in Saint Mary or because it was the Lord who was born. In other words there is always the possibility that the birth of other children would have been painful. So the ‘evidence’ (if it was evidence) is inconclusive. There is not enough to go on here, so the account is neutral for our purposes.
All we have then, is the historical account of her death, and what that fact meant to the Christians of the day. We cannot go by what we would like to believe, nor with what ‘makes sense’ to us from this vantage point 2000 years later, we have to confront the facts.
The fact is that she definitely died, and had to be buried. The interpretation the early Christians gave to this was that she died.
The tomb was opened to be found empty. The interpretation the early Christians gave to thuis was that she was assumed into heaven as the First Fruits of the coming Resurrection. In other words, they didn’t think she was a victim of grave robbers, but they did know she had died and was buried. They definitly believed she was assumed.
They also had no tradition of her willing her own death. It appears no where. The idea is alien to Christianity.
Whatever else we might believe about the nature of Original Sin, or Saint Mary’s role in salvation history has to conform to these facts. We cannot change the facts to conform to what we want to believe.
Changing the known facts is like the police planting evidence to get a false conviction. Regardless of what motivates a person to do this it is always wrong.
We believe she died, she was sinless, was proclaimed to be full of grace by an archangel before she said Yes to God becoming her Son, was believed early on to have given birth painlessly, was proclaimed the all-immaculate, spotless and holy, died peacefully, and was assumed into heaven, that she was understood to be the 2nd Eve in the order of grace, by the fathers (and modern Catholics and Orthodox) and was contrasted with the 1st Eve, as Christ the 2nd Adam is contrasted with the 1st Adam- All three (1st & 2nd Adam and 1st Eve) had perfect human natures and made their choices without the encumberances of fallen nature- Catholics do not see how the 2nd Eve could have a fallen nature and stand in the place of the 1st Eve.
Our interpretation of the facts is that she died out of conformity to Christ as with all things in her life, as also with the Saints, she being holier than any of them and loving Christ more than all of them, she was also conformed to him in her bodily resurrection. Is there a tradition that outlines all her inner thoughts and acts of the will?
If we are "changing the facts" you’ll need to show us the contrasting beliefs (that Mary had a fallen nature and she suffered the curses of the fall) from the Early Church.
Peace!