M
Mannyfit75
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Note the ECF which you refer too said that Mary suffered from venial personal faults. Though none of them** is explicit that these fault are sins**. Doubt my friend is not sin, unless it is act upon. Tim Staples made a point. I presume you got this information from Lidwigg Ott’s books.You still haven’t my question flyersfan; I’m not surprised; however, here’s a teaser from Ludwid Ott, Fundamentals of Catholic Dogma (Rockford: Ill., Tan Book Publishers, 1974), 201, 203:"…individual Greek Fathers (e.g., Origen, Basil, John Chrysostom, Cyril of Alexandria) taught that Mary suffered from venial personal faults, such as ambition and vanity…Neither the Greek nor the Latin Fathers explicityly teach the Immaculate Conception of Mary.”J.N.D. Kelly also notes that Irenaeus, Tertullian, and Hilary did as well, (J.N.D. Kelly, Early Christian Doctrines (San Francisco: Harper & Row, 1978), 493, 496.
I would like to quote Origen if he truly believe that Mary sin. Let us take a look at one of the quotes he said concerning Mary:
“Every incorrupt and virgin soul, having conceived by the Holy Spirit in order to give birth to the will of the Father, is a mother of Jesus.” (Origen, Fragments on Matthew 281, quoted in Gambero, 76).
Origen however, taught that Mary was not holy from the beginning, and that she was scandalized and had vanity within her (Homily on Luke 17, 6-7). But this was because he was speaking in the Greek context of sanctification. Origen, faithful to the more ancient Alexandrian tradition, tends to emphasize the Virgin’s holiness and virtues, always in the context of her condition as one still making progress (Gambero, 78).
However, Origen still believed that Mary **was all-holy **(Homily 7 in Lucam) and she was holy before the Annunciation (Homily 6 in Lucam). While reading Origen, we must also keep in mind that the **East did not have the developed concept of original sin and grace **(as seen later, for example in St. Augustine), and thus, this affected his teaching. However, it did not keep Origen from saying Mary was a symbol of Christian life.
The dogma developed more after the Council of Nicaea. We have St. Athanasius of Alexandria in the 4th century saying,
“He (Christ) took it (His body) from a pure and unstained Virgin, who had not known man.” (On the Incarnation of the Word 8)
Athanasius also believed that Mary is a model of perfection. He states,
“The Holy Scriptures, which instructs us, and the life of Mary, Mother of God, suffice as an ideal of perfection and the form of the heavenly life.” (De Virginitate, 255)
It has been claimed that Cyril of Alexandria for example, believed that Mary had personal faults (Fundamentals of Catholic Dogma by Ludwig Ott, p. 203). Though this is true, he still believed that Mary was uncommonly holy (Adversus Nestorii blasphemies, lib. 1, cap. I). And the belief that Mary did contact original sin and was delivered of its stain only at the moment of the Annunciation never gained any measure of wide acceptance among the better authors (Carol, 1:352).
Most of these I gather from Catholic Apologetic website which I taken verbatim.
You can read the article of you like.
bringyou.to/apologetics/a95.htm