B
benhur
Guest
Hi pat,Protestants tend to emphasize God’s “salvation” almost exclusively to the forgiveness of sins actually committed.
Well yes.You do not need forgiveness for something you did not do.
Understand. Of course there is grace both in forgiveness in sin, and grace in being kept from sin. In the end ,* all* in Christ are presented blameless, as if we had never sinned, like Catholic Mary.However, Sacred Scripture indicates that salvation can also refer to man being protected from sinning before the fact:
Again, the degree of sin is mute. You can be perfect like Mary, or like the thief on the cross. Both will be presented blameless: the OT saints thru faith in the future Calvary and ever present Savior, and the NT saints thru the past Calvary and ever present Lord.Now to him who is able to keep you from falling and to present you without blemish before the presence of his glory with rejoicing, to the only God, our Savior through Jesus Christ our Lord, be glory, majesty, dominion, and authority, before all time and now and for ever. (Jude 24-25) END Quote]
It is not necessary for Mary to have been “highly favored” as Christ was “full of grace and truth” John 1:14. Catholics say it is fitting. Perhaps. I say it was fitting that she was like you and I, not perfect , but made righteous in faith in the promises and traditions of Judaism/Christianity. Christ came to a fallen world, to touch fallen man, and to shed His blood on fallen soil. That Mary be fallen is all too fitting. She, like us, was both fallen yet righteous thru the Lord.
Most translations have Mary as "highly favored’ not “full of grace”. I understand the CC uses the "full of grace’ translation and that this implies full to the brim as in perfect, sinless, even immaculately conceived. We have “full of grace” in John 1 speaking of the Lord, and it is not the same Greek wording as for Mary. Many of us also see the grace, the favoring, as not describing her state of condition, but in describing her state in/for being chosen. It was in her being chosen that set her apart, from amongst women. This was the grace, not that she was special in and of herself before the annunciation, otherwise she would have been above all women, and not amongst them (that is, all the other righteous Jewish maidens).
Thank you for stating the ‘fitting’ part though.Not everybody seems to know or understand that when dialoguing with others.
Blessings