And I am not saying Mary is the source of salvation either! You just as Protestants would tether take me and others out of context when we are using the same language as the bible! You obviously did not bother reading my post Mary does not nor Paul bring others salvation as christ does. But both of them do save in a different manner. Why can you understand this when in scripture but not when a church father says the same of the blessed mother?
Paul “
saved” people in his day by taking the gospel message of Jesus Christ to the Gentiles (and Jews) to be personally believed unto eternal salvation (Acts 16:31). His time to do that was when he was here on earth. He can no longer do it.
Neither Paul or Mary can “
save” anyone in the manner you speak since both of them no longer operate on this earth. Paul was commissioned by Christ to take the gospel to the Gentiles, however Mary was never personally commissioned by Christ for such a task. But no doubt she told individuals in her limited sphere during her life time, just as evangelical Christians do today. But neither Mary or Paul are “
saving” anyone in such a manner today. They don’t live here, hence they can speak to no one regarding belief in Christ for eternal life. And nowhere are we told to pray to God to send them back to this earth to spread the Gospel message of belief. This was/is to be done by the generation of believers that presently live on this earth - through the Holy Spirit.
As for all the other things proclaimed of Mary by men, well, men have yet to provide any
objective evidence to support their proclamations. You have a right to believe anything you want, but all I’ve been saying on this thread is that you who believe what has been stated of her are doing so apart from any
objective evidence:
Divine Revelation. No one ever eye witnessed her alleged bodily assumption into heaven, and no one was taken up to witness her alleged coronation as “
Queen of Heaven.”
Tradition, by definition, supposedly entails those teachings by the Apostles that were not written in Scripture, but were instead passed down orally. Well, I have yet to see a document where the author directly quotes an Apostle who taught the doctrine of the heavenly intercessory office of Mary. IOW, such teachings simply cannot be traced back to the Apostles in order to prove that such teachings concerning Mary were ever part of “
the faith which was once for all delivered to the saints” (Jude 3b). The fact that they were introduced into your church and eventually accepted as dogma is not the dispute.