M
Marybeloved
Guest
I’m sorry you find the term offensive, but it’s honestly quite appropriate.I think your use of words like “deformed” etc. is not becoming of someone as well versed in theology as yourself!
I’m describing a notion of Western theology that is false, and has been shown to be false- It most definitely is deformed because it is not representative of the true form of the actual Western teaching is supposedly described.
Alright, show me what evidence shows that Mary “had” to die.Be that as it may, our Saviour did die, of course, but He did not have to. Your argument here has no relevance in this respect.
When the Protestants started attacking Catholic beliefs, that’s when. And what do you mean it never occurred in the East? I’ve seen plenty of expressions to the contrary by Eastern Apologists.And also, at what point in the West did it become apparent that there was a possibility that the Mother of Christ our God could have lacked any Grace at any time - therefore incurring some sort of “stain?” And why did this never occur in Eastern theology?
I did address it. Christ died- That is clear proof that death does not automatically translate to presence of original sin.However, the one remaining point of difference is something you haven’t addressed (and don’t really need to) regarding the issue of the death of the Mother of God in relation to Original Sin.You accuse me of confusing a consequence of Original Sin with the sin itself. That is simply not what I said.The argument I made is that the fact that the Mother of God did die, as our liturgy asserts clearly, means that she had Original Sin. The East asserts BOTH that she had Original Sin (which the East only understands in terms of its effects) but that God had poured such a superabundance of grace onto her that those effects were mitigated in her i.e. that she felt no pain in giving birth to Christ and that her death was nothing more than a light, sweep sleep.
The same applies to the Blessed Virgin. Perfectly sinless, unfallen and still capable of experiencing suffering, (the ultimate form of which is death) as a consequence of mankind’s sin and fall.Q: Why do people assume that capacity to suffer is a strict result of the fall? Are we told that Adam was created "incapable" of suffering or rather, just without suffering? Rather, suffering itself was the result of the fall, not the ability to experience it. I believe that Adam & Eve could suffer, or had the ability/capacity to, but never did because no cause of suffering entered their world (it was made all-good, just like them) until they opened the doors for it by their own sin. It does not mean that their natures were created with incapacity for suffering. We know that their sin:
So Christ could definitely be sinless and with an unfallen nature but still experience suffering as a result of Adam’s sin. What he did not have was concupiscence.
- Lost grace and God’s intimate friendship
- Caused a dis-order in their very natures, or concupiscence, or rebellion of the lower natures
- Caused a fall in the world itself which is to say all the creation tied to man and made for him as his world.
I’m glad you’re open-minded enough to learn the Latin teaching from the Latin perspective rather than just cling to the false ideas that have been spread by polemicists.If this is what the Latin Church teaches, although referring to the effects of Original Sin as such, then there is no problem. I then don’t understand your apparent anger and dismay at Eastern theology and/or those coming at this issue from that perspective.
Peace!