C
Contarini
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Point well taken, but the fact remains that several doctors of the church made contrary statements to what has become some of the dogmas of Mary in the RCC.
Point well taken, but the fact remains that several doctors of the church made contrary statements to what has become some of the dogmas of Mary in the RCC.
“Let them not therefore ascribe to the law the unbelief of certain [among them]. For the law never hindered them from believing in the Son of God; nay, but it even exhorted them so to do, saying that men can be saved in no other way from the old wound of the serpent than by believing in Him who, in the likeness of sinful flesh, is lifted up from the earth upon the tree of martyrdom, and draws all things to Himself, and vivifies the dead.” Adversus Haereses, Book 4, Chapter 2Example? It depends of course by what you mean when you say “original sin.”
Key elements such as…?As with the development of any doctrine, the principles were certainly there. But key elements of the doctrine were not in place before Augustine.
Does the text say “All have committed personal sin” or “All have sinned”? You’re reading your preconceived notion into it, and conveniently ignoring the part that says “Therefore, just as sin entered the world through one man…”“All have sinned.” That’s not original sin, which pre-exists the commission of any actual sin.
Yes sort of…You’re talking about concupiscence, which is the wounding of our nature, which was originally perfect as created by God. Our fallen nature predisposes us to sin, but that really only strengthens my argument. To repeat, Paul says that “sin entered the world through one man”. What does that mean? Our nature fell with Adam, and that’s why we have concupiscence and the predisposition to sin. We are all sinners from birth.According to original sin, people sin because they are sinners.
Again, note the word “death.”
“For the wages of sin is death, but the gift of God is eternal life in Christ Jesus our Lord.” **Romans 6:23 **This is not the developed doctrine of original sin either.
Source please.Indeed–nor did I say that. Although some early Christians did speak as if Mary sinned–at least Chrysostom ascribes a lack of faith to her.
Isn’t it though, when we apply what I said above about concupiscence? We all have a fallen nature that prompts us to sin, which is why you won’t find anyone who hasn’t committed a personal sin (past the age of reason). Therefore if Mary never committed a personal sin, she must not have had concupiscence or original sin.Saying that Mary never committed a sin is not the same thing as the Immaculate Conception.
Sure, I can live with that description. Why does Jesus call him a devil here?OK–how about “imaginative speculation.” Judas is mentioned here as a “devil,” but nothing whatever is said about his reaction to what Jesus has been saying about the Bread of Life.
mgoforth;9653892:
I’m not sure anything was “declared doctrine” that early, as in someone said “you must believe this”, other than when the Church Fathers argued against specific heresies.The Immaculate Conception was not dogma of the Church in the 2nd century nor was perpetual virginity of Mary. Show where it was declared doctrine and dogma of the Catholic church in the 2nd century.
Sorry if that’s not good enough.
Please do, that’s why I asked earlier.As far as Ambrose and Aquinas, I can give you more examples of doctors of the Church who disclaimed what became Roman dogma.
Death, disordered passions, weakness and decay of all sorts, a tendency to sin that is not itself sin. . . .“Let them not therefore ascribe to the law the unbelief of certain [among them]. For the law never hindered them from believing in the Son of God; nay, but it even exhorted them so to do, saying that men can be saved in no other way from the old wound of the serpent than by believing in Him who, in the likeness of sinful flesh, is lifted up from the earth upon the tree of martyrdom, and draws all things to Himself, and vivifies the dead.” Adversus Haereses, Book 4, Chapter 2
What is “the old wound of the serpent” that we need to be saved from, if not original sin?
“And thus, as the human race fell into bondage to death by means of a virgin, so is it rescued by a virgin; virginal disobedience having been balanced in the opposite scale by virginal obedience. For in the same way the sin of the first created man receives amendment by the correction of the First-begotten, and the coming of the serpent is conquered by the harmlessness of the dove, those bonds being unloosed by which we had been fast bound to death.” Adversus Haereses, Book 4, Chapter 2
The legal claim that death had against us; the ontological reality of death that pervades every aspect of fallen human existence. . . .What are the “bonds”, if not original sin?
The idea that human beings are guilty of sin before they commit an actual sin is the main one that comes to mind.Key elements such as…?
The normal, pre-Augustinian sense of the term “all have sinned” would be “all have committed personal sin.” You only need this clarification after Augustine.Does the text say “All have committed personal sin” or “All have sinned”?
Not at all. The preconceived notion with which I approached the text originally was the doctrine of original sin. It was only in graduate school, through studying Augustine and the relationship of his ideas to preceding tradition, that I realized that I had been taught to read Augustine into Paul. I’m not necessarily saying that this is a bad thing (though I think that the somewhat different Eastern approach is at least as legitimate).You’re reading your preconceived notion into it
Not at all. Again, you assume this because you read “sin” and think “original sin.” But that’s begging the question. Sin could enter the world through one man’s sin, which was imitated by others (yes, I know this is heresy–but my point is that it was not condemned as heresy until the fifth century, and was one possible way to read the text which some Christians adopted). Or, as in the Eastern view (which as far as I can see is an orthodox alternative that complements rather than contradicting the Augustinian approach), it could mean that sin enters the world as a power of death and decay but not necessarily as guilt incurred by everyone before the commission of any actual sin.and conveniently ignoring the part that says “Therefore, just as sin entered the world through one man…”
In the Latin Catholic view as I understand it, concupiscence is counted as sin to those who are not regenerate, but not to those who are (this is the distinction rejected by the Reformers, who argued that concupiscence was simply sin). In other words, where there is a fundamental disposition toward righteousness (restored in human beings through grace), the mere predisposition toward sin is not sin–but where that “original justice” is lacking or has not been restored, concupiscence determines the person’s basic orientation and thus is sin. (That, at least, is how I make sense of the traditional doctrine without invoking purely legal categories.)Yes sort of…You’re talking about concupiscence, which is the wounding of our nature, which was originally perfect as created by God. Our fallen nature predisposes us to sin, but that really only strengthens my argument. To repeat, Paul says that “sin entered the world through one man”. What does that mean? Our nature fell with Adam, and that’s why we have concupiscence and the predisposition to sin. We are all sinners from birth.
We have to consider the whole…not just one verse. It’s very basic logic to put these pieces together:
*]Death entered the world through Adam, and is a possibility for everyone from the moment they’re born.
*]The wages of sin is death.
*]Therefore, “all have sinned” from the very moment that they’re conceived. Otherwise, no one would die until they were old enough to commit personal sins.
Arguably it is there in embryo. But not explicitly. You see it because you have been trained to see it–I see it too, but I see other things as well.The whole doctrine is right there in Romans and 1 Corinthians.
The passage appears to be this one (see the last two sections), in which Chrysostom certainly says that Mary behaved in a way she should not have, and ascribes “human feelings” to her in a manner that appears to imply sin (the “feeling” in question is the desire to gain personal credit from Jesus’ miracles). It isn’t as clear-cut a passage as i had been led to believe.Source please.
This is illogical because it ignored the power of God’s grace, which of course is the only thing that makes the Immaculate Conception possible. So you’re arguing that God could do the greater thing (preserve Mary from original sin from the very beginning) but not the lesser (preserve her from actual sin in spite of concupiscence). That makes no sense to me.Isn’t it though, when we apply what I said above about concupiscence? We all have a fallen nature that prompts us to sin, which is why you won’t find anyone who hasn’t committed a personal sin (past the age of reason). Therefore if Mary never committed a personal sin, she must not have had concupiscence or original sin.
Because Jesus knew that he was going to betray him. Yes, that raises difficult questions about free will. . . .Sure, I can live with that description. Why does Jesus call him a devil here?
Concupiscence, in other words, which is the effect of original sin.Death, disordered passions, weakness and decay of all sorts, a tendency to sin that is not itself sin. . . .
Also the effect of original sin.The legal claim that death had against us; the ontological reality of death that pervades every aspect of fallen human existence. . . .
Says who? That claim requires a major citation.The normal, pre-Augustinian sense of the term “all have sinned” would be “all have committed personal sin.” You only need this clarification after Augustine.
Not at all. The preconceived notion with which I approached the text originally was the doctrine of original sin. It was only in graduate school, through studying Augustine and the relationship of his ideas to preceding tradition, that I realized that I had been taught to read Augustine into Paul. I’m not necessarily saying that this is a bad thing (though I think that the somewhat different Eastern approach is at least as legitimate).
Ahh…graduate school. Now it all makes sense.I’m not saying that the text can’t bear Augustine’s interpretation–you’re the one insisting that it can’t bear any other, and hence you’re the one reading a preconceived notion into the text.
Heresy is always heresy. Just because it wasn’t officially condemned until later doesn’t mean it wasn’t wrong from the beginning. I don’t believe the Eastern view you mentioned would be considered orthodox by the Catholic Church.Not at all. Again, you assume this because you read “sin” and think “original sin.” But that’s begging the question. Sin could enter the world through one man’s sin, which was imitated by others (yes, I know this is heresy–but my point is that it was not condemned as heresy until the fifth century, and was one possible way to read the text which some Christians adopted). Or, as in the Eastern view (which as far as I can see is an orthodox alternative that complements rather than contradicting the Augustinian approach), it could mean that sin enters the world as a power of death and decay but not necessarily as guilt incurred by everyone before the commission of any actual sin.
In the Latin Catholic view as I understand it, concupiscence is counted as sin to those who are not regenerate, but not to those who are (this is the distinction rejected by the Reformers, who argued that concupiscence was simply sin). In other words, where there is a fundamental disposition toward righteousness (restored in human beings through grace), the mere predisposition toward sin is not sin–but where that “original justice” is lacking or has not been restored, concupiscence determines the person’s basic orientation and thus is sin. (That, at least, is how I make sense of the traditional doctrine without invoking purely legal categories.)
It’s not concupiscence that’s counted as a sin before baptism, it’s original sin. Original sin is the cause - concupiscence the effect. You keep confusing cause with effect. Also, original sin isn’t considered personal sin for anyone (except Adam and Eve).At any rate, the point here is that what Augustine called “concupiscence” was certainly acknowledged by earlier Fathers, but Augustine was the one who argued that in the unregenerate this concupiscence itself constituted the guilt of sin.
The phrase “eph ho pantes hemarton” in Romans 5:12 has been translated in at least three ways:
“Because all have sinned,” which is the most common modern translation and the one you are relying on;
“In whom all sinned,” which is the translation Augustine was working with and on which he based his doctrine;
Making death the cause of sin is completely illogical. How would that even fit with the idea of death being the “wages of sin”, which comes from the same letter? Or how would that square with the creation story, where God didn’t impose the penalty of death until after the sin was committed?“Because of which all have sinned,” which is the most common Eastern translation and which makes death the cause of sin rather than the other way round.
Where does death come from? Every interpretation of Genesis I’ve read says that God imposed it as a penalty on Adam and Eve. It wouldn’t have been much of a penalty if it was going to happen anyway as part of their original design, would it? So we can logically infer that they would not have died if they hadn’t sinned. And if their design was the template for ours…then why do infants die before they can commit a sin personally? It must be because our nature is fallen (concupiscence), which is a result of Adam and Eve’s sin (original sin). It’s only possible to argue otherwise by ignoring one part of Scripture or another.Historically speaking, neither Augustine nor any other early Father I’m aware of came up with the ingenious interpretation you espouse (that the mere phrase “because all have sinned” proves that all sinned in Adam, because otherwise infants would not die); Augustine had a lot more “help” in the Latin translation which explicitly said that all sinned in Adam.
I saw it before becoming Catholic…not that it really proves anything.Arguably it is there in embryo. But not explicitly. You see it because you have been trained to see it–I see it too, but I see other things as well.
That’s not my argument at all. God could have done both things, but He chose to do the former and that was all Mary needed.This is illogical because it ignored the power of God’s grace, which of course is the only thing that makes the Immaculate Conception possible. So you’re arguing that God could do the greater thing (preserve Mary from original sin from the very beginning) but not the lesser (preserve her from actual sin in spite of concupiscence). That makes no sense to me.
Yes, I agree that Jesus knew in advance. But still, there had to be a turning point for Judas, where the seed of doubt crept into his mind. This seems like as plausible a place as any other, especially since such a huge part of Christianity doesn’t believe it today.Because Jesus knew that he was going to betray him. Yes, that raises difficult questions about free will…
I’m not sure what your point is here. If you’re making the bold claim that Marian dogmas were not fully developed by the 4th century… then I’m not sure you’ll find much disagreement on CAF.…the fact remains that several doctors of the church made contrary statements to what has become some of the dogmas of Mary in the RCC.
It’s a fact that they were not part of the Early Church. If they were, explain why it took centuries upon centuries for the Roman church to declare them to be so.I’m not sure what your point is here. If you’re making the bold claim that Marian dogmas were not fully developed by the 4th century… then I’m not sure you’ll find much disagreement on CAF.
Here’s some words from the centuries of the church on the Immaculate Conception.I’m not sure what your point is here. If you’re making the bold claim that Marian dogmas were not fully developed by the 4th century… then I’m not sure you’ll find much disagreement on CAF.
Forgive me for asking, but are you dense? I said they were not dogmas in the Early Church as they were not fully developed.…If they were…
No I’m not dense and I don’t appreciate your snarkiness. Whatever you wish to call them, dogmas, doctrine, realizations, Whatever; they were not part of the Early Church. Did you bother to read what some of the doctors of the Church said?Forgive me for asking, but are you dense? I said they were not dogmas in the Early Church as they were not fully developed.
You appear to be putting forth the exact same arguments (and quotes) of a CAF user named “SIA” (who has since been banned). Are you the same person, just a different user name?Here’s some words from the centuries of the church on the Immaculate Conception.
Augustine of Hippo: Christ alone being made a man but remaining God never had any sin nor did he take on flesh of sin though he took flesh OF THE SIN OF HIS MOTHER.
Ambrose: Of all that are born of women, ONLY Jesus experienced not the contagion of earthly corruption.
St. Bernard: Our astonishment is not small that some of you are believed to be able to introduce a new feast that is UNKNOWN to the Church.
I could go on with several others.
Edwin where did you get the teaching that according to original sin people sin because they are sinners.Example? It depends of course by what you mean when you say “original sin.”
As with the development of any doctrine, the principles were certainly there. But key elements of the doctrine were not in place before Augustine.
“All have sinned.” That’s not original sin, which pre-exists the commission of any actual sin.
According to original sin, people sin because they are sinners.
Again, note the word “death.”
This is not the developed doctrine of original sin either.
Sure.
Indeed–nor did I say that. Although some early Christians did speak as if Mary sinned–at least Chrysostom ascribes a lack of faith to her.
Saying that Mary never committed a sin is not the same thing as the Immaculate Conception.
OK–how about “imaginative speculation.” Judas is mentioned here as a “devil,” but nothing whatever is said about his reaction to what Jesus has been saying about the Bread of Life.
Edwin
You appear to be putting forth the exact same arguments (and quotes) of a CAF user named “SIA” (who has since been banned). Are you the same person, just a different user name?
Boy talking about taking scripture out of context. Where is Augustine of Hippo speaking of the Mother of Christ.Here’s some words from the centuries of the church on the Immaculate Conception.
Augustine of Hippo: Christ alone being made a man but remaining God never had any sin nor did he take on flesh of sin though he took flesh OF THE SIN OF HIS MOTHER.
Ambrose: Of all that are born of women, ONLY Jesus experienced not the contagion of earthly corruption.
St. Bernard: Our astonishment is not small that some of you are believed to be able to introduce a new feast that is UNKNOWN to the Church.
I could go on with several others.
If by “original sin” you just mean “Adam’s sin,” then fine.Concupiscence, in other words, which is the effect of original sin.
Then I’ll rephrase it: I’m unaware of any Church Father before Augustine who interprets the phrase “all have sinned” to mean something other than “all have committed personal sin.” Now you are the one who has to provide the major citationSays who? That claim requires a major citation.
It takes a lot more than that. It requires simply shutting one’s eyes to the historical evidence and rejecting everything Catholic scholars and theologians have learned in the last few centuries about how doctrine develops.Perhaps we’re not “reading Augustine into Paul”, but reading the correct interpretation of Paul, which just happens to coincide with what Augustine wrote. In other words, it has always been the correct interpretation, even before Augustine. Of course, that takes faith in the infallibility of the Church.
Then show me where it’s been condemned. Certainly Eastern Catholics are more likely to interpret it in a way that is compatible with the Latin view, but as far as I know the Orthodox view of original sin is not considered unorthodox by the Catholic Church. It would be easy to show me otherwise. . . .Heresy is always heresy. Just because it wasn’t officially condemned until later doesn’t mean it wasn’t wrong from the beginning. I don’t believe the Eastern view you mentioned would be considered orthodox by the Catholic Church.
Perhaps we should step back and define what original sin is. My understanding was that it consists, in traditional Western Catholic theology, of two things:It’s not concupiscence that’s counted as a sin before baptism, it’s original sin.
You would do well, I think, to be less cavalier in dismissing a view held by many great Eastern Fathers.Making death the cause of sin is completely illogical.
Death is the wages of sin. It’s a cycle.How would that even fit with the idea of death being the “wages of sin”, which comes from the same letter? Or how would that square with the creation story, where God didn’t impose the penalty of death until after the sin was committed?
Indeed. Although the important nuance in Athanasius (corresponding to Augustine’s idea of the “donum superadditum,” and contrasting with the Reformed view yet again) is that because we came from nothing, there is a sense in which we “naturally” return to nothingness, and only the ever-present life of God within us prevents us from doing so.Where does death come from? Every interpretation of Genesis I’ve read says that God imposed it as a penalty on Adam and Eve. It wouldn’t have been much of a penalty if it was going to happen anyway as part of their original design, would it?
I think we may be talking past each other, because you seem to think that “original sin” refers to Adam and Eve’s sin and not to anything in us. That is not the traditional language of the Western Church. I refer you to the sources I cited above–Aquinas, the CE, and the Catechism (though the last of these has been modified by the influence of “ressourcement” and a greater openness to Eastern forms of experession).And if their design was the template for ours…then why do infants die before they can commit a sin personally? It must be because our nature is fallen (concupiscence), which is a result of Adam and Eve’s sin (original sin). It’s only possible to argue otherwise by ignoring one part of Scripture or another.
Precisely for that reason, I resist this interpretation. It amounts to a vicious smear on many pious Christians. I grew up in hyper-Zwinglian circles, and I can’t see that our rejection of the Real Presence had anything to do with betraying Jesus. It had to do with an impoverished understanding of the sacramental relationship between physical and spiritual.Yes, I agree that Jesus knew in advance. But still, there had to be a turning point for Judas, where the seed of doubt crept into his mind. This seems like as plausible a place as any other, especially since such a huge part of Christianity doesn’t believe it today.
But that’s not what Ambrose said (I find the interpretation of “seed of the woman” you’re following highly strained, but I grant you that it’s a traditional one). He said “born of woman.” At least that is how he was quoted in the post to which you were replying. It wouldn’t make sense for him to use the other meaning, since Jesus is the only person in human history who was born of the “seed of woman” in the sense you’re using the term.And yes Jesus is the only Man who was born from the seed of Woman. So what. Where does it say that the Blessed Mother was born from the seed of Woman?She was not. SHe was born from the seed of her Father.
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Caught! It’s a cliche often used in conservative Protestant circles. Perhaps I am wrong in thinking that it also applies to the Augustinian Catholic perspective, but it seems to me that it does. If people were not made sinners by original sin, then the traditional Western argument for infant baptism would fail. See CCC 403–though I note again that the CCC says that original sin is only sin in an “analogical sense” (a distinction I like very much).Edwin where did you get the teaching that according to original sin people sin because they are sinners.
Well, that’s the traditional difficulty with the Augustinian view. Augustine says that after the fall and before regeneration people do not have free will with regard to the choice whether to sin or not: “non posse non peccare.” They do, however, have the freedom to choose their sin–you can choose not to give in to lust, for instance, but apart from grace you will only do so through some other sinful motive, such as pride.If all people sin because they are sinners, what happens to free will?
Yes, I understand that, and while my own inclination would be to agree more with the traditional Dominican position (which still holds that Mary was cleansed of all sin in the womb), this is certainly a point on which I’m willing to submit to the judgment of the Church. The IC is a legitimate (or, at the very least, a possibly legitimate) development of the traditional understanding.The I.C. means that at the time of the Conception of Mary God got between her and Original sin…
I’m trying to get in on this conversation here a bit and I don’t really understand your point.Boy talking about taking scripture out of context. Where is Augustine of Hippo speaking of the Mother of Christ.
He is not at all. He is speaking how although Christ had not sins he took on Human Flesh and died to save us.
This does not say Mary had ever sinned.
And yes Jesus is the only Man who was born from the seed of Woman. So what. Where does it say that the Blessed Mother was born from the seed of Woman?She was not. SHe was born from the seed of her Father.
If you are going to go on and on. please finish with the congext of what is being taught.