G
Gavin
Guest
If Christ states that John the Baptist is the greatest of all born of a woman, then why do we consider Mary the greatest creation?
When was understanding of Our Blessed Mother ever “somewhat negative”?Understanding of her radically developed from being somewhat negative
Exactly. ‘All these with one accord devoted themselves to prayer, together with the women and Mary the mother of Jesus, and with his brethren.’ - Acts 1:14When was understanding of Our Blessed Mother ever “somewhat negative”?
She was loved by the Apostles. Our understanding of her has developed over time, but there was never a “negative” period.
The Council of Ephesus was held in 431 to determine whether Mary was the Mother of Jesus (only in his humanity) of the Mother of God ( in His total being humanity and divinity). The Council taught she was the Mother if God, which the Church teaches today. There was a crowd of lay faithful outside the Church where the bishops were meeting and they started celebrating when the bishops proclaimed that Mary was the Mother of God. So I agree that I don’t see any negative teachings about Mary in the early Church.The “negativity” around Mary nowadays is coming from people’s own personal hangups, not from Church teaching on Mary.
The poster who brought it up suggested that such negativity was present in the Church’s original old teachings about Mary. I’m not aware of any such thing. Mariology developed over time, as did other theologies of the Church.
St Louis Marie de Montford stated that in the early days of the Church, that the Holy Spirit somewhat hid Mary so as not to draw people away from the reality that Jesus is the only Saviour. It was for the purpose of rightly establishing devotion andI don’t know if ‘negatively’ would be the right word, but it did take a lot of time for Marian devotion to develop and become commonplace.
John the Baptist was the greatest of those born [ONLY] of woman. Mary was “full of grace” thus she was born of “water and the Spirit” - that is, she was “born again” or “born from above” - at the moment of her conception. Mary, then, was not born [only] of her mother, but was born also of the Spirit, and thus, into the Kingdom of God. Jesus was born of woman, but not born [only] of His mother Mary - He was and is eternally begotten [or “born”] of the Father, eternally alive in the Holy Trinity.If Christ states that John the Baptist is the greatest of all born of a woman, then why do we consider Mary the greatest creation?