Chris LaRock:
When someone said to Jesus, ‘there are your brothers and your mother.’, he didn’t correct them by saying she was a virgin.
Veneration of Mary is nothing new. A woman said to Jesus as he preached ‘blessed is the womb that bore you and the breasts that nursed you’. Jesus corrected her, ‘blessed are those who hear the word of God and keep it’. We are not to venerate Mary.
Please reread my post #47 as it doesn’t appear you read it or the accompanying link to Scripture.
As to this particular passage, you truly need to understand the Bible a lot better. Jesus’ correction here is that the woman is saying blessed be the objects of breasts and womb. His correction lies in blessed are people not objects without association to a person. If you were to take this line literally as you state then a deaf person could not be blessed because he or she cannot “hear” the the Word.
What Jesus means is that breasts and womb are just that, but it is the person who keeps The Word who is called “Blessed.” Mary is honored for being Mary the person. It is not just her body parts that remained untouched, or virgin, it is the whole person of Mary throughout her entire existence.
I find the most trouble in helping specifically Evangelicals get their minds to grasp these concepts because in my experience Evangelicals are taught only to interpret from their own point of view. God is outside of time. If you are strapped to a timeline, as most Protestants are, then you cannot see things as God wants you too.
What if you had lived in the year 200? What would you believe about Mary’s ever-virginity? You would have no Bible, would possibly be illiterate anyway, (most people were, I know I would have been.) Does that make those in the year 200 less able to love God? Does having your personal interpretation of Scripture make you more Christian now than a man from the year 200?
No, in 200 you would have believed that Mary was an ever-virgin and that she was a “spouse” of the Holy Spirit. You would have believed that the marriage of Mary and Joseph was very special, one that could be held as a model of perfect submission to the will of God. And you would have thought that Joseph was a saint for being a humble guardian of the perfect vessel who brought The Word in The Flesh.