prieldedi:First of all, let me say to my Lord,“Thank You Jesus, for the Peace You freely give to me on a daily basis!!!”. You know, if I didn’t know better, I’d be tempted to believe that you are implying that those of us who don’t believe that Mary’s virginity is necessary for salvation, are dishonoring her

I have never once dishonored Mary, or rejected her as the mother of Our King! and I imagine that most noncatholics do not have statues of her anywhere either; just as we don’t have corpuses on our Crosses! And it makes perfect sense for Jesus to tell His disciples that they “could not bear these things now.” They had not yet received the Holy Spirit! You do realize that the promise He made about sending the Advocate, who would lead Them into Truth was for US Christians as well! Mothers re and have always been extremely important, and Mary is, of course, no exception. And you really had to go out on a limb to use that sentence about James

God Bless You my friend, and fellow Christian!
Thank you, my friend
1beleevr.
You know better, I’m not implying anything.
I know I’m not going to convince you to believe what we believe. With the help of the Holy Spirit though, perhaps you’ll eventually believe what we believe.
I have tried to explain what we believe and why. I have, like many of the other Catholic posters in this thread, explained why do we believe in what we believe, why do we trust and believe the men and women of the 1st, 2nd, 3rd, 4th, centuries who wrote about the Church in its beginning, as opposed to why we don’t believe the men and women who wrote and spread a totally different gospel after 1520. In letting you know what we believe and why do we believe it, I’m trying to do what Peter told us in 1 Peter 2:15, “Always have an answer ready when you are called upon to account for your hope, but give it simply and with respect.”
Back to Mary’s Perpetual Virginity:
Jesus told the Apostles in John 16:14-15, “He will take what is mine and
make it known to you; in doing this, he will glorify me. All that the Father has is mine; because of this I have just told you, that the Spirit will take what is mine and
make it known to you.”".
Jesus is referring to things that the Apostles didn’t know at that moment, they are obviously things that Jesus
did not teach them during His public life, things that were to be revealed in the future, just as we read in verse 13… the Holy Spirit “will guide you into
all the truth”.
I have to mention though, that it’s never said nor implied by Jesus that all the truth was to be revealed during the Apostles lifetimes. The same goes for “he will declare to you the things that are to come.” Again, not all “the things that are to come” came and stopped coming prior the year 95AD or earlier. They have continued to come. From all this we can say that, even if devotion to Mary was not expressed in the Bible as “clearly” as many Christians need it to be in order to believe it, you cannot deny the fact that devotion to Mary is part of “
all the truth”, and also part of “
the things that are to come” as they were revealed, by GOD, through the Holy Spirit as promised by Jesus, to His Church.
As for the passage about James… tell me where I’m wrong, point it out, please.
Regarding corpses… what’s wrong with having Jesus at the cross? We have Him as a newborn under our Christmas trees; in paintings as a young boy when He stayed behind at the Temple; or walking on water; multiplying bread and fish; giving the Sermon of the Mount; at the trial in front of the Sanhedrin, or Pilate, or Herod; we have Him asking Thomas to put his finger inside His wounds, etc… what’s wrong with having Him at the cross, which is the reason that He came for,
to died for us? Isn’t that what John 3:16 tells us: that God “
gave His only Son”, that is, God “gave His only Son”
to DIE? Or was the suffering and dying at the cross a non-event? Jesus Himself told us His death was His greatest LOVE: “
There is no greater love than this, to give one’s life for one’s friends.” (John 15:13) Jesus LOVED us so much that He died for us! Should we feel that we are offending Him (who died for us), if we depict Him dead in paintings and sculptures? We take ALL of Jesus, including a DYING Jesus and a DEAD Jesus.
Finally, do you know what’s the greatest relic in Christianity? The Turin Shroud. What do we see there? A dead Jesus! How that imprint came to be? By a miracle, a miracle by God… about a DEAD Jesus! Are you implying that God was wrong to have “a corpse” imprinted in the Shroud?
God bless you