Yes – precisely!
And yet, while you (continue) to point to doctrinal teachings, these teachings do not say what you assert that they say. The teachings – in this case, what the CCC says about John the Baptist – do not answer the question at hand. Rather, your interpretation of what they say is what you’ve put in play here…
No one is disputing this. Yes, “in his mother’s womb”, John is filled with the Holy Spirit. The question
we’re debating here is when, precisely, during his nine months in the womb, is John filled with the Holy Spirit? Subsequent to his conception, we seem to agree. But, is it prior to the Visitation?
At the moment of the Visitation? Or, at some time following the Visitation?
The footnotes don’t prove your case, it would seem. I think it’s possible for you to make an interesting case here; but you seem to think that it’s self-evident (and, I would argue, it is
not manifestly the case).
Certainly, the account of the Visitation is in play here. Does it demonstrate what you think it does? That is somewhat unclear…
No – you’re claiming that the Church is using it to support
your assertions – there has been no clear Church teaching here that says what you and Della have claimed (that is, that John was filled with grace at the Visitation). In other words,
what ya’ll say is Church teaching – not what we see is explicit Church teaching – is what you claim the CCC supports.
Let’s parse this out:
- John was filled with the Holy Spirit. Check.
- John was filled with the Holy Spirit prior to birth. Check.
- It was Christ who filled John with the Holy Spirit. Check.
- Since Christ was just conceived, and was already incarnate, Mary’s visit to Elizabeth was a “visit from God to his people.” Check.
There’s nothing here that says that John must have been ‘filled with the Holy Spirit’ at the time of the Visitation. We could just as validly claim that he was filled with the Holy Spirit after his conception but prior to the Visitation. (It
would seem that we can’t claim that he’s filled with the Holy Spirit
after the Visitation, however.)
The big question, given CCC 717, is whether the phrase “whom the Virgin Mary had just conceived by the Holy Spirit” – in its temporal expression – refers strictly to Christ vis-a-vis the Visitation, or if it refers to the timing of the “being filled by the Holy Spirit” of John the Baptist. Both seem like they might stand a chance of being successfully argued.
However – and here’s where the rubber meets the road – the CCC doesn’t make a claim one way or the other. It only says what you’ve quoted, without asserting anything else.
So, that’s why your claims don’t really hold water: you’re using a text that doesn’t make a definitive statement as your proof of the definitive statement that you’re claiming. It just doesn’t hold up.
Clearly, we could discuss the timing of John’s ‘being filled with the Holy Spirit’, and you could make the claims that you’ve made here. But, those claims would require some sort of substantiation. It’s this kind of substantiation that has been requested, but hasn’t yet been provided here.