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tdgesq
Guest
Glad to do it. I am also perplexed over the accusation. I have never seen the term used other than in the context of the RCC’s disagreement with Luther and Calvin. I can’t remember the last time I heard a homily about the Annunciation that didn’t emphasize Mary’s free cooperation with God’s plan for salvation.Thanks for posting the Canons in question. I have to admit that this is the first time I’ve ever heard Catholic teaching accused of monergism.![]()
Yes, and imho most of that stems from a fundamental error in Protestantism’s theology of grace; from which all kinds of other errors flow like double predestination, once saved always saved, total depravity, etc. The more I consider this the more I think the confusion is a result of the intentionally limited scope of INEFFABILIS DEUS. It doesn’t clearly set forth Mary’s monumental free choice to say “yes” to God, which doesn’t really surprise RCs since it is a limited dogmatic decree of the Immaculate Conception.I will add that if the problem is that God poured His Grace into Mary before she could cooperate, the same complaint holds against Baptizing infants (another problem some Reformers had with Apostolic Tradition).
As one notable theologian wrote: Grace makes us more free, not less.