Gottle of Geer;1745014QUOTE:
Mary bore her Son without any violation of her virginal integrity. (**De Fide **
on the ground of the general promulgation of doctrine.)
Dogma of the Church that she gave birth without violation. If dogma declares it was not a natural birth, could the same pains of natural childbirth be true? Are not we as Catholic’s required to support the teachings of the Church? Merry CHRISTmas All## That depends on whether virginity & an intact hymen are necessarily linked. If they aren’t, she could have ceased to have her hymen intact, without ceasing to be a virgin.
As to that doctrine’s being
de fide - that is Father Ott’s opinion; other may differ from him. What is certain is that something is very wrong with a doctrine of the Incarnation of which the real corporeality is denied; an Incarnation that is not genuinely, fully, grossly, fleshily carnal, is too close to Docetism for comfort. Fortunately for us, the obscenity & indecency of the Cross is at the heart of Christian faith, so there is no way it can be got rid of.
Christianity is not spiritual; it’s vulgar, coarse, fleshy, indelicate, “not nice”; it’s about someone who ended His public life naked & bleeding & accursed on a Cross - why should His coming into the world be any more sanitary ? The world was not yet redeemed, & His mother was part of that world - why should she be exempt from pain, when He was not ? The devil
is spiritual - to a fault; Jesus Christ, being the vulgarian He is, has a body: He sweated, had body fluids, ate, drank, worked with His hands, walked, wept, was crushed by sorrow, was flogged, bled, pierced, died.
Happy Advent to you too