B
BlackFriar
Guest
I think it is important, in defining motherhood and humanity, to involve the whole process of gestation, “of being borne” as well - rather than over emphasising certain more momentous “show pony” events…be that preserved signs of virginity or simply the mere fact of natural birth indicating “full humanity”.
God respected all that it means to be human following the slow, weak, humble, inherent teleology of lowly matter developing under the gentle act of a truly human soul with the cooperation of a human mother from the conceptus to a birthed child.
It would have been just as incongruent and less than human had Jesus appeared full formed in the womb after the annunciation and then birthed.
Likewise with those fables that had Jesus talking Aramaic from the womb, his words only childish/jibberish by reason of an unformed hard palate.
I have always remembered a priest I knew many years ago whom I noticed had slightly modified the prayer of absolution to better match the oremus prayer at the end of the Rosary.
He always started, “God the Father of mercies, through the life, death and resurrection of His Son…”
This I in time realised well counters the temptation that some more mechanistic theologies have of thinking that salvation was wrought simply by the suffering/death of the God-Man in some warped St Anselm type satisfaction accounting where His life of teaching, his solidarity, his job, his healings, his calling disciples, his walking among men really paid no essential part in the formation of the Church and the Reconciliation his life brought about. Its almost as if God could equally have miraculously created Jesus as an adult and had him killed somehow a few hours later in anonymity somewhere and the human race would equally have been saved. To be human surely everything about the human condition from conception to death must be subject to the same weak, fraught, material causal processes.
That does raise an issue of whether there is place for anything biologically miraculous in the life of Jesus including his Resurrection and Conception. Does the biologically miraculous inherently deny Jesus’s humanity … and if not why not?
Does Jesus’s divinity necessitate the absence of a human father? Probably not.
It appears simply a well attested fact from the NT itself that Jesus actually had no biological father.
These are thorny questions, but these “terminal miracles” I suggest are quite different in nature from that we have been discussing re the Virginal birth.
But that is perhaps another discussion for another thread.
God respected all that it means to be human following the slow, weak, humble, inherent teleology of lowly matter developing under the gentle act of a truly human soul with the cooperation of a human mother from the conceptus to a birthed child.
It would have been just as incongruent and less than human had Jesus appeared full formed in the womb after the annunciation and then birthed.
Likewise with those fables that had Jesus talking Aramaic from the womb, his words only childish/jibberish by reason of an unformed hard palate.
I have always remembered a priest I knew many years ago whom I noticed had slightly modified the prayer of absolution to better match the oremus prayer at the end of the Rosary.
He always started, “God the Father of mercies, through the life, death and resurrection of His Son…”
This I in time realised well counters the temptation that some more mechanistic theologies have of thinking that salvation was wrought simply by the suffering/death of the God-Man in some warped St Anselm type satisfaction accounting where His life of teaching, his solidarity, his job, his healings, his calling disciples, his walking among men really paid no essential part in the formation of the Church and the Reconciliation his life brought about. Its almost as if God could equally have miraculously created Jesus as an adult and had him killed somehow a few hours later in anonymity somewhere and the human race would equally have been saved. To be human surely everything about the human condition from conception to death must be subject to the same weak, fraught, material causal processes.
That does raise an issue of whether there is place for anything biologically miraculous in the life of Jesus including his Resurrection and Conception. Does the biologically miraculous inherently deny Jesus’s humanity … and if not why not?
Does Jesus’s divinity necessitate the absence of a human father? Probably not.
It appears simply a well attested fact from the NT itself that Jesus actually had no biological father.
These are thorny questions, but these “terminal miracles” I suggest are quite different in nature from that we have been discussing re the Virginal birth.
But that is perhaps another discussion for another thread.
Last edited: