She was never credited with one miracle of anykind…not one, as was Peter, Paul, or the other apostles…
So what? Does that PREVENT God from enabling her to perform miracles NOW? Nope.
She had less said about her, and was never made a big deal about, other than she was the mother of the (MAN part of Jesus…His Father was God) and she was a virgin until after Jesus birth when Joseph "Knew’’"and they had sex according to the Bible, as I said and will continue to say she was not a prepetual virgin…it was never asked of her.
You should re-read your Bible. The scriptures never say that Joseph and Mary had sex. If you think otherwise, cut and paste the verse into the space below:
A vow of virginity was not “asked of her” - she offered it to God by her own free will.
This is an old, old heresy that has been reborn in recent years among many ignorant Protestants who are clueless - CLUELESS - as to why Mary is rightly called the Mother of God.
I am so sorry…it is not heresy, it is truth. It hard to get this point accross to many ignorant Catholics… I thought we could both be ignorant…K
It’s one thing to argue with someone who knows what they are talking about but simply disagrees, but it’s quite another to argue with someone who is completely ignorant of basic facts but continues to assert that her errors are correct.
- Mary is the Mother of Jesus.
- Jesus is God.
- Mary is the Mother of God.
The idea that Jesus can be divided into divinity and humanity is an ancient heresy known as Netorianism. Read on…
Nestorianism is the
Christian doctrine that
Jesus existed as two persons, the man Jesus and the divine Son of God, or Logos, rather than as a unified person. This doctrine is identified with
Nestorius (c.
386–c.
451),
Patriarch of Constantinople.
This view of Christ was condemned at the Council of Ephesus in 431, and the conflict over this view led to the
Nestorian schism, separating the
Assyrian Church of the East from the
Byzantine Church.
The
Assyrian Church of the East refused to denounce Nestorius’ doctrine as heretical, and it has continued to be called “Nestorian” in the West, to distinguish it from other ancient Eastern churches. However, the Church of the East does not regard its doctrine as truly Nestorian, but rather teaches the view of
Babai the Great, that Christ has two
qnome (essences) which are unmingled and eternally united in one
parsopa (personality). According to some interpretations, the origin of this confusion is mostly historical and linguistic: for example, the
Greeks had two words for ‘person’, which translated poorly into
Syriac, and the meanings of these terms were not even quite settled during Nestorius’ lifetime.
Nestorianism originated in the Church in the 5th century out of an attempt to rationally explain and understand the incarnation of the divine Logos, the Second Person of the Holy Trinity as the man Jesus Christ. Nestorianism taught that the human and divine essences of Christ are separate and that there are two persons, the man Jesus Christ and the divine Logos, which dwelt in the man. In consequence, Nestorians rejected such terminology as “God suffered” or “God was crucified”, because the humanity of Jesus Christ which suffered is separate from his divinity.
Likewise, they rejected the term Theotokos (Giver of birth to God/Mother of God) as a title of the Virgin Mary, suggesting instead the title Christotokos (Giver of birth to Christ/Mother of Christ), because in their opinion Mary gave birth to only the human person of Jesus and not the divine.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nestorianism
So, are you a Nestorian, Leslie?
