Dan-Man916:
That is because i think you have a fundamental difference in the understanding of the Body of Christ, Communion of Saints, Nutpial mystery of Christ and the Church, and Theosis, whereby we participate in Christ’s divine nature.
I “understand” your perspective, I just don’t accept it or perhaps apply it to the degree you do. That’ll become more clear in my next response.
Dan-Man916:
Then, with all due respect, you have a fundamental misunderstanding of the Sacrament of Marriage and its relation to the inner life of the Trinity. I believe Ephesians 5 forms the basis for it. What we to do others, we do to Jesus. How we relate to others directly affects our relationship to Jesus. It is through the Body of Christ that we participate in relationship to Christ. I recommend John Paul II’s work, Theology of the Body. It explains it in full detail. (or at least read the highlights, it’s very long).
I understand that what we do for the least of our brothers, we’ve done it unto Christ, and I agree with everything you’ve just said, but my point was that our relationships with each other do not
substitute for having a direct and active relationship with Jesus Himself. We can not avoid Jesus and ask others to approach Him for us. That’s a travesty of His human life and eternal sacrifice. And that’s what that prayer is saying.
Dan-Man916 said:
*I don’t ask my wife to ask Jesus for forgiveness for me. I ask Him myself. *
That’s unfortunate. I pray for my wife and daughter’s sanctification and salvation everyday. That necissarily involves forgiveness of sins and Hope of mercy in Christ’s promises to us.
But your comment has nothing to do with my point. I also pray for my wife and children daily, that they would mature in Christ and grow into the fullness of Christ’s nature. And ‘yes’, if I’ve sinned against them I directly ask them for forgiveness. And I pray that God would forgive their sins and draw them to repentance when they have sinned. But I can’t ask my wife to ask Jesus for me to forgive me of my sins, I need to do that myself.
Dan-Man916:
That’s exactly what the meaning of this petition to Mary is. If you’ve never asked someone to pray for you, then you are clearly missing a biblical idea.
But that’s NOT what this prayer is about at all. It’s not asking Mary to pray for you. It’s asking Mary to obtain grace for you, something only Jesus can do.
Dan-Man916:
You don’t know what i fully appreciate, so don’t presume based on your own misunderstandings of Catholic theology. As a former evangelical protestant, I know full well about this kind of sanctimonious attitude of presuming other’s appreciation of the salvation offered in Christ alone.
Your response to me is loaded with the same presumptions claiming I don’t understand things about your spirituality For instace, when you said “Sorry if you couldn’t understand what I was saying. However, without the Catholic udnerstanding of the theological concepts I discussed, I can see why you misunderstand everything I have said.” So I guess we’re both guilty on that count.
As a former Catholic, I was basing my statement on the vast majority of Catholics I know and still know, since most of my family are faithful Catholics. Most Catholics focus their relationship with Christ through the Church and the sacraments. In order to spend time in His Presence, their first thought is to go to a Church to sit before the Eucharist. This is valid, I’m not criticizing it. But they don’t fully appreciate that God dwells within them and that they can enjoy the fullness of His Presence in private worship and prayer anywhere/anytime.
I spent 20 years as a faithful Catholic followed by 20 years as a faithful Pentecostal (Assemblies of God), so I understand and appreciate the theological focus of both paradigms. Currently, I attend a “catholic” church via the Charismatic Episcopal Church (CEC) which embraces both paradigms fully, the Lord as experienced via the Church and Sacraments (including the Eucharist) and the Spirit-Filled life of charismatic worship and prayer.
David