Mary - sinner - Romans 3?

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P.S. – Just because Mary remained sinless, did not detract from her humaness! She was a human being just like any one of us. She experienced pain, joy, death just as all humans do.
IMO “humaness” is more often thought of as the condition of sin that separates us from G-d, this is a pain the sinless don’t experience. Its common to humanity but not to the sinless.
The sinless are the model of who humans can be and are offered to be but they are not not a model of “humaness” or better said the experience of sins defined by near every human.
Bless you and yours
 
Do you see Mary as part of God’s divinity? :confused::confused::confused: I only ask because your profile says that you are Orthodox in agreement with Alexandria, and the Orthodox do not see our mother Mary as part of God’s divinity. 🙂
Peace and blessings i realise your were having more direct discussion with other poster so dont feel obligated to answer.

If Mary (bbhn) is a part of G-ds divinity, as the first sinless human where does she fit in the trinity?

IMO i do see Mary (bbhn) as a part of G-ds divinity my take on trinity maybe different to a Catholics.

Blessings to you and yours
 
Oh BTW i see all sinless beings as of the divine, as sinless is purity absolute, the absolute pure is of the divine only, nothing else.
 
your profile says that you are Orthodox in agreement with Alexandria
The main reason I say I am in agreement with Alexandria is that this Holy See has maintained since the Apostles time the Miaphysite/Monophysite understanding the nature of Christ. That is one composite nature that is both true God and true man, without confusion, without change, without division, without separation.

But just because something is not taught does mean it cannot be believed. St Clement of Alexandria spoke of the Holy Spirit being Female. Jesus said that blasphemy against the Son would be forgiven, but blasphemy against the Holy Spirit would not be forgiven, therefore, at least in this one respect, the Holy Spirit ranks higher than the Son! Quite a few Semitic Christians (Jews and Samaritans) said (and claimed that Jesus said) that the Holy Spirit is the Mother of Jesus Christ. At the very least I think it is true to say that the Holy Spirit used the womb of the Virgin Mary to give birth to ‘true God and true man’. But does this mean that Jesus has two Mothers? There is no way that this can be so. Jesus has but one Mother, from which He attained His human flesh as well as His divine nature. Mary gave birth to His flesh and the Holy Spirit gave birth to His divinity. But there is not two Mothers, two births, two natures, any more than there are two Christ’s. The Holy Spirit and Mary are one, hence there is one Mother, one birth, one nature, one Christ. The Miaphysite view holds up with Mary just as it does with Jesus.

‘All’ have sinned and come short of the Glory of God. ‘All that are of the first Adam and Eve’ is what is meant by the context. Here’s the answer to the question: “Whosoever is born of God doth not commit sin; for his seed remaineth in him: and he cannot sin, because he is born of God.” (1 John 3:9) The Second Adam and the Second Eve as well as all who were born of Them cannot sin!

God Bless!
 
JohnVIII;8353327]The main reason I say I am in agreement with Alexandria is that this Holy See has maintained since the Apostles time the Miaphysite/Monophysite understanding the nature of Christ. That is one composite nature that is both true God and true man, without confusion, without change, without division, without separation.
But just because something is not taught does mean it cannot be believed. St Clement of Alexandria spoke of the Holy Spirit being Female. Jesus said that blasphemy against the Son would be forgiven, but blasphemy against the Holy Spirit would not be forgiven, therefore, at least in this one respect, the Holy Spirit ranks higher than the Son! Quite a few Semitic Christians (Jews and Samaritans) said (and claimed that Jesus said) that the Holy Spirit is the Mother of Jesus Christ. At the very least I think it is true to say that the Holy Spirit used the womb of the Virgin Mary to give birth to ‘true God and true man’. But does this mean that Jesus has two Mothers? There is no way that this can be so. Jesus has but one Mother, from which He attained His human flesh as well as His divine nature. Mary gave birth to His flesh and the Holy Spirit gave birth to His divinity. But there is not two Mothers, two births, two natures, any more than there are two Christ’s. The Holy Spirit and Mary are one, hence there is one Mother, one birth, one nature, one Christ. The Miaphysite view holds up with Mary just as it does with Jesus.
Hmm…Monophysitism (anti-Nestorianism) - asserted that Jesus Christ had only a sole nature. At first this sole substance concept had been tolerated because it helped to offset the dual Christ teaching of Nestorianism, but eventually, the Alexandrian school found it unacceptable, which makes me wonder why you believe that the church in agreement with Alexandria continued/continues to uphold the beliefs of Monophysitism. Perhaps I am overlooking something? :confused:
‘All’ have sinned and come short of the Glory of God. ‘All that are of the first Adam and Eve’ is what is meant by the context. Here’s the answer to the question: “Whosoever is born of God doth not commit sin; for his seed remaineth in him: and he cannot sin, because he is born of God.” (1 John 3:9) The Second Adam and the Second Eve as well as all who were born of Them cannot sin!
God Bless!
So you and I ("…as well as all who were born of Them") - cannot sin???:confused::confused::confused::confused: I believe the key below is to distinguish the follower of Christ from the follower of Satan, and this how one knows who the children of God are and who the children of the devil are…

*“Dear children, do not let anyone lead you astray. The one who does what is right is righteous, just as he is righteous. 8 The one who does what is sinful is of the devil, because the devil has been sinning from the beginning. The reason the Son of God appeared was to destroy the devil’s work. 9 No one who is born of God will continue to sin, because God’s seed remains in them; they cannot go on sinning, because they have been born of God. 10 This is how we know who the children of God are and who the children of the devil are: Anyone who does not do what is right is not God’s child, nor is anyone who does not love their brother and sister.” 1 John 3 *

Blessings friend…👍
 
THIIS IS FROM A 2008 THREAD: Re: Ag_nots Catholic Scriptural Challenge - just ONE proven example wins!! post # 254

Ro 3:23 -for all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God

Earlier in the chapter, Paul says as it is written in other words, he is quoting the Old Testament. Psalm 14 to be precise. Now, look at that scripture:

1 For the leader. Of David. 2 Fools say in their hearts, “There is no God.” Their deeds are loathsome and corrupt; not one does what is right.
2
The LORD looks down from heaven upon the human race, To see if even one is wise, if even one seeks God.
3
All have gone astray; all alike are perverse. Not one does what is right, not even one. 4
Will these evildoers never learn? They devour my people as they devour bread; they do not call upon the LORD.
5
They have good reason, then, to fear; God is with the company of the just.
6
They would crush the hopes of the poor, but the poor have the LORD as their refuge.

Now, here the psalmist, which Paul is quoting says very clearly, as Paul does, ALL. But does all mean all??? How can it when a few lines along we read MY PEOPLE. That is, God’s people. So the all, is not actually all, but those people NOT of God’s people. The Evil Doers. Otherwise, if the all meant all people, that is every single solitary person, then who are the ‘‘company of the just’’, or in the RSV_CE version, the generation of the righteous???

So, now you know that all doesnt always mean actually all, where do we go from here.

The wages of sin is death. If you have sin, you will die. Yes? Are there people in the Bible who we are told did Not die? IF they didnt die, does that mean they did not collect the wages of sin?

👍 every time my born-again sister throw this bible verse (R0 3:23) in my face, am stupified, now i know better!.. & thanks to Ag_not…BTW, where is she?
spot on… John Martignoni does an excellent talk on this which can downloaded free here just click on Mary & the Bible; plus Purgatory & the Bible
 
Hmm…Monophysitism (anti-Nestorianism) - asserted that Jesus Christ had only a sole nature. At first this sole substance concept had been tolerated because it helped to offset the dual Christ teaching of Nestorianism, but eventually, the Alexandrian school found it unacceptable, which makes me wonder why you believe that the church in agreement with Alexandria continued/continues to uphold the beliefs of Monophysitism. Perhaps I am overlooking something? :confused:
My guess is that you got the assertion that “the Alexandrian school found it unacceptable” from here. Do you also agree with it that Chalcedon was a “compromise”? They’re right about that you know! Just like Monothelitism was a compromise by asserting that Jesus has two natures and one will, so to Chalcedon was a compromise by asserting that Jesus has two natures and one person. Both were compromises that hoped to unite everyone. But the result in both cases when truth was compromised was division.

And yes it would appear that you have ‘overlooked something’. The vast majority of the Church of Alexandria continues the miaphysite position as was expressed at the Council of Ephesus and they are united today under H.H. Pope Shenouda III. I suggest that you read a booklet Pope Shenouda wrote called The Nature of Christ if you doubt this.
So you and I ("…as well as all who were born of Them") - cannot sin???:confused::confused::confused::confused:
Why are you so “:confused:”? Jesus cannot sin, Mary cannot sin, and I’m sure there has been many saints that progressed to the point that they likewise cannot sin. (It’s called deification! 👍)

Most Holy Mother of God save us!
 
There is no way that this can be so. Jesus has but one Mother, from which He attained His human flesh as well as His divine nature. Mary gave birth to His flesh and the Holy Spirit gave birth to His divinity.
if she is divine why has she not passed on both natures.
From reading i dont know that Catholics teach she is divine. They seem to have separation between sinless and of the divine.
This makes my earlier post wrong, or better said my stated position in it.
Blessings to you and yours
 
Hey JohnVIII…
JohnVIII;8357269]My guess is that you got the assertion that “the Alexandrian school found it unacceptable” from here.
Yes, I copied and pasted from there. However, the outcome would have been the same wherever I would have gone to retrieve that information. Perhaps we should defer to the council that settled the matter instead of some random site?
Do you also agree with it that Chalcedon was a “compromise”? They’re right about that you know! Just like Monothelitism was a compromise by asserting that Jesus has two natures and one will, so to Chalcedon was a compromise by asserting that Jesus has two natures and one person.
Do you embrace the decisions of the council of Chalcedon?
Both were compromises that hoped to unite everyone. But the result in both cases when truth was compromised was division.
OK…
And yes it would appear that you have ‘overlooked something’. The vast majority of the Church of Alexandria continues the miaphysite position as was expressed at the Council of Ephesus and they are united today under H.H. Pope Shenouda III. I suggest that you read a booklet Pope Shenouda wrote called The Nature of Christ if you doubt this.
Does that booklet written by Pope Shenouda agree with Catholic church’s take on the matter?
Why are you so “:confused:”? Jesus cannot sin, Mary cannot sin, and I’m sure there has been many saints that progressed to the point that they likewise cannot sin. (It’s called deification! 👍)
Most Holy Mother of God save us!
John, can we say with certainty that those saints, while still on earth, never sinned once they progressed to said point?

Let’s say that many have progressed to the point of not committing sins; did they progress to the point of deification? Perhaps my definition is lacking. What does deification mean to you?

If you believe, because Mary was sinless, Mary should be part of the Godhead, you shouldn’t feel reluctant to say so. Do you believe this friend or have I grossly misunderstood? 🙂 If so then I apologize in advance…BTW, the angels in heaven have not sinned; should they be deified?
 
What scripture do you find to support the idea that Mary is perfect (sinless)? Not from the Church - from the Bible? If the purpose of the deity of Christ (which He gets from His Father) is that He be fully God so that we have a perfect, sinless Savior and the purpose of the humanity of Christ (which He gets from His mother) is that He be fully man so that we have an Intercessor who responds to our weakness in the flesh - she must be human which makes her a sinner like the rest of us (as per Romans 8:23). What scriptures do you find that support any other premise? The BEAUTY of Mary is her humanity, her frailty, her weakness - through those things, despite those things, she was greatly used by God. It gives us the hope that He can use us too.
 
Do you embrace the decisions of the council of Chalcedon?
If they can be interpreted in a miaphysite fashion then yes, but if not then no. If you talk to Brother [user]mardukm[/user] about this he will tell you that the Council of Chalcedon can and should be understood in a miaphysite fashion. But, as for me, that council seems pretty diophysite, and so as I understand it I would have to say that I do disagree with part of it.
Does that booklet written by Pope Shenouda agree with Catholic church’s take on the matter?
The official position of the Catholic Church is diophysite. The booklet by Pope Shenouda uses the term monophysite (but what is meant is miaphysite). There is an agreement of “limited communion” that has been made between the Pope of Rome and Pope Shenouda and within it there was made a conclusion that both views (diophysite & miaphysite) are essentially the same. Personally I cannot explain how this is so, but as I said you could ask Brother [user]mardukm[/user] about this and he could explain it. Brother [user]mardukm[/user] is also miaphysite and he is Catholic.
John, can we say with certainty that those saints, while still on earth, never sinned once they progressed to said point?

Let’s say that many have progressed to the point of not committing sins; did they progress to the point of deification? Perhaps my definition is lacking. What does deification mean to you?
Deification is also called theosis. We have to “work out your own salvation with fear and trembling” (Philippians 2:12). One Church Father (I can’t remember which one) said to the effect that when a saint gets closer to God his physical body starts to acquire some of the characteristics of what it will be like in the resurrection, and this is why we have incorruptible relics of saints! So it is a progression on the way to the Resurrection of the just.
If you believe, because Mary was sinless, Mary should be part of the Godhead, you shouldn’t feel reluctant to say so. Do you believe this friend or have I grossly misunderstood? 🙂 If so then I apologize in advance…BTW, the angels in heaven have not sinned; should they be deified?
I do not believe Mary is in the Godhead because She is sinless, that is not the reason. It is the other way around, God cannot sin! I am also not saying that She “progressed” to this via theosis either. And yes, it does appear that I might be alone on this, but I do confess to believe that the Person of the Holy Spirit and the Person of Mary are one and the same person! Is that clear enough?

I don’t think I can comment on your question on angels. However, it is interesting to note that there are places in the Old Testement that call angles “Gods” (Elohim), and “the Sons of God”. Of course, “Sons of God” would have to be in some other sense then how Jesus is “the Son of God”, because it would not be orthodox unless you believe that Jesus is the Son of God in a unique way.

You have asked me questions about my orthodoxy or heterodoxy (as the case may be), to put is simple, I believe the same as all Eastern Orthodox believe with 3 exceptions. Well more like three and a half; the half would be that I believe the Pope of Rome does hold a primacy in the Catholic Church (Eastern Orthodox included). Two of the three we have already talked about (Mary & miaphysite). The only other is I do not believe the Catholic Church (or the Eastern Orthodox - to me both are spiritually the same) is the only true Church. I believe Jesus and the Apostles established Churches (plural) mainly for the Gentile Christians and Jesus and the Apostles also established Christian Synagogues for Jewish and Samaritan Christians. There is no one true Church, so I believe, but several true Churches.

Good questions!

Peace and God Bless my brother!
 
Protestants, scripture says:* “all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God.”* Romans 3:23

Meaning that Mary must have been a sinner too…

Scripture says: For just as through the disobedience of the one man the many were made sinners…" Romans 5:19

Meaning that it was the disobedience of just the one man, as opposed to the first man and woman, that many were made sinners.

Those who believe that Jesus’ mother Mary was a sinner:

Could it possibly be wrong to interpret Romans 3 to include the woman Mary, the new Eve of creation, as a sinner, if it’s wrong to assume that Romans 5 contradicts Genesis 3 by excluding the first woman from Romans 5?
First error: the Bible (73 books, catholic) does not contradict itself.

First clarification: Genesis speaks of two very different women - one on whom the penalty of sin falls: and the who will crush the head of the serpent…the same woman between whom the seed of Satan and Her seed there will be enmity.

Second clarification: Mary is the Immaculate, Perpetual Virgin, Mother of God.

Second error: Mary is sinless, as a matter of fact, faith and dogma - Mary is The Immaculate Conception.

Third error: Paying attention and giving validity to what protestants say about the Theotokos.
 
Protestants, scripture says:* “all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God.”* Romans 3:23

Meaning that Mary must have been a sinner too…

Scripture says: For just as through the disobedience of the one man the many were made sinners…" Romans 5:19

Meaning that it was the disobedience of just the one man, as opposed to the first man and woman, that many were made sinners.

Those who believe that Jesus’ mother Mary was a sinner:

Could it possibly be wrong to interpret Romans 3 to include the woman Mary, the new Eve of creation, as a sinner, if it’s wrong to assume that Romans 5 contradicts Genesis 3 by excluding the first woman from Romans 5?
Seeing as Mary is the ONLY flesh that Jesus came in the likeness of, doesn’t Romans 8:3 say that Mary was a sinner?

Romans 8
3For what the law could not do, in that it was weak through the flesh, God sending his own Son in the likeness of sinful flesh, and for sin, condemned sin in the flesh:
 
Why is it so important for some Christians to try to prove Mary was a sinner? Why do they hate what the Catholic Church teaches about Mary? Everything the Church teaches about Mary ultimately points to Jesus. The questions that the early Church had about Jesus were taught in someway through Mary. Mary always says “Do whatever He tells you” even through her many titles. For those who could not (cannot) believe that Jesus is God, we have Mary’s title of Theotokos (Mother of God), and so forth. We should always and everywhere call Mary blessed and thank God for Mary and the great things God has done for her and for us. Holy is His Name!
 
Hey Richard…
Richard Kastner;8372196]Seeing as Mary is the ONLY flesh that Jesus came in the likeness of, doesn’t Romans 8:3 say that Mary was a sinner?
Sure, the Father sent His Son in the likeness of sinful man to be a sin offering, just as Hebrews reminds us, *"Therefore, when Christ came into the world, he said: “Sacrifice and offering you did not desire, but a body you prepared for me.” *

Romans 8:3: *“The law of Moses was unable to save us because of the weakness of our sinful nature. So God did what the law could not do. He sent his own Son in a body like the bodies we sinners have. And in that body God declared an end to sin’s control over us by giving his Son as a sacrifice for our sins.”
*
Not sure what Jesus’ “body” has to do with Jesus’ mother Mary? Romans 8:3 is not telling us that “Mary is the ONLY flesh that Jesus came in the likeness of…” It has nothing to do with Mary. It clearly tells us that God sent his own Son in the likeness of sinful man to be a sin offering. Of course God sent His only Son, again, in the likeness of sinful man, to the world - via Mary.
 
Rocky;8373143]Why is it so important for some Christians to try to prove Mary was a sinner? Why do they hate what the Catholic Church teaches about Mary? Everything the Church teaches about Mary ultimately points to Jesus.
👍👍
The questions that the early Church had about Jesus were taught in someway through Mary. Mary always says “Do whatever He tells you” even through her many titles. For those who could not (cannot) believe that Jesus is God, we have Mary’s title of Theotokos (Mother of God), and so forth. We should always and everywhere call Mary blessed and thank God for Mary and the great things God has done for her and for us. Holy is His Name!
Speaking as a former protestant, the issue really has nothing to do with Mary, in my humble opinion. It is rather a combination of 2 things:
  1. It has to do with the protestant interpreting scripture and taking from it what they deem to be truth, thereby making the interpretation of that individual, the only interpretation that represents the truth. With a system like that, truth is impossible to pin down.
  2. Rejection of doctrine simply because the doctrine is catholic. As a former protestant I saw a lot of mutual acceptance within the protestant sphere when doctrinal differences occurred. But the same could not be said when it came to the protestant churches and the one catholic church. What I was confronted with, for the most part, was a protestant united front opposing the teachings of the one catholic church, as opposed to a mutual acceptance when doctrinal differences occurred.
 
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