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gkoomen
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If we are going to be so hyper-literal as to interpret “all” in Romans 3 to include Mary, then it has to include Jesus - He was true man. This is clearly not Paul’s intention.
The first comment I have to make here is about your wording. I am not clear if it was intentional or by accident that you use the word “contradict” but to answer that part of the question…the Bible was written in 3 languages by over 40 authors over the course of about 1500 years, every book in the canon tells the message of God and never does any place in the Scripture contradict another place in Scripture…never.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?
this is incorrect since Scripture is clear that He (Jesus) is without sin. Jesus is the only spotless lamb of God mentioned in Scripture, thus he would be excluded from the all in Romans 2:23, but Mary does not get this same privilege in ScriptureIf one interprets “all” to mean every individual with no exceptions then one must include Jesus because He is fully human so is one of the individuals.
Not really, because it completely avoids the core issue, which is how does anyone know his/her interpretation is correct?? Especially when it differs from someone else’s?No disrespect here Frank but you and others ask the same questions over and over and over and either don’t read the responses or … nevermind.
The answer to your question - simplified: while the Spirit is speaking to them, church leaders don’t hear Him because of their own preferences, hang-ups, culture, upbringing, influences by church doctrine, etc. These get in the way. Poor listening does not make 1 John 2:27 invalid. We learn to listen as we grow. We learn to be obedient as we listen. Refer Rom 8, “he who is led by the Spirit of God is a son of God” and 1 John 2:3, “We know Him if we follow His commandments”. As for an authority given to one church, we define church in different ways. Church is a body of believers. It is that simple. As for the question about whether or not you were baptised into one church, … do you not know that the effectiveness of baptism vests in the condition of your heart, not in the place you were baptised or the person who took you through it? Do you not know that it is about your heart and nothing else? If people choose to find interpretation with men, then so be it. I try to be led by the Spirit and the word, my “rod and my staff” (Psalm 23). Hope that helps.![]()
I’m assuming Adam and eve were married/ became one. Considering that both verses are correct.You use Scripture to interprete Scripture, so any conclusions have to be compatible with the whole of the Bible.
Scripture interprets Scripture? Reasonable, with the right interpreter of course… How is Romans 5, which says, “For just as through the disobedience of the one man the many were made sinners…” - compatible with Genesis 3, which says that many were made sinners through the disobedience of man and woman?
Actually you are incorrect. So how can you merely make an exception for Jesus,but not Mary? You know for a fact God cannot spare anyone from original sin? That is one my issues with Protestanism: Placing limits on what God can or cannot do or would not do.this is incorrect since Scripture is clear that He (Jesus) is without sin. Jesus is the only spotless lamb of God mentioned in Scripture, thus he would be excluded from the all in Romans 2:23, but Mary does not get this same privilege in Scripture
Poor choice of words for I believe it is definitely WRONG to assume that Romans 5 contradicts Genesis 3 even if it excludes the first woman from Romans 5, but I can certainly understand why someone could justify it…RevG;8507602]The first comment I have to make here is about your wording. I am not clear if it was intentional or by accident that you use the word “contradict” but to answer that part of the question…
Many would disagree with you, but not me…the Bible was written in 3 languages by over 40 authors over the course of about 1500 years, every book in the canon tells the message of God and never does any place in the Scripture contradict another place in Scripture…never.
Let’s assume the word “all” means just that, “all” humans. Jesus was fully human but of course He is an exception. If we accept an exception to the word “all” doesn’t it become difficult to prove that there are no other exceptions by simply quoting this same verse?Now to the beginning of your question, Romans 3:23 does say all…since Mary would have to be included in that all, then it is being faithful to the text when you include her, and it is not being faithful to the text if you do not.
Coming in late, so sorry if this has been said.If we are going to be so hyper-literal as to interpret “all” in Romans 3 to include Mary, then it has to include Jesus - He was true man. This is clearly not Paul’s intention.
The Trinity is not in the Bible but it is a common theme among Christians. One thing to keep in mind is that Her womb was a Tabernacle. She had to contain the Holy of Holy.Personally, I try always to keep in mind that I could be wrong.
If Mary was totally without sin, I would expect that to be mentioned somewhere in the Bible, but as far as I know, it is not. I am willing to be corrected, of course, so feel free.![]()
Actually…no…for in Luke 1…this is incorrect since Scripture is clear that He (Jesus) is without sin. Jesus is the only spotless lamb of God mentioned in Scripture, thus he would be excluded from the all in Romans 2:23, but Mary does not get this same privilege in Scripture
But the point remains, then, that the “all” in “all have sinned” is definitely not an absolute, no?this is incorrect since Scripture is clear that He (Jesus) is without sin. Jesus is the only spotless lamb of God mentioned in Scripture, thus he would be excluded from the all in Romans 2:23, but Mary does not get this same privilege in Scripture
All did not mean all, but just the Roman empire.
Yet here in Luke it says that the Pharisees were not baptized!
"All" apparently does not always mean "allYou’re saying that Romans says “All” therefore, Mary must be included but not Christ- This is a contradiction! If “All” must mean all and admit of no exceptions (in order to include Mary) then it means All, admits no exceptions, and includes Christ!Now to the beginning of your question, Romans 3:23 does say all…since Mary would have to be included in that all, then it is being faithful to the text when you include her, and it is not being faithful to the text if you do not.
For you to imply that I am limiting God is an insult that I do not take lightly. I have not tried to limit God in any way. What I have done is point out what God has already said in Scripture. I did not make the exception for Jesus, Scripture did that. I did not include Mary in the “all” of Romans 3:23, again Scripture did that too. God can do whatever God wants to, that is His prerogative for being God, but He has revealed to us through Scripture how He works, if you disagree with what God said in the Bible, then you need to re-examine your theology.Actually you are incorrect. So how can you merely make an exception for Jesus,but not Mary? You know for a fact God cannot spare anyone from original sin? That is one my issues with Protestanism: Placing limits on what God can or cannot do or would not do.
I am not going to quote anyone here since there are so many to respond to. When one interprets the Bible they must go back to the original languages, if you can not read Greek in this case then you must rely on a trustworthy commentary. I can assume that you will use a Catholic one**, but a real scholar **of the Word will seek varying views in commentaries to gain a proper understanding of the context of the passage…
It seems you are ready with insults yourself.For you to imply that I am limiting God is an insult that I do not take lightly.
You are being inconsistent.I am not going to quote anyone here since there are so many to respond to. When one interprets the Bible they must go back to the original languages, if you can not read Greek in this case then you must rely on a trustworthy commentary. I can assume that you will use a Catholic one, but a real scholar of the Word will seek varying views in commentaries to gain a proper understanding of the context of the passage. The key word here is context. In Bible translation there are several ways to interpret words based on the semantic range of the word. Context determines translation not your theology or the churches theology. The Bible is infallible we need to seek what it says in context and then adjust our own theology to fit the Bible, not try to fit the Bible to our theology.
Now that being said, The all in Romans 3:23 is intended to cover all. The Bible gives exception to Jesus by explicitly saying He is without sin. God gives Jesus exclusion from Romans 3:23 by the fact that Jesus is without sin according to Scripture. The Bible does not at any point ever say that Mary was sinless. This has nothing to do with original sin. One can argue that was the reason for the virgin birth, but that argument has gone on for centuries and will not be solved here. The question was does all include Mary, and according to Scripture she is included since there is no place that says Mary was sinless. The all does not include Jesus since Scripture is again clear He is without sin.
What you are trying to do when you argue that Mary is exempt is called an argument from silence. The argument for her being included is an argument from the text.
Actually, RevG…to read in context, one must also not just read the verse in isolation…one must also read the whole book and chapter…and the rest of Scripture so that it harmonizes and does not contradict the rest of Scripture. What you are doing is isolate a verse and extract your doctrine from it.I am not going to quote anyone here since there are so many to respond to. When one interprets the Bible they must go back to the original languages, if you can not read Greek in this case then you must rely on a trustworthy commentary.The question was does all include Mary, and according to Scripture she is included since there is no place that says Mary was sinless. The all does not include Jesus since Scripture is again clear He is without sin.
What you are trying to do when you argue that Mary is exempt is called an argument from silence. The argument for her being included is an argument from the text.
I did not include Mary in the “all” of Romans 3:23, again Scripture did that too.
The nascent Church in apostolic time interpreted the OT in light of sacred Tradition. There is nothing explicit in the Hebrew Bible or the Septuagint concerning the divinity of Christ. Thus the Bible isn’t the sole medium of divine revelation, being formally insufficient, although materially sufficient. The Holy Spirit declares to the Church what is a true revelation from God through both the written and unwritten word of God: the deposit of faith. Meanwhile exegetes don’t comprise the final teaching authority of the Church. The divine mandate rests with the appointed teaching authority - the Magisterium - with the guaranty of the Holy Spirit.I am not going to quote anyone here since there are so many to respond to. When one interprets the Bible they must go back to the original languages, if you can not read Greek in this case then you must rely on a trustworthy commentary. I can assume that you will use a Catholic one, but a real scholar of the Word will seek varying views in commentaries to gain a proper understanding of the context of the passage. The key word here is context. In Bible translation there are several ways to interpret words based on the semantic range of the word. Context determines translation not your theology or the churches theology. The Bible is infallible we need to seek what it says in context and then adjust our own theology to fit the Bible, not try to fit the Bible to our theology.
The Bible does say that Mary was “full of grace” (Lk 1:28) and at total enmity with Satan and his offspring - sin and the corruption of death - together with her divine Son (Gen 3:15).Now that being said, The all in Romans 3:23 is intended to cover all. The Bible gives exception to Jesus by explicitly saying He is without sin. God gives Jesus exclusion from Romans 3:23 by the fact that Jesus is without sin according to Scripture. The Bible does not at any point ever say that Mary was sinless. This has nothing to do with original sin. One can argue that was the reason for the virgin birth, but that argument has gone on for centuries and will not be solved here. The question was does all include Mary, and according to Scripture she is included since there is no place that says Mary was sinless. The all does not include Jesus since Scripture is again clear He is without sin.
What you are trying to do when you argue that Mary is exempt is called an argument from silence. The argument for her being included is an argument from the text.