Pope innocent the third (1216 a.d.) “She (Eve) was produced without sin, but she brought forth in sin, she (Mary) was produced in sin, but she brought forth without sin.” ( De festo Assump.,sermon 2)
Interesting, this is one of the
last popes I would have thought would be against the idea. Interesting; gotta read this one… As quoted, I think this is one of the best definitions put forth to date on the issue.
Are we on the same page and understand the difference between original sin and actual sin? Mary needed a savior from original sin.
Sorry to interject, but… This point is totally irrelevant, as the defining section of the Dogma in question asserts that she was born entirerly free of “all” taint of Original Sin. The point I find interesting, is that same definition, despite occasional asides as to her (mary’s) life-long sinlessness, explicitly fails to proclaim her free of personal sin, only Original Sin.
Not to throw in a “new” angle on it, but given the “assurance” that Mary had free will, it makes more theological sense to assert that the Grace of Immaculate Being would have been granted to Mary at the Annunciation. By making her personal conception the point of adding the Grace, then it really supports the concept that she really didn’t have a choice, or at least
Diminishes the choice said to have been made at Jesus’ conception, which is more Biblical, and generally more highly regarded. If, however, the Grace of Immaculate Life was given at her choice of agreeing to the Will of God, then it reinforces her Free Will, as well as reinforces the importance and correlation as the Second Eve (as explained by
Pope Innocent3).
And regardless, the doctrine just does not define anything, as far as I can see, that has ANY Theological “necessity” in regards to My Faith or personal salvation, quite unlike the Marian Dogma that actually DID make it into the Creeds.
I would like to pose a question. Since when is God required to proove anything to us mere mortals as to why or how He decides to accomplish His plan for salvation. How is it that we decide that we have the proper creditentials to “evaluate” whether or not God should “grace” a particular person to do a particular job?
Ahh, but the issue isnt that God “couldn’t” have done so, but rather, what proof do we have that suggests that He
did do it? It seems far more damning for us to arbitrarily create a doctrine of God doing something
out of a human passion (that we theologically say He
doesn’t have), just because some of us feel that if we were God, we would want to elevate our theotokos in such an
uneccesary manner. If God really wanted us to make sure we all were clued in on what is now a Dogma “essential to salvation”, He would have prepared us though more than is apparent (such as OT prophets, NT epistles, even the Apocolypse of John…). The issue is NOT us desciding to ignore what God has given us, or even denying “HOW” He wishes to do something; the issue, again, is what evidence do we have that He did act in this manner. So far, noone has provided anything even slightly compelling in this regard. Sorry.
Indeed, I think most Christians of any “sort” positively believes that God does, in fact, grant the Graces necessay to accomplish those things He desires of us.
Why is Church on Sunday and the New Testament Canon an acceptable Catholic Tradition, but not the Immaculate Conception? If you follow some Catholic Traditions, by what basis do you decided which?
Because not all traditions are either Equal or Theologically Essential. The Rosary is a Tradtion, but it is not capable of being made into Dogma, any more than the Code of Cannon Law could be. At this point in my Formation, The IC AND the Assumption both fall into this category. Not sure about
Sunday, but without looking it up, I’d also have to agree that such is a liturgical practice, and prolly could be changed if desired by the Church. Going to Mass is essential, and therefore designating a regular time to necessitate fulfilling that requirement is expected. However, I think that the Church could as easily tell us tomorrow that the “mandatory” Mass is on Tuesday, and we would be “bound” as a matter of Discipline to obey the change.
Anyway, just my late night thoughts on it.