Mary's Perpetual Virginity

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Yes, only if you had an existing neo-protestant theology in your head could you try to make the bible say that.
I’m not “making” it say anything. Read the account for yourself. I can tell you one thing for sure, you’re not going to find anywhere in the text that the reason she asked the question was because she took a “vow of virginity.” Now that would be making the Bible say something it does not.

You can’t say it’s “whistling Dixie” when it’s not. Right GF? :whistle:
 
I’m not “making” it say anything. Read the account for yourself. I can tell you one thing for sure, you’re not going to find anywhere in the text that the reason she asked the question was because she took a “vow of virginity.” Now that would be making the Bible say something it does not.

You can’t say it’s “whistling Dixie” when it’s not. Right GF? :whistle:
Your own fathers believed it. This is documented. Only the neo-Protestants as yourself deny her perpetual virginity.
 
More accurately “the beliefs” of those men. The basis for “the faith which was once for all delivered to the saints” (Jude 3) is not the personal beliefs of men, but divine revelation. Even those men needed to provide evidence for what they personally believed. Do you have those quotes for me to read?
Sure…Matthew, Mark, Luke, John, Acts, Romans…you get the idea.

Your divergence from the commonly held beliefs of the ancient Church founded by Jesus Christ upon Peter “the rock” as well as from the fathers of the Reformation indicates just how far the pursuit of sola scriptura has led you away from that faith “delivered once for all to the saints.”

If, however, you are willing to accept the full revelation of God as contained in both Sacred Scripture and Sacred Tradition as taught by an infallible Church instituted by your savior, then perhaps there is more “evidence” than you realize.
 
Exactly.Mary, as one who studied the scriptures and knew them well, would have quite certainly known the prophesies of the Messiah, Jesus. She would have well known that he was to be born of a virgin, and thus, when the angel told her that she was to be the mother of Jesus, the first thing that may have come to mind was “Wait a minute – Jesus is going to be born of a virgin, and now you’re telling me that I am this virgin, so how exactly is this going to happen?” This fits perfectly with the following verses, with the angel explaining exactly how the conception would happen. Another theory is simply that, as the espoused of Joseph, one not yet married to him, Mary inquired as to the means of this conception and birth so as to regulate her own conduct accordingly. This fits in well with Mary’s response to the angel’s explanation – she wasn’t about to do something to hinder God’s plan, hence she responded by saying “let it happen as you have said”.These explanations fit perfectly well with the knowledge of a devout Jew such as Mary.
If Mary had “intended” to have sexual relations with Joseph after the consummation of their marriage, she would not have asked how this conception of the child could happen. Obviously she would have acknowledged to herself that the child would belong to her and Joseph. Further, Mary did not understand the angel’s promise to be a declaration of Jesus’ ontological deity. The Jews did not expect a “divine” Messiah as the Gospels themselves make clear: Jesus was condemned to death for claiming to be one with God. The Jews expected a Messiah who would only be a man: a Son of man, but greater than Moses, a descendant of David. They did not expect a Son of God. Jesus was rejected for claiming to be divine. (Mary is the Mother of God. The Son of man claimed to have had the power to forgive sins when he cured the paralytic, Apophasis. 😉 ) Hence, Mary could not have had a miraculous birth in mind when the angel Gabriel declared that she would conceive and give birth to the “Son of the Most High”. She was perplexed by the prospect of having future sexual relations with her husband in view of her vow of virginity. She must have wondered how God could so easily dismiss the oath she had sworn in the spirit of Judith.

One of the most fundamental Jewish articles of faith is the belief in one God - and one God only, with no partnership of any kind. According to Judaic eschatology, the Messiah will fulfill the prophecies of Isaiah and Ezekiel. Isaiah is believed to have prophesied that the Messiah will be a “paternal” descendant of David through King Solomon. The Messiah will have a biological father. There is no God the Son in Judaism, and there never has been. The Holy Trinity is a Christian concept that developed over time. Mary had no idea what the Holy Trinity is, and she never expected a divine Messiah. And she could not have believed that the Messiah would be born of a virgin, for virgins do not give birth to children who have no biological fathers. The Messiah was to have a biological father of the house of David. So we can see why Mary asked the angel Gabriel: “How could this be?” She had no intention of having sexual relations with Joseph.

Finally, the Jews object to the Christian interpretation of Isaiah 7:14 and 9:67. This is how they interpret Isa 7:14: this passage refers to a sign during the time of Ahaz demonstrating, before the child has the knowledge to refuse wrong and right, the two kings of Israel and Syria will be destroyed. The Jews maintain that this is a “near term sign” and it does not refer to the Messiah. The virgin birth in Isaiah is purely a symbol. Now if Mary had known what the prophet and the Jews did not know, that the Messiah would be born of a virgin, she would not have asked “How could this be?” and then qualify her question with the declaration “I know not man.” ( I don’t smoke.") For she would have known that the Messiah would not result from a sexual union between her and Joseph. :yup:

You can toss your wild theory into a trash bin, but not in a recycling container. Listen to the infallible teachings of the Catholic Church. And do stop quibbling with English grammar. 😉

Pax vobiscum
Good Fella :cool:
 
More accurately “the beliefs” of those men. The basis for “the faith which was once for all delivered to the saints” (Jude 3) is not the personal beliefs of men, but divine revelation. Even those men needed to provide evidence for what they personally believed. Do you have those quotes for me to read?
I do not know what led these men to accept the Perpetual Virginity of Mary. I do know from the quotes I provided that they did.

However, since I cannot document what led them to accept this belief, I think you should ignore their statements completely.

Although these men are giants in the history of Christendom, their unsubstantiated testimonies are of no value whatsoever. I would simply overlook these statements as the personal quirks and pet theories of otherwise brilliant and orthodox men. Afterwall, no one can be expected to get everything right, and we should be willing to overlook these minor imperfections in their otherwise flawless theological understandings.

I am curious, however…does Tradition play any role at all in your own faith experience (a tenable position, I believe, for a sola scripturist) or do you deny any place to anything outside of the Bible Alone (a position some have called solo scriptura)?
 
I didn’t say she expected a miracle either. But the account in Luke that describes the conversation between Mary and Gabriel certainly indicates that Mary did not at all correlate what Gabriel said would happen to her with her future marriage to Joseph. She understood it to be imminent and expressed to him her present condition of virginity (“I know no man”). So it stands to reason that she would question him with, “How can this be…?” Then he informed her of the pending miracle. So, no, she was not “expecting” a miracle. She wasn’t even expecting to be the “favored one.” I agree with PC, she must have been in awe over the whole encounter. But she was a Jew and was aware of the nation’s Messianic hope.
Mary said “I know not a man” which means not any man. She did not say “I know not the man” which means her husband. The sentence contains an indefinite article. So metaphorically speaking, Mary told the angel Gabriel “I don’t smoke”. She did not say “I don’t smoke this brand”.

I agree, Mary was a Jew, and she was aware of the nation’s Messianic hope. She believed, as all Jews did, and still do, that the Messiah would be born of “paternal” lineage. She could not have expected a pending miracle if she believed that the Messiah would have a biological father. And so she asked the angel Gabriel “How could this be?”, “How could I be the mother of Joseph’s child?” “I have sworn an oath to God!” Then the angel Gabriel comforted her in her anxiety by declaring the miraculous birth of Jesus: “The Holy Spirit will come upon you, and the power of the Most High will overshadow you.” Mary had at first thought she would then have to have sexual relations with Joseph after the consummation of her marriage. This prospect troubled her on account of her vow of virginity. If she had intended to have sexual relations with her husband, then she would not have asked “How could this be?” She wasn’t planning to marry another person, since she was already betrothed to Joseph, who would soon receive the initially alarming news of her pregnancy. Some Protestants (and Catholics) are unaware that the Jewish Messiah was to be born of paternal lineage, according to Judaic belief. 😉

He said to me: “This gate is to remain closed; it is not to be opened for anyone to enter by it; since the Lord, the God of Israel, has entered by it, it shall remain closed.”
{Ezekiel 44:2}

Pax vobiscum
Good Fella :cool:
 
No response to this I see…The Third Apostle James?In order to allege that the Apostle James, “brother” of Jesus was a Son of Mary, you have to invent a shadowy third Apostle called James. Is this credible?James “Brother of Jesus” is referred to as one of the APOSTLES by Paul in Galatians 1.9. Yet we know from Matthew 10:2-4 that neither of the Apostles named James was actually a Son of the Virgin Mary! One of the Apostles James, is however, the Son of ALPHAEUS, who most bible scholars agree is the same person as Clopas - already identified as Father of James and Joseph.So if James “brother of Jesus” was an Apostle, he cannot have been a son of Mary.One can argue that a third James, supposed blood brother of Jesus, was elevated to the Apostleship at some time after the resurrection. However this presents a number of difficulties.a) Why is this “third James” never mentioned in the gospel accounts?b) Why would the Apostles take a non-apostle as their leader in Jerusalem?c) Why is the 3rd James’s elevation to Apostle not mentioned in scripture?d) Why did Jesus give Mary as Mother to John, if this “third James” existed?e) What happened to the “second” James, son of Alphaeus after the resurrection? If we imagine a “third James”, then James the Apostle, son of Alphaeus disappears from history mysteriously at exactly the same time the supposed “third James”, just as mysteriously appears.We are also told that James the Apostle, “brother” of Jesus has a house in jerusalem, where all the disciples met. A big house for the younger son of a poor carpenter from Nazareth?Is it not obvious that it is James the Apostle, Cousin of Jesus, who is the Apostle and “brother of the Lord” of the early church in Jerusalem?The “Third James” hypothesis doesn’t hold water.We are also told that James the Apostle, “brother” of
 
I don’t denigrate celibacy. I denigrate the denigration of sex. God designed sex, and no one in their right mind should even think of stating that sex between husband and wife, a crucial part of God’s design of humanity, can be somehow unholy.
I agree with you that god made sex, and it is intended to be holy between man and woman. But if a person has made a vow of consecration to God, it is considered a sin to have sex. This is because, in such a vow, one forswears intimacy with persons in favor of intimacy with God. One is considered “espoused” to God, so having relations with a person would be form of adultery or fornication
So, assuming that to be true, Mary could still have been sinless (all other factors being based on the Roman Catholic assumption which I do not agree with) while having had sex with Joseph. To say that her purity hinges on her perpetual virginity is to say that a married couple having sex is against God in some fashion.
No, her purity is based upon grace. She made a vow of virginity, which is the fruit of that grace. You are in error, though, that this is a Roman Catholic “assumption”. In fact, this was believed long before the Roman Rite developed. It is equally preserved as Apostolic in the Orthodox Church, which has nothing to do with Rome.
I wasn’t trying to. All I was saying is that there’s nothing in scripture which at all supports the view that Mary remained a virgin. Neither is there anything in the earliest of the church fathers. It’s yet one more view that, like the papacy and other things the RCC holds to be true, cannot be found in early Christianity.
I think one needs to take into consideration the other keepers of Sacred Oral Tradition and Apostolic Succession that are not “Roman”. this will prove that it is not some sort of “Roman” invention,but in fact, an Apostolic Teaching.
Second, as I’ve already shown, there’s simply not one word in scripture which says anything about Mary’s sexual status after Jesus’ birth.
This being the case, isn’;t “assuming” she bore other children just as insupportable as “assuming” she did not? Except that “assuming” she had children does not have two millenia of historical support from the Apostolic Succession…
Assuming that she remained a virgin seems ridiculous,
The ways of God may seem like foolishness to men. The Apostolic Teaching shows is that Mary is the Ark of the New Covenant, and we know what happens when unconsecrated hands touch THAT ark!
unless you incorporate the Roman Catholic view of celibacy being more holy than sex, a view which also is not found in the early church, save Paul’s statements that it’s easier to be devoted to ministry without a spouse, a statement which says nothing about holiness.
I think you both misunderstand Catholic teaching, and also discount the entire Monastic Tradition of the Church. Apparently you are not well educated in your own family history in this matter. The Teaching does not hold that a person os “more holy” who is a consecrated celibate, except in the sense of “holy” as “set apart”.
Protestants who uphold this? I’m sure there are some. That doesn’t mean scripture actually says anything about it. Seriously, just show me the verse that says that Mary took a vow of celibacy, or that she remained celibate after Jesus’ birth.
I read further up in the thread that this is what is meant by Mary’s inquiry of the angel. If she was planning to have relations, she would never bother to ask the angel “how”. She was not ignorant of how children are produced!
 
Good Fella:
Mary said “I know not a man” which means not any man. She did not say “I know not the man” which means her husband. The sentence contains an indefinite article. So metaphorically speaking, Mary told the angel Gabriel “I don’t smoke”. She did not say “I don’t smoke this brand”.
No GF, the metaphor would be “Up to this present moment I’ve never smoked.” It states nothing about the future. She expressed to the angel her present state of virginity and that’s why she asked, “How can this be?” He told her how. And at that moment she understood that she would actually conceive despite her present state of virginity, because, as the angel said, “nothing will be impossible with God..”

And she still knew no man after having conceived. She remained virgin. But then Matthew states that Joseph kept her a virgin until she gave birth to her first-born son (Matt. 1:25), later revealing that she and Joseph conceived together several children of their own. God did not permanently interrupt their marriage.

It matters not what you (or anyone) personally “believes” about Mary (or even Joseph), but what’s divinely revealed (not added to it).
“How could this be?”, “How could I be the mother of Joseph’s child?” “I have sworn an oath to God!
Read the account in Luke, GF. Where is it recorded there that Mary says to Gabriel that she swore an oath to God?

You see, your whole argument hinges on that one false assertion (insertion, interpolation). You insert that statement into the conversation and then commence to build your whole argument upon it. True Christian doctrine is to be based on what is extrapolated from Scripture not interpolated by men.
 
Randy Carson:
I do not know what led these men to accept the Perpetual Virginity of Mary. I do know from the quotes I provided that they did.
What led the early Reformers to their extrabiblical, personal beliefs about Mary was their RC upbringing. The thrust of their writings was on soteriolology, not Marianology. Wesley I don’t know about. But it’s still only a personal belief on his part. He has a right to believe what he wants, but his personal belief is not what “the faith once for all delivered to the saints” is based on.
I am curious, however…does Tradition play any role at all in your own faith experience (a tenable position, I believe, for a sola scripturist) or do you deny any place to anything outside of the Bible Alone (a position some have called solo scriptura)?
I know that God made Himself (the fact that He exists) evident within every man. So human intuition plays a part, hence, no self-proclaimed atheist has a leg to stand on. I know that through creation He has made His invisible attributes, His eternal power and divine nature, clearly seen.

But when it comes to the specifics of the doctrines of “the faith once for all delivered to the saints,” I can trust divine revelation only. And it is the job of the saints in every generation, since the Apostolic age, to “contend earnestly for the faith which was once for all delivered” to them (Jude 3).

The quest and struggle throughout the centuries was not to get added revelation, but to preserve the purity and simplicity of what was delivered, once for all" by the Apostles (2 Cor. 11:3).

The Apostle Paul left us with an important principle: “A little leaven leavens the whole lump” (Gal. 5:9). Even the smallest amount of error (leaven) introduced into "the faith" in time causes the foundation of “the faith” to change. So in the end you have something far different than what originally began.

That’s why it’s extremely important to base all true Christian doctrines on divine revelation, not personal beliefs or the product of man’s imagination. Or else we no longer have true Christianity but a man-made religion. Which, essentially was the state of Judaism in Christ’s day. And He rebuked its leadership harshly for it.

With the insertion of the extra-biblical Marian doctrines men have made Christianity into a Mother/Child religion. But based on the original, Apostolic teachings about Christ, found within the thepneustos Scriptures, this is not at all what they had intended. There message was Christ crucified and salvation, redemption, justification and ultimate sanctification through faith in Him alone.

Scripturally, very little information about Mary was even preserved for us in Holy Writ. It’s men who have inserted their own ideas about Mary and they, not the Scriptures, have exalted and elevated her beyond what was written.
 
Scripturally, very little information about Mary was even preserved for us in Holy Writ. It’s men who have inserted their own ideas about Mary and they, not the Scriptures, have exalted and elevated her beyond what was written.
Do you put your conscientious above all the Catholic and even your own Protestant ones? Never ceases to amaze me.

MAYBE, just MAYBE, YOU are the one that is wrong.

The truth of the matter is, your father (Luther) believed in it, and rightfully so since it is clearly in Scripture and in the TRADITION of the Christian faith.
 
No GF, the metaphor would be “Up to this present moment I’ve never smoked.” It states nothing about the future. She expressed to the angel her present state of virginity and that’s why she asked, “How can this be?” He told her how. And at that moment she understood that she would actually conceive despite her present state of virginity, because, as the angel said, “nothing will be impossible with God..”

And she still knew no man after having conceived. She remained virgin. But then Matthew states that Joseph kept her a virgin until she gave birth to her first-born son (Matt. 1:25), later revealing that she and Joseph conceived together several children of their own. God did not permanently interrupt their marriage.

It matters not what you (or anyone) personally “believes” about Mary (or even Joseph), but what’s divinely revealed (not added to it).Read the account in Luke, GF. Where is it recorded there that Mary says to Gabriel that she swore an oath to God?

You see, your whole argument hinges on that one false assertion (insertion, interpolation). You insert that statement into the conversation and then commence to build your whole argument upon it. True Christian doctrine is to be based on what is extrapolated from Scripture not interpolated by men.
Please go back and read the second paragraph in #145 and read #143. I believe our debate is over. I have nothing further to say to people who prefer to quibble to evade the truth which is now obvious. You are here to contest the truth, not seek it.

Pax vobiscum
Good Fella :cool:
 
This debate still hasn’t gone anywhere. RCs blindly assert that Mary was a temple virgin who took a vow of celibacy, married Joseph (who was a widower sworn to protect Mary), and never had sex at any time in her life.

Here’s the flaws…
  1. You have not established that God actually approved of the role of temple virgins and that these were not just one of the many flawed things in Judaism.
  2. You have not established that Mary actually took a vow of celibacy.
MAYBE, just MAYBE, YOU are the one that is wrong.
Provide some proof of that and I’ll believe it.

Again, I don’t expect much of a response, because there really is no proof of the Roman Catholic position.
 
This debate still hasn’t gone anywhere. RCs blindly assert that Mary was a temple virgin who took a vow of celibacy, married Joseph (who was a widower sworn to protect Mary), and never had sex at any time in her life.

Here’s the flaws…
  1. You have not established that God actually approved of the role of temple virgins and that these were not just one of the many flawed things in Judaism.
  2. You have not established that Mary actually took a vow of celibacy.
Provide some proof of that and I’ll believe it.

Again, I don’t expect much of a response, because there really is no proof of the Roman Catholic position.
Blindly?

Perhaps you have not been paying attention to the writings of the Early Church Fathers. Most assuredly you have not been paying attention to the teachings of the authoritative Church established by Christ.

Answering the Question, “Where is that in the Bible?”

The Evangelical starts with the assumption that scripture existed first and that tradition was slowly and incrementally added to it as time progressed. However, the original deposit of faith was given to the Apostles years before Scripture was ever penned. The Church was founded on this truth from Christ. Some of this deposit was then written in Scripture, some was scrupulously passed from bishop to bishop as oral tradition, and some was later clarified as dogma by the agreement of the bishops in the councils of the Church.

These sources, of course, should be expected not to contradict each other. If the Church teaches something as true, it is justifiable to check that it is not contradicted by Scripture. But if the Church teaches something and the Bible is silent or ambiguous, that does not mean the teaching is any less truly a part of the original deposit of faith given the Apostles. The focus must shift from what is biblical to what is true. The first is always contained in the second, but all of the second is not necessarily contained in the first.

When an Evangelical asks, “Where is that doctrine in the Bible?”, the correct response is “First show me from Scripture why you believe all Christian doctrines must be in the Bible.” It can be frustrating for Evangelicals to confront this issue, but it is important for them to understand the lack of biblical basis for their question. Truth is at issue here.

Adapted from Born Fundamentalist, Born Again Catholic *by David B. Currie, pp.61-62. *
 
Yes, I agree that Mary the wife of Clopas is identified as the mother of James and Joseph. No problem there. And I agree James and Joseph (Joses) are siblings. However, I do not at all agree that the “Mary, mother of James and Joseph (wife of Clopas)” is identified as Mary’s sister. In Jo. 19:25 it states that standing by the cross were the mother of Jesus, and His mother’s sister. Then two more: Mary the wife of Clopas and Mary of Magdala. The name of Mary’s sister is not given. Mary, wife of Clopas, mother of James and Joseph, is an altogether separate person from “His mother’s sister.”

What Bible are you using?

But I totally disagree with Fr. John Hainsworth’s false presupposition. He writes:"Note that in Matthew the names “James and Joseph” were mentioned before. Indeed, the way Matthew mentions “Mary mother of James and Joseph” in 27:55, 56 presupposes that he has already introduced these “James and Joseph” - as indeed he has. In Matthew 13:55, we read that our Lord’s “brothers” are "James and Joseph and Simon and Judas."The naming of James and Joseph in Matt. 27:56 was to identify who this Mary was. It does not at all presuppose that Matthew already introduced them earlier in Matt. 13:55. In fact, quite the contrary! The James and Joseph in Matt. 13:55 are clearly identified by the whole town of Nazareth as two of the four sons of Joseph the carpenter and his wife Mary, not Mary wife of Clopas. Matt. 13:55 does not say:"Is not this the carpenter’s son? Is not His mother called Mary, and His mother’s sister (also called Mary), and her sons James and Joseph and Simon and Judas, and their sisters, are they not also with us?"No my friend, that is pure manipulation and distortion of the Scriptures (2 Pet. 2:16). The town of Nazareth does not identify James, Joseph, Simon Judas and their sisters as the sons and daughters of Mary, wife of Clopas. But literally as the children of Joseph the carpenter and his wife Mary. Which would make them half brothers and sisters of Jesus.

The futile attempt to try to identify James and Joseph (sons of Mary wife of Clopas) as the same as those previously listed in Matt. 13:55 (belonging to Joseph and Mary) clearly exposes an ulterior motive by the interpreter. Could it possibly be to preserve the legend of Mary’s perpetual virginity? :hmmm: :yup:

Fr. JH then writes:"It seems beyond reasonable dispute that the Mary at the Cross in St. Matthew and St. Mark is the mother of our Lord’s “brothers,” "James and Joses."To the contrary, when allowing Scripture to speak for itself it is totally unreasonable. The passages themselves tell us who their mothers were. From what’s revealed, Joseph and Mary had four sons, Mary and Clopas had two. Both families had sons named James and Joseph.

Not so unusual. Think about it, there were at least three Marys present at the crucifixion of Christ. “Mary,” “Joseph” and “James” obviously were very popular Jewish names at that time.
**
As we’ve been trying to tell you, it’s not at all clear as you make it once one considers the way adelphos and adelphe are used, along with some verses (which you’ve rejected of course…). Jesus’ brothers and sisters are not called “sons of Mary” in the verse, only Jesus is, and Joseph is nowhere to be found. Also, are you saying that both Mary and Joseph and Mary and Clopas had a son (Joses/Joseph) with the same variant names in two different accounts? Unlikely to me… I wonder what a non-Christian would think…**
 
Blindly?

Perhaps you have not been paying attention to the writings of the Early Church Fathers. Most assuredly you have not been paying attention to the teachings of the authoritative Church established by Christ.
Neither has PC been paying attention to the scriptural verses I have provided above in this thread and other Marian threads that show ‘sola scriptura’ is an erroneous principle to embrace and that the Apostolic Church is the only divine authority on earth to inerrantly interpret the scriptures and formulate essential Christian doctrines. The Bible is not a compendium of defined theological concepts. Nor is it a history book: it consists of historical narratives rich and deep in meaning beneath the surface. The Catholic Church forms her doctrines by initially taking the entire Bible into account, discerning symbols and types ( the suffering servant, the near sign of the virgin birth, the gate to be closed, the ark of the covenant, Eve, Judith, etc.) that possess more than one meaning. This is exegesis proper. Our Lord never intended that our doctrines be based strictly on what is explicitly written in the Bible. Christians who argue from the premise of ‘sola scriptura’ naturally arrive at faulty conclusions to the point where they engage in nothing but psuedo-reasoning and attempt to defy logic.

Pax vobiscum
Good Fella :cool:
 
This debate still hasn’t gone anywhere. RCs blindly assert that Mary was a temple virgin who took a vow of celibacy, married Joseph (who was a widower sworn to protect Mary), and never had sex at any time in her life.

Here’s the flaws…
  1. You have not established that God actually approved of the role of temple virgins and that these were not just one of the many flawed things in Judaism.
  2. You have not established that Mary actually took a vow of celibacy.
Provide some proof of that and I’ll believe it.

Again, I don’t expect much of a response, because there really is no proof of the Roman Catholic position.
Firstly, the Church has never taught that Mary was a ‘temple virgin’. Mary was not part of the Temple in Jerusalem.

Secondly, the Church has never taught that Joseph was a widower.

He first intended to marry Mary, and have children, I assume. It wasn’t until the Angel revealed to him that the child that she was to have was from God. Read it in St. Matthew, St. Luke…

Thirdly, the Church has never taught that Mary took a vow of celibacy. She was not a Vestral virgin, or a Temple virgin. If she had a vow, as you call it, she never would have been bethrothed by her parents to marry Joseph.

It is difficult for us in the present day to imagine the horror and indignation which in the 5th Century was evoked by the news that certain heretics, Helvidius and Jovinian, had set themselves against the universal tradition of Christianity, which had been handed down from the beginning, and dared to assert that our Blessed Lady had other children after the birth of her Divine Son.

St. Jerome answered them.

peace
 
Mary taking a vow of celibacy and Joseph being a widower with kids comes from the Protoevangelion of James, which was not accepted as canonical, but the Orthodox believe the latter (about Joseph), and for all we know, they and the apocryphal book could be correct all along (but that doesn’t make those Catholics [who believe Joseph wasn’t a widower] wrong, as both churches believe in the perpetual virginity).
 
Maurin, where did you go to school to learn Greek? Or were you just parroting something you read? I went back and did a little research on my own. Look at Matt. 2:9.Matt 2:9 After hearing the king, they went their way; and the star, which they had seen in the east, went on before them until it came and stood over {the place} where the Child was.In the Greek it is just heos. Yet a change took place. It went before them only until - then a change took place - it stopped.
what about 2 samuel 6:23?

*και τη Μελχολ θυγατρι *σαουλ ουκ εγενετο παιδιον εως της
ημερας του αποθανειν αυτην *

read: michal had no children until the day she died. were children born after death? i think this far surpasses the miracle of the virgin birth if this is true.

and now for matt 1:25

και ουκ εγινωσκεν αυτηνp εως ου ετεκεν τον υιον αυτης τον πρωτοτοκον και εκαλεσεν το ονομα αυτου ιησουν

there’s that pesky word again! :doh2:
 
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