G
Good_Fella
Guest
Elizabeth was filled with the Holy Spirit when she exclaimed, “Most blessed are you among women and blessed is the fruit of your womb,” (Lk 1:42) and added later. “Blessed are you who believed that what was spoken to you by the Lord would be fulfilled” (Lk:1:45). In the first instance Elizabeth is indeed praising her cousin Mary as the most blessed woman ever on earth, because she was favoured with the privilege of being the mother of the Lord. Elizabeth spoke in Aramaic so she would have used the ancient semitic word* Adonis* which in English is Lord and in the Greek translation by Luke Kurio. Adonis is also used in the Old Testament Hebrew Bible when referring to YHWH. So it is no surprise that Elizabeth ecstatically congratulated her cousin for having conceived God incarnate. Who wouldn’t have in Palestine among the faithful if they happened to eventually believe in the Incarnation by the grace of God? But just as Jesus had when he spoke to the woman in the crowd after she had praised his mother for having borne and nursed him, Elizabeth praised Mary for her meritorious act of faith, without which the divine Word ought not to be made man. Jesus could have become a man by being formed out of the clay in the earth as Adam had been, by the operation of the Holy Spirit, but instead he desired to have a genuine loving mother who would welcome him in faith with open arms, and whose human personality he longed to assume. If Mary had disappointed our Lord at the start, the Incarnation would not have occurred.Good Fella,
Mary is highly favored! She was definitely blessed… How do those verses prove she is queen of heaven? All it shows to me is that God favored her and she was blessed enough to be able to carry and give birth to Jesus Christ…Well what do you think of this verse?..(Luke 11:27-28) Or (Mt 12:46-50)
Likewise, if we as individuals reject the divine offer of salvation by self-righteously presuming that we are in no need of being saved from sin and death, Jesus will reject and condemn us on the Day of Judgment and cast our souls into hell, unless we repent of this deadly sin of presumption before we die. God desires to save everyone, according to Paul in his first Letter to Timothy, but salvation is his free gift to us, not something imposed against our will because God feels obligated to us. For it is by the love and mercy of God that we are saved, not by his justice. If it were by his justice, then Protestants would be correct in believing that we are justified by being externally covered by the alien righteousness of Christ, and that our works of charity simply sanctify our souls and determine our eternal rewards once we are saved permanently by our acquired faith in Jesus. So much for the grace of hope and final perseverance! Without hope and any need to persevere to the end, there is no longer any reason to pray for one’s soul, so perhaps this might explain one reason why most Protestants feel it is superfluous to supplicate Mary for her prayerful assistance. Our Lord’s death on the cross is an act of atonement, not a legal transaction by which Jesus covers our debts to the Father and imputes his righteousness to our account, while inherently we are still totally corrupt like “cow dung covered by snow” to use Luther’s metaphor. In his first Letter (4:8). Peter writes “Love covers a multitude of sins,” meaning that we are justified by our sincere love for the "Father" and our neighbour, and implying that we can lose our justification before God every time we commit a deadly (mortal) sin against him and our neighbour and remain in that fallen state until we sincerely repent as David had after he committed murder and adultery.
David sought an interior and internal righteousness of being effected by the infused grace of God when he cried out" Create a clean heart in me, O Lord. Put a steadfast spirit within me" (Ps 51:10). He was more concerned with loving God and being conformed to his divine image than he was with being eternally damned ( a true mark of faith). He would have wanted to “put on Christ” rather than just be covered by him and shielded from the Father’s wrath (justice) if he happened to be alive on the other side of the Cross and heard Paul preach the Good News. By the grace of God we can be interiorly transformed slowly but surely, and molded into a relative state of divine perfection sufficiently pleasing enough to avoid the Divine justice, only if by the sufficient grace of God we are sincerely willing enough to cooperate with his efficacious actual graces. “So be perfect as your heavenly Father is perfect” (Mt 5:48); “Purify yourself as he is pure” (cf.1 Jn 3:3). Thus it’s wise to petition Mary for her stewardship of divine grace.
So Jesus meant that Mary was more blessed for having pronounced her* fiat * at the Annunciation than for having conceived and borne him immediately after. Her act of faith working through love (Gal 5:5-6) served to save not only her, but us all. The Greek word for “rather” in Luke 11:28 is menounge, meaning “more than” in this instance. Mary had first conceived Christ spiritually in her heart, mind, and soul. So that is why she subsequently conceived and bore her Son physically. She was more of a mother to him by her faith than she was by her biological and natural capacity, making her more blessed than the woman in the crowd thought she was, for she had no idea, like Elizabeth, that Jesus was the divine Word incarnate. Who is our Lord’s true mother? The one who had first of all conceived him spiritually that morning in the month of Elul in an act of faith informed by love (caritas) that was causative of the redemption formally achieved by Christ in strict justice by the mercy of God the Father.
PAX :heaven: