T
Tomdstone
Guest
I am learning a lot from the contributions here of Father John Morris and dvdjs. Thanks to both.I don’t know, closer, we are getting closer.
I am learning a lot from the contributions here of Father John Morris and dvdjs. Thanks to both.I don’t know, closer, we are getting closer.
Why do you think that Our Lady chose to die? Where is that in the Holy Scriptures or the Fathers?I don’t know, closer, we are getting closer.
Genesis 3:16-Foward
"To the woman he said, “I will make your pains in childbearing very severe; with painful labor you will give birth to children. Your desire will be for your husband, and he will rule over you.”
(St Mary had no birth pains according to tradition, and She resolved “the rule over you part” at least according to St Maxinus)
"To Adam he said(God), "Because you listened to your wife and ate fruit from the tree about which I commanded you, ‘You must not eat from it,’ "Cursed is the ground because of you; through painful toil you will eat food from it all the days of your life.
(Note-because he disobeyed the Lord and transgressed, Mary didn’t do any of that)
“It will produce thorns and thistles for you, and you will eat the plants of the field.”
(and it did/does)
“By the sweat of your brow you will eat your food until you return to the ground, since from it you were taken; from dust you are and to dust you will return.”
(I think that’s a guilty conversation, Enoch and Elijah)
“Adam named his wife Eve, because she would become the mother of all the living.”
(And Mary is the New Eve)
"And the LORD God said, “The man has now become like one of us, knowing good and evil. He must not be allowed to reach out his hand and take also from the tree of life and eat, and live forever.”
(inclination to sin, the closer to the Lord the less is has any influence, course Mary was perfectly Graced and of course the tree of life is none other than Jesus Christ and the tree the Cross, Mary was good here!)
“So the LORD God banished him from the Garden of Eden to work the ground from which he had been taken.”
(And it so it was to till the Word of God became fully-human/divine…Marys yes and the Tree of Life…RISEN!!!)
“After he drove the man out, he placed on the east side of the Garden of Eden cherubim and a flaming sword flashing back and forth to guard the way to the tree of life.”
(Tree of Life no problem, And the Heaven is now open by Christ, and Mary -resurrected)
Lovely story, surely we are not saying again Mary “had to die”, most fitting She chose to of course.
Mary chose to do just as Her Son, and of course the supernatural rest is indeed a mystery, I really think its the best,
And the East can believe in the Incarnation/IC and the West the IC.
Jesus comes to judge the “Living and the Dead”
The dispute with the Orthodox over Mary’s immaculate conception is mostly about semantics. Traditionally Eastern and Western Christianity have arrived at very different definitions of ‘original sin,’ which means that we approach Mary’s immaculate state from different perspectives. Both Orthodox and Catholic Christians readily admit that Mary never sinned, as you know from speaking with your friend. According to the Western definition original sin is a sinful nature, and anyone who has it is powerless to stop sinning. Because Mary was sinless, she must not have had original sin.
In contrast, the Eastern Fathers defined original sin first and foremost as the onset of mortality and death. Because (according to the Eastern Fathers) Mary died before her body was assumed into heaven, she must have had original sin… otherwise she would have not aged, and would have been immortal. Thus many Eastern Orthodox theologians have concluded that Mary must have had original sin - but remained sinless by God’s grace.
Source: east2west.org/doctrine.htmAs you can see, this entire dispute goes back to how one chooses to define ‘original sin.’ Because the Eastern Catholic Churches follow the guidance of the Pope of Rome, we believe that Mary was freed from original sin at the very first moment of her existence.
Where is it that she had to die? I can’t think of anyone from antiquity who used a term “had to die” There’s an unwritten rule that itsbanned from the Apostolic Church’s.Why do you think that Our Lady chose to die? Where is that in the Holy Scriptures or the Fathers?
Has nothing to do with the conversation. I’ll argue then from the point Jesus was Immaculately Conceived at the Incarnation. Polemical point and a bad one.The doctrine of the Immaculate Conception has dangerous Christological implications.
And She who was a virgin without spot or stain, was sanctified (your view, at the Incarnation) She had no sin was sanctified from A or O=X sin and remained ever virgin with no-sin. God has no sin, Christ has no sin, and Mary has no sin.When God the Son was united with His human nature, He assumed all that we are including our fallen nature. .
Good.By its union with the divine nature, the human nature was deified and cleansed and liberated from sin and death. .
We are saved when we stand before the Throne of God if you want to get right down to it. Enoch and Elijah alive wherever they were not saved till the stood before the Throne of God.We are saved by union with Christ .
Sanctifying Grace at the Incarnation “perfectly graced” and prior, and then, ever virgin no-sin.through union with His Church through the Sacramental Life of the Church, .
That wasn’t His body Mary conceived?which is His Body…
She already was, are you going to tell me she had to die now to complete the deal?In order for us to be healed of ancestral sin, …
God had no sin, Mary was preserved to have no sin by God and She is the New Ark.Christ had to assume human ancestral sin. In order for Him to assume ancestral sin He had to receive it from…
RightOur Lady, because He received His human nature from her…
took a mortal body which, united with Him, should avail for all, and by partaking of His immortality stay the corruption of the Race…He made His Flesh an offering for our souls…by being one with us all, he clothed us with immortality…He takes a body of our Nature, and that of a spotless Virgin, in whose womb He makes it His own, wherein to reveal Himself, conquer death, and restore life.If she was not born in ancestral sin, Christ’s human nature could not have received ancestral sin and we are not saved from ancestral sin. .
Mary- flesh was assumed by sanctifying Grace.in person and in Her free will.St. Gregory the Theologian, “That which is not assumed is not healed.” .
No issue here.We agree that God prepared Mary through His grace to become the Birthgiver of God. However, He prepared her because she used her free will to cooperate with God’s transforming grace. If she had no choice, again we are not saved. .
Can’t see what this has do but in some incorrect understanding of the IC which I’m not even defending. Incarnation is fine for the debate.Mary represents all humanity saying yes to God.
Doesn’t matter if she born in sin, then preserved at the IC, Incarnation, Annunciation or sometime in between, She never sinned, She was preserved by Sanctifying Grace.Despite being born in ancestral sin Mary willingly obeyed God and cooperated with His Grace. That is why the Fathers called Mary the Second Eve…
It doesn’t matter, I’ll use the other Incarnation. All the IC is, is “most fitting”.The doctrine of the Immaculate conception
This is just a bad argument. I can’t imagine how you come to this conclusion. That was the same fresh and nature Second Person Trinity assumed. He had free will and was tempted also. And so did She be it whichever moment we agree She was sanctified.takes away from Mary because it takes away her choice, to obey God.
I knew that was going somewhere. Mary wasn’t immoral till the assumption. But She had no sin, no where that I see, how about you?If a person is already born deified, they cannot sin
OK but I don’t how you end up here after that rough ride. So why did She have to die?Mary did not sin because she chose herself to live a righteous life and because of her righteousness God chose to give Her the grace to prepare her to become the Theotokos.
Perfectly Graced is the correct version in Greek. And its in this thread where I added the Greek.This all revolves around the doctrine of original sin. Because one version of the Greek text can be translated, “And the angel being come in, said unto her: Hail, full of grace, the Lord is with thee: blessed art thou among women.” Douay-Rheims 1899 American Version. In looking as 100 different English translations the Douay is one on only three that translated the text, “full of grace.” The other 97 translated the text as “Highly favored one.” This is because most English translations do not us the Received Text, which is the text used by the Greek Orthodox Church. The Greek text used by most English translation has “kecharitOmenE” which means “highly favored one” instead of “charitou” the word found in the Received text. The word “charitou” which means “full of grace.” The greeting, “Hail Mary, full of grace,” does not cause problem with the Orthodox doctrine of ancestral sin. The Orthodox doctrine ancestral sin, unlike the Latin doctrine of original sin, does not teach that we are deprived of God’s grace as a result of Adam’s sin. Following Genesis 3: 16-19, we believe that the major inheritance of ancestral sin is mortality. For this reason, according to the Orthodox doctrine Mary could be full of grace and still be born in ancestral sin.
Fr. John
The whole of man's history has been the story of dour combat with the powers of evil, stretching, so our Lord tells us, from the very dawn of history until the last day. Finding himself in the midst of the battlefield man has to struggle to do what is right, and it is at great cost to himself, and aided by God's grace, that he succeeds in achieving his own inner integrity.303You quote St. Athanasius as stating that God the Son took a mortal body.Where is it that she had to die? I can’t think of anyone from antiquity who used a term “had to die” There’s an unwritten rule that itsbanned from the Apostolic Church’s.Nor did God have to do anything.
Has nothing to do with the conversation. I’ll argue then from the point Jesus was Immaculately Conceived at the Incarnation. Polemical point and a bad one.
And She who was a virgin without spot or stain, was sanctified (your view, at the Incarnation) She had no sin was sanctified from A or O=X sin and remained ever virgin with no-sin. God has no sin, Christ has no sin, and Mary has no sin.
Good.
We are saved when we stand before the Throne of God if you want to get right down to it. Enoch and Elijah alive wherever they were not saved till the stood before the Throne of God.
Sanctifying Grace at the Incarnation “perfectly graced” and prior, and then, ever virgin no-sin.
That wasn’t His body Mary conceived?
She already was, are you going to tell me she had to die now to complete the deal?
God had no sin, Mary was preserved to have no sin by God and She is the New Ark.
Right
- The Word, then, visited that earth in which He was yet always present ; and saw all these evils. He takes a body of our Nature, and that of a spotless Virgin, in whose womb He makes it His own, wherein to reveal Himself, conquer death, and restore life.
- The Word, since death alone could stay the plague, took a mortal body which, united with Him, should avail for all, and by partaking of His immortality stay the corruption of the Race. By being above all, He made His Flesh an offering for our souls; by being one with us all, he clothed us with immortality. Simile to illustrate this. Athanasius
took a mortal body which, united with Him, should avail for all, and by partaking of His immortality stay the corruption of the Race…He made His Flesh an offering for our souls…by being one with us all, he clothed us with immortality…He takes a body of our Nature, and that of a spotless Virgin, in whose womb He makes it His own, wherein to reveal Himself, conquer death, and restore life.
St Athanasius
Mary- flesh was assumed by sanctifying Grace.in person and in Her free will.
No issue here.
Can’t see what this has do but in some incorrect understanding of the IC which I’m not even defending. Incarnation is fine for the debate.
Doesn’t matter if she born in sin, then preserved at the IC, Incarnation, Annunciation or sometime in between, She never sinned, She was preserved by Sanctifying Grace.
It doesn’t matter, I’ll use the other Incarnation. All the IC is, is “most fitting”.
This is just a bad argument. I can’t imagine how you come to this conclusion. That was the same fresh and nature Second Person Trinity assumed. He had free will and was tempted also. And so did She be it whichever moment we agree She was sanctified.
I knew that was going somewhere. Mary wasn’t immoral till the assumption. But She had no sin, no where that I see, how about you?
OK but I don’t how you end up here after that rough ride. So why did She have to die?
God created man in His image…then he sinned. Man in free will created his own evil.According to Orthodox doctrine mortality is the chief characteristic of ancestral sin.
Not exactly, the Latin Catechism says:
I find little in the above with which I disagree. I would add, however, that despite ancestral sin, we are not deprived of grace. That should be obvious because there were holy men and women before Christ. However no one could enter Heaven until Christ destroyed the power of Hades by descending into Hades between His death and Resurrection and liberating those imprisoned there and opening the gates of Heaven.
I do have problem with the expression “original holiness and justice.” The traditional Eastern teaching is that Adam and Eve were not fully deified, but were like children who had not yet grown to holiness. Therefore, the fall is not as great in Eastern Orthodox theology as it is in Western theology.
The point is that we inherit the consequences of the sin of Adam and Eve which is mortality and corruption. Because we are mortal we are corrupt and all sin.
I do have a problem with the concept of the death of the soul. Even a completely evil person has a soul. We are all created in the Image of God. That image can be stained by our sins, but it is never completely destroyed. That sounds too much like the Protestant doctrine of total depravity.
Our Lady is a special case because of her own free will she cooperated with God’s grace, which prepared her to become the Birth Giver of God. However, she still inherited mortality, which is ancestral sin, but through cooperating with God’s grace she overcame the corruption in which she was born and was made holy by God in preparation for becoming the Theotokos. Therefore the Eastern Orthodox Church calls her “our all holy, immaculate most blessed and glorious Lady the Theotokos and Ever Virgin Mary.” We also call her “More honorable than the Cherubim, and more glorious beyond compare than the Seraphim…” By teaching that Our Lady was already deified before she was born, the doctrine of the Immaculate Conception actually takes away some of Mary’s glory. Because it means that she was not an active participant in our salvation by using her free will to cooperate with God’s grace and consenting with her free will to bear Christ. If she could not sin, she had no choice and could not have refused to give birth to Christ. That means that she did not really play the major role that she played in our salvation by becoming the Second Eve whose obedience to God helped liberate us from the consequences of the sin of the Second Eve. The Eastern Orthodox doctrine actually honors Mary more than the doctrine of the Immaculate Conception.
Fr. John
IBy teaching that Our Lady was already deified before she was born, the doctrine of the Immaculate Conception actually takes away some of Mary’s glory. Because it means that she was not an active participant in our salvation by using her free will to cooperate with God’s grace and consenting with her free will to bear Christ. If she could not sin, she had no choice and could not have refused to give birth to Christ. That means that she did not really play the major role that she played in our salvation by becoming the Second Eve whose obedience to God helped liberate us from the consequences of the sin of the Second Eve.
Where was Elijah, Moses and Enoch? He didn’t descent for them, Must have picked them up on the way up?However no one could enter Heaven until Christ destroyed the power of Hades by descending into Hades between His death and Resurrection and liberating those imprisoned there and opening the gates of Heaven.
No one teaches they were fully deifiedThe traditional Eastern teaching is that Adam and Eve were not fully deified, but were like children who had not yet grown to holiness.
Only one I heard allude to this is Bishop Ware. He didn’t elaborate, you can, but I don’t see how. I do believe he is talking in the context of most fitting of 4 variables.Therefore, the fall is not as great in Eastern Orthodox theology as it is in Western theology.
Mortality was defeated at the Cross by Jesus Christ, there is no break in Gods Grace/Divinization, you make your own free-will choice.The point is that we inherit the consequences of the sin of Adam and Eve which is mortality and corruption. Because we are mortal we are corrupt and all sin.
Your thinking of death in the carnal sense. There is no death. You cannot not exist, you can only exist apart from God in your own free will. Have you heard about any demons repenting? I haven’t, but hey, Gods will is His will. Luther isn’t relevant.I do have a problem with the concept of the death of the soul. Even a completely evil person has a soul. We are all created in the Image of God. That image can be stained by our sins, but it is never completely destroyed. That sounds too much like the Protestant doctrine of total depravity.
No actually its most fitting in understanding Gods perfection, love and grace.By teaching that Our Lady was already deified before she was born, the doctrine of the Immaculate Conception actually takes away some of Mary’s glory. Because it means that she was not an active participant in our salvation by using her free will to cooperate with God’s grace
Can’t imagine how you arrive here. Think baptized, She never sinned and was baptized by the Incarnation and still never sinned. There you can see free-will.If she could not sin, she had no choice
Way out there. Listen no disrespect but hundreds of years of scholars throught this through and through. You ever think perhaps your wrong?and could not have refused to give birth to Christ.
Only if you believe Jesus Christ was born in sin. How is it you believe demons don’t have to die, but Mary had to die?That means that she did not really play the major role that she played in our salvation by becoming the Second Eve whose obedience to God helped liberate us from the consequences of the sin of the Second Eve. The Eastern Orthodox doctrine actually honors Mary more than the doctrine of the Immaculate Conception.
The doctrine of the Immaculate Conception was not a part of the teaching of the ancient undivided Church. It was only proclaimed Catholic doctrine in 1854. If it had been a legitimate doctrine, it would have been proclaimed by one of the 7 Ecumenical Councils.
- The IC teaches that she was deified? Where does that idea come from? Do you not think that theosis is a never ending process?
- Do you really believe that deification entails a loss of free will? Do you believe that Christ had a free will, in particular a will belonging to his human nature? Does baptism cause a loss of free will?
- The doctrine IC does not assert that she “had no choice”.
Neither was the teaching of Palamas against the Barlaam. Illegitimate?The doctrine of the Immaculate Conception was not a part of the teaching of the ancient undivided Church. It was only proclaimed Catholic doctrine in 1854. If it had been a legitimate doctrine, it would have been proclaimed by one of the 7 Ecumenical Councils.
Yes theosis is a never ending process. In the Liturgy of St. John Chrysostom, the Liturgy is offered for “Especially our all-holy, immaculate most blessed and glorious Lady Theotokos and Ever-Virgin Mary.” No, I do not believe that theosis means a loss of free will.
Excellent. The deification of Mary, or even the divinity of Christ, does not mean a loss of free will. I take this as a retraction of the the suggestions to the contrary in your earlier post, #618.Christ also died on the Cross because He took on our sins and became mortal for our sakes. Thus Christ voluntarily took upon Himself ancestral sin to deliver us from ancestral sin.
Mary was holy and sinless, and she used her free will to cooperate with the grace of God. That is the teaching of the CC and the the IC in no way changes that.Mary was holy and sinless, because she used her free will to cooperate with the grace of God.
Once again some EOs, from whom I have quoted have a broader definition, that more aligned with the teaching of the CC. In any case the IC does not claim thaqt Mary was spared from “ancestral sin as narrowly defined by some Orthodox”. It speaks of the stain of original sin as understood in the CC, posted in post #425.Once again the Eastern Orthodox Church defines ancestral sin as the inheritance of mortality.
Well put it this way, The Dormition doesn’t fit your own requirement.If it had been a legitimate doctrine, it would have been proclaimed by one of the 7 Ecumenical Councils.
The conception of Panagia, yes, so too the conception of St John the Forerunner. I don’t recall the title of either feast including the term “immaculate”. No doubt you are aware that the feast of the Assupmtion of Mary in Rome was originally known as the “Dormition of Mary”Immaculate Conception was a feast in Russia and Greece long before it was a dogma. The history is on this thread in regards. Not sure what your saying.
But we call the Theotokos immaculate - unlike John the Baptist. When did she become immaculate?The conception of Panagia, yes, so too the conception of St John the Forerunner. I don’t recall the title of either feast including the term "immaculate
Do you mean to suggest that there was a time at which only her falling asleep was commemorated and not her assumption?No doubt you are aware that the feast of the Assupmtion of Mary in Rome was originally known as the “Dormition of Mary”
He would be, then, in disagreement with a very large numbers of Roman Catholic theologians who taught that the Virgin was impeccable. See this thread on the subject over at byzcath, started by Apotheoun (who also occasionally posts here under the same handle).Father John,
Please show me where the Catholic Church teaches that Mary was unable to sin. Coming home from work today I’m pretty sure I heard Catholic Apologist John Martignoni say the opposite