A
ALLFORHIM
Guest
Hi,Hello again,
I don’t understand the question.
Wow talk about grammatical error
I guess I dont get How.
Hi,Hello again,
I don’t understand the question.
Hi,We claim to have all the original apostles relics, though.
If you mean the Jews of Israel (sorry - pet peeve “Palestine” was something the Romans imposed in AD 150 to mock the Jews. There was no place called Palestine in Biblical times) - no they were not Hellenistic. And Hellenic Jews simply referred to them being Greek speaking. Syria and Lebanon are not Israel. Though parts of it were - the people of Damascus were not the people of Jerusalem - so the geography does not neccesitate a relation. The Jews of Israel were Hebrew/Aramaic speaking primarily. They were not Hellenic thinkers. And Augustine got St. Paul very well. And Saint Paul was a Hebrew who thought like a Hebrew. St. Paul’s view and of original sin and the Hebrew ideas of covenantal identity and headship had everything to do with Hebrew thought. Mankind would not have inherited corruption either if the Orthodox position were correct. Here is the problem, and Jews would agree. As with the Western Church and many of the fathers. But more importantly the testimony of scripture - The primary effects of the Fall are sin resulting in death. The Hellenistic taint of the east is thinking the primary effects of the Fall is death which leads to sin. Nowhere is scripture is this found to be true. In fact much scripture needs to be ignored or explained away in order to support this position. That is why the Orthodox view tends to only focus on one aspect of the atonement - Christus Victor. While downplaying or completely denying that that it was a sacrifice to the Father. That it was penal. That it was substitutionary. All these are essential. But the Eastern view minimizes the effects of the Fall and therefore cannot understand the full effects of the Cross. That is why all the foreshadowing of animal sacrifice in the Old Testament is so ignored in Orthodoxy. And why the OT plays such a minimal role in Orthodox teaching.Were not the Jews of Palestine, Syria, and Lebanon Hellenistic? I have read several Jewish Commentaries that explicitly deny Augustine’s teaching of original sin and affirm a position in line with Orthodoxy and the earliest fathers of the Church. There is no “stain” of sin mentioned in these (although I’ll qualify Tertullian’s legal thinking, but then again, he denied the ever-Virginity of the Theotokos!)
By the way, Augustine is far from Hebrew thought and struggles with his early Manichaen thought…
Prayers and petitions,
Alexius![]()
newadvent.org/cathen/12734a.htmHi,
What are the relics? I didnt know there were any. I learn something new every day.![]()
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I know the whole ark of the covenant.Amen!
There has not been unanimous consent on the issue, even from the early days. See below:The really amazing thing is that this has caused to some scandal. It seems outrageous…yet there is not a sliver of evidence from the early church that anyone was opposed to the notion of her immaculateness. With all of the early writings on this matter of her perfection don’t you think that there would have been at least one or two writings to address the issue from YOUR point of view.?? I challenge you to find one Church Father who writes about being as shocked as you are about the doctrine.
Wow, I can’t fathom what I said that you find repulsive. I thought that “impersonal comments” were the proper and polite mode of discussion, as opposed to “personal comments”.Yes, Christ died, but not of a natural death, rather he was put to death in an unnatural way. The Holy Virgin died in a natural manner and at an old age. I think it is a relavent question since it comes from my heart and I want to hear the reasoning behind it. To make impersonal comments regarding the nature of this question is rather repulsive. I sincerely need help as this is tied to whether the Immaculate Conception is valid or not.
RR, there is much about the infinite nature of God that our feeble minds can’t understand. These are mysteries which will be illuminated when we see the face of God.Sorry, I did not mean my response to your post to come across like that.
I think that the doctrines are difficult to understand, at least to those of us who were not raised Catholic, because they are contary to what we see everyday in life. We live in a fallen world where even the greatest of the great saints among us still sin to some degree. So, even though we know that we are talking about a miraculous exception (Mary without original sin and/or remaining sinless), it is hard for us to get our feeble minds around the concept. At least it is for me.
RR, you will find that the longer you hang out with us that the Church takes quite seriously its commission by Christ as Shepherd and to safeguard the Deposit of Faith and Truth. The more errors that people adapt in their “own counsel” the more errors there are about God. In our calling to love and serve God, it is imperative that we have an accurate understanding of God in all His Revelation. Otherwise, we will be loving and serving a rendition of God that is inaccurate, a creation of our “own counsel” and thus blasphemous.Not that anyone asked me, but I wish the Church had kept the same silence as to the immaculate conception instead of dogmatically defining the teaching. That removes any ability for a Catholic or potential Catholic to keep his own counsel on the subject.
AllforHim, if God had to personally go to the trouble to bury Mary Himself, why wouldn’t He just take her up to Heaven directly?Hi,
I personally believe God buried her body so no one would know and could not find it. He did the same with Moses. There is a Scripture reference for it I think in Exodus. I think God did this because otherwise people would absolutely worship those sights. Moses was a GREAT MAN and Im sure his followers would worship at his grave. I dare to say people might even do it today. IMHO I think the same would absolutely happen if we knew where Mary was buried. How many catholics here would go to her grave? I bet you every single one and many other religions as well. I might even.God doesnt want us to take our focus off of Christ. By thinking about Moses or Mary other then they were followers of God/Christ and did HIS WILL to me is wrong.
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I fail to see how anything you’ve referred to is evidence for the IC.Scripture is CHOCK FULL of evidence of the IC and sinlessness.
Defined how?But the most appealing evidence to me comes from the early church Fathers. Almost every single early church father writes on Mary’s perfection.
Specifics?I mean way way way back to the first few decades even BEFORE some of the GOspels were finished.
You can’t slide from the general proposition “Mary is spotless” (which could mean all sorts of things, such as her virginity or simply what Wesleyans would call “entire sanctification”) to the specific doctrine of the Immaculate Conception.The really amazing thing is that this has caused to some scandal. It seems outrageous…yet there is not a sliver of evidence from the early church that anyone was opposed to the notion of her immaculateness.
Because the doctrine hadn’t been developed yet. It wasn’t even conceivable before Augustine, because it only becomes an issue once you have a fully developed doctrine of original sin. Right through the Middle Ages the entire Dominican Order opposed the doctrine. Your argument is woefully ill-informed.With all of the early writings on this matter of her perfection don’t you think that there would have been at least one or two writings to address the issue from YOUR point of view.?? I challenge you to find one Church Father who writes about being as shocked as you are about the doctrine.
I’m not sure I follow your argument here, and you haven’t engaged my point about the “second Fall.” A naturally sinless being (which is what being without original sin would mean) choosing to sin would be an incredibly catastrophic event. Your argument works against the IC, and that’s fine–I’m not here to argue for the IC. All I’m trying to show is that the proposition “Mary was conceived without original sin” is far more radical than the proposition “Mary had original sin but never freely chose to sin,” and the proposition “Mary was conceived without original sin but repeated the sin of her first ancestors even though she had no predisposition to do so” is if possible the most radical of all.If the IC is true, then Mary also had the capacity but chose not to sin. I find that implausible considering that our only example of a sinless human being is Christ himself.
Because Mary’s sinlessness and great holiness is an ancient tradition of the Church, and because I believe in the possibility of Christian perfection.Why do you doubt the immaculate conception but tend to believe that Mary was without sin?
Well, I think in some respects the doctrine of original sin I grew up with is different from the Augustinian one, and that may play a role. You have been around Methodists, so I guess I assumed you were more familiar with the Wesleyan perspective than is the case.If she was subject to original sin, then her human nature would be corrupted and it would be inconceivable (pun intended) that she would not sin. (I suppose that it would make sense to the Orthodox who have a different concept of original sin than us in the West, but…)
I am in no position to judge. But I can think of at least one person (my childhood piano teacher, who is a close friend of the family and whom I’ve known over a period of more than 20 years) whom I have never seen act out of selfishness or pride or anything other than love of God and neighbor. That is my definition of sinlessness–a person whom grace has so transformed that all their actions are supremely motivated by love (in Wesley’s terms this actually goes beyond freedom from sin in the strict sense, because it involves a person’s habitual “tempers” as well as their voluntary actions). She is not perfect–she has made plenty of mistakes (and she drives like a maniac, which some might consider a sin). But as far as I can discern, she has never chosen to disobey God or to act in a manner incompatible with love.Also, from a practical standpoint, have you ever known a person to be sinless?
I think that arguments along the lines of “if X were happening the NT would tell us about it” are weak when they involve details–and this is a detail. The NT does tell us that creation is being renewed in the Incarnation. The holiness of Mary is simply one of the incidental circumstances to this. If a “second fall” had taken place, then you’d think the NT would tell us about it.Of course not, we live in a fallen world. If a sinless woman such as Mary was living in your neighborhood, you would have heard more about it and this miracle would be reflected directly and explicitly in the New Testament (more than just Gabriel’s ambiguous pronouncement).
I grew up in the Methodist Church and worshipped there faithfully for 25 years prior to converting to the Episcopal Church upon marrying an Episcopalian. Unfortunately, none of the UM Churches I attended were very good at teaching Wesleyan concepts, at least apart from free will and a social conscience (and, maybe, small groups). This will sound sad, but I do not remember even hearing of prevenient grace, justifying grace or sanctifying grace until attending an Emmaus weekend (an ecumenical version of Cursillo) ten years after leaving the Methodist Church.Well, I think in some respects the doctrine of original sin I grew up with is different from the Augustinian one, and that may play a role. You have been around Methodists, so I guess I assumed you were more familiar with the Wesleyan perspective than is the case.
I’m not sure I follow your argument here, and you haven’t engaged my point about the “second Fall.” A naturally sinless being (which is what being without original sin would mean) choosing to sin would be an incredibly catastrophic event…
I’ll agree with that. Which means one of two things: (1) Mary was naturally sinless and did not choose to sin or (2) Mary did sin in some small way. I believe that the latter is the more likely explanation.
Implicit in your argument seems to be the assumption that human beings are predisposed to sin apart from original sin itself. That is to say, you seem to find the idea of a person without original sin *not *choosing to sin surprising. Why?..
***Because we have the example of only three persons in that situation and two of these, Adam and Eve, sinned and the other is divine. ***
Original sin is an infection of the will that predisposes us to actual sin, and it is irresistible *except for grace. *Your entire discussion of this issue ignores the grace of God–which seems like a pretty big omission to me. The point of grace is to free us from sin, not simply to forgive our sins. St. Paul says that where sin abounded grace *much more *abounds. That is not the impression you get from much of the Western Augustinian tradition, particularly its Protestant versions (Lutheranism, Calvinism, and the latter’s Baptist offshoots). To say that we sin inevitably (when sin is defined as I defined it above–obviously we will inevitably fall short in some respects) is to say that grace is powerless.
***I don’t think that grace is powerless. It is only be grace that we are saved and sanctified. Unlike Wesley, I don’t believe that we can achieve total sanctification this side of heaven. Everyone sins to some degree, although some of us are bigger sinners than others. Remember that we can sin in our hearts without displaying that sin to anyone other than ourselves and God. ***
I think that arguments along the lines of “if X were happening the NT would tell us about it” are weak when they involve details–and this is a detail. The NT does tell us that creation is being renewed in the Incarnation. The holiness of Mary is simply one of the incidental circumstances to this. If a “second fall” had taken place, then you’d think the NT would tell us about it.
I think that if the “second fall” took place it would be referred to in Scripture. I think the same of a woman living a totally sinless life.
What you are actually saying here is that God created a fatally flawed creature when He created man. Even without the corruption of a fallen nature, you are saying that man could not ever avoid sin. Even in the most perfect, uncorrupt form, man was fatally flawed. That doesn’t say much about God’s abilities.If the IC is true, then Mary also had the capacity but chose not to sin. I find that implausible considering that our only example of a sinless human being is Christ himself.
It is interesting to me that the Eastern Orthodox proclaim that Mary was preserved from falling into sin even though they don’t believe in the Immaculate Conception. The Immaculate Conception says that Mary was preserved from the stain of guilt from original sin, but the Eastern Orthodox say we don’t have any stain of guilt (just the stain of death) from original sin. Because Eastern Orthodox believe that nobody inherits a stain of guilt from Adam’s original sin, there was no need for the doctrine of the Immaculate Conception. Eastern Orthodox believe humans receive an overwhelming propensity to sin, but that Mary was preserved from such sin by God’s grace. So the overwhelming tradition of both East and West claim that Mary was preserved from sin.So that I wouldn’t take the thread in which this statement was written off-topic, I decided to start a new thread:
In all sincerity, why were you stunned? What do you think it says about Mary that all Christians can’t embrace and/or about the Catholic Church?![]()
Interesting point, because I’ve thought about this in the opposite way. I live in a place where people still talk to neighbors and sit around on porches to visit in the summer - we know our neighbors. Of the neighbors that I know, I have only witnessed two or three of them do something that appeared to be an obvious “sin”, and have had a couple more confide in me about things they have done that were sinful. Other than that, if everything were based on what I see or hear about my neighbors, they’d appear sinless.Also, from a practical standpoint, have you ever known a person to be sinless? Of course not, we live in a fallen world. If a sinless woman such as Mary was living in your neighborhood, you would have heard more about it and this miracle would be reflected directly and explicitly in the New Testament (more than just Gabriel’s ambiguous pronouncement).
I don’t believe you are in a minority on this. I didn’t know it until I came to this forum and I even used to attend Mass regularly!Maybe I’m in a minority and this teaching of the Catholic Church is widely known among other Protestants, but it certainly was not known to me.
Why does it bother you that Jesus might have kept Mary from falling into sin? Don’t you hope Jesus keeps you from falling into sin? Don’t we pray for God to keep us from falling into sin? Why do we pray this if we think God can’t do it for us? And if God can do it for us, why couldn’t God have done it for the Virgin Mary?I don’t believe you are in a minority on this. I didn’t know it until I came to this forum and I even used to attend Mass regularly!
It’s totally normal for any protestant to have significant trouble with this. I certianly do.
Hi,Interesting point, because I’ve thought about this in the opposite way. I live in a place where people still talk to neighbors and sit around on porches to visit in the summer - we know our neighbors. Of the neighbors that I know, I have only witnessed two or three of them do something that appeared to be an obvious “sin”, and have had a couple more confide in me about things they have done that were sinful. Other than that, if everything were based on what I see or hear about my neighbors, they’d appear sinless.
Going to my dear Christian mother, I have never once seen or heard anything sinful in her life. My mother does not even say “darn”, she is faithful to the teachings of Christ, she shows amazing love for all those around her, she works hard and suffers long, I have never known her to lie, to steal… to my eyes, my mother appears sinless.
(Of course, I know this cannot be the case, but, do you see my POV)?
Perhaps you experience is with more “colorful” people than mine, but, to me it seems a virtous woman could live up the road, and never commit a sin, and her neighbors would only speak of how kind and loving she was - it would not strike them “oh my gosh, she never sins!”