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I was answering the question to the best of my ability from the teaching and experience of being an American Evangelical.Are you sure, brother?
It is my understanding that grace generally means favor. What we typically mean is that Mary was given special status because she was chosen by God.What does favor mean in this context? Is favor used more or is it grace?
How do you mean? I’ve never seen that, but I may be misunderstanding youSouthern Baptists will outright downplay the wedding at Cana.
“Let those, therefore, who deny that the Son is by nature from the Father and proper to his essence deny also that he took true human flesh from the ever-virgin Mary" - Saint Athanasius(Discourses Against the Arians 2:70 [A.D. 360]).As for your question to me. I haven’t seen anything (Biblical or historical) that would make me think any different.
I’m sure there are saints who didn’t have a particularly strong Marian devotion.There is no Saint in Heaven that was not piously devoted to Our Blessed Mother.
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I’m sure there are saints who didn’t have a particularly strong Marian devotion.There is no Saint in Heaven that was not piously devoted to Our Blessed Mother.
I’m sure there are many people in Heaven (not formally canonized Saints) who had no Marian devotion at all, unless you believe every non-Catholic is in hell.
There is not one Saint, that we know of, that was not piously devoted to Our Blessed Mother.I didn’t say there weren’t saints who placed a very heavy emphasis on Mary. Certainly, you can find plenty of examples.
My understanding (not an expert) is that Calvin was ambivalent about it, but other Reformed theologians like Zwingli and Heinrich Bullinger did believe in it.I believe all the original Protestant Reformers – Luther, Calvin, etc. – accepted Mary’s perpetual virginity.
“He turns, in September 1522, to a lyrical defense of the perpetual virginity of the mother of Christ . . . To deny that Mary remained ‘inviolata’ before, during and after the birth of her Son, was to doubt the omnipotence of God . . . and it was right and profitable to repeat the angelic greeting - not prayer - ‘Hail Mary’ . . . God esteemed Mary above all creatures, including the saints and angels - it was her purity, innocence and invincible faith that mankind must follow. Prayer, however, must be . . . to God alone . . .catholic1seeks:![]()
My understanding (not an expert) is that Calvin was ambivalent about it, but other Reformed theologians like Zwingli and Heinrich Bullinger did believe in it.I believe all the original Protestant Reformers – Luther, Calvin, etc. – accepted Mary’s perpetual virginity.