It provides wonderful apologia for his divinity, esp. if you are in efforts to evangelize Jews and Muslims who cannot conceive of the idea of God being incarnated. It allows us to say: see, friend, how divine this being was? Even the womb which contained him was set apart for him, immaculate and pure, and for no other.
Regardless if Mary was pure or not has no bearing in others’ understanding of God becoming man. The belief that God needs someone pure because he cannot be inside someone who is “dirty” touches on Gnosticism where they believe everything in the material world is “dirty” and God cannot and should not come into contact with it.
“Enhance, highlight and nourish” are the words I used.
Same thing, how can anything of a human being enhance God’s divinity? God is unchanging, so regardless of our own state, God is still the same. He is not “enhanced” by whatever we are.
No, but it assists you in offering proof of Jesus’ divinity.
Only if used in the proper context. The current explanation offered by those who adhere to the IC touches more on Gnosticism than true Christian belief.
A Presbyterian who believes Mary sinned and also had other children will be at a very, very vulnerable spot if she is attempting to dialogue with a Jew. All the Jew has to say is, “How could this man be divine when what carried him for 9 months was dirty and defiled by sin? And then it held other human creatures, too! Methinks that the firstborn creature of this sinful Mary was exactly like all the rest of the creatures this sinful womb brought forth into this world!”
So you believe that God can be defiled by sin? This is why the IC does more harm than good, because people think that God who is all pure, all powerful, all holy, can be defiled by sin? That does more damage to the acceptance of the divinity of Christ than if he was born of a sinful harlot. Because anyone will come back and ask the question I just did. How can a God who is all powerful and all holy be defiled by sin? If he can be defiled by sin, then he simply is not God. Darkness never defeats light, a metaphor used often in Scripture.
And the Presbyterian would only be able to say, “Hmmm…”
I can’t speak for Presbyterians, but an Orthodox Christian would be able to answer that, just like I did above.
That’s why I always use the argument that it’s “fitting”, not that it was “necessary”, for, as you correctly point out, God could have used a sinful, dirty, putrid vessel. But it was fitting that he created a pure, undefiled, immaculate vessel to hold the Word Made Flesh.
It wasn’t because it was “fitting”. It wasn’t a reward just because God likes handing out shiny medals out of his whim. Again, this introduces another issue to a God who is arbitrary, a God who is unfair. If he can immaculately conceive one person, why not do it for all of humanity? If He can become human and die for us, why not also immaculately conceive all of us? This makes the IC nothing more than an arbitrary action by God done out of a whim where He bestows something only to a few elect. This then favors the Calvinistic belief of Election.
We believe that the Theotokos isn’t a break in humanity, but rather she is the greatest example. All that has been given to her either has already been given to us or will be given to us. In fact, all of us are called to bear God (Theophorus). Of course the only unique “privilege” is being the Theotokos, but that is more of a metaphysical limitation. We can’t all humanly give birth to God, but we can bear Him in the sense that He lives within us and the divine uncreated light shines within us.
And this is nothing more than an explanation you’ve given for the IC, CTG!
No it is not. As you have said above, the IC was a due privilege given. The Orthodox understanding is that Mary’s preservation from corruption is a result of her cooperation with God’s divine plan, not a precondition to it.
Right. Mary did not “need” to be pure It was “fitting” that she was.
Based on how you described what “fitting” means above, I disagree.
The Torah was viewed by the Jews and the Word of God. Jesus, too, is the Word of God.
The Ark of the Covenant contained, like Mary’s womb, the Word of God. And the Ark was pure, undefiled and immaculate. Not dirty and putrid.
I’ve never seen any Patristic teaching that teaches it this way. Mary being undefiled is the result of Christ whom she bears. To believe that humanity is dirty and putrid again is a gnostic belief, not a Christian one.
What an odd thing to say! As if St. Athanasius’ 57 paragraph treatise is the* summum bonum *of the Church’s theology of the Incarnation.
Is it not? If St. Athanasius’ teachings aren’t consistent with the teaching of other Church Fathers, someone is making stuff up, and therefore in heresy. St. Maximos the Confessor centuries later used St. Athanasius’ teaching to defend his own teaching against monothelitism.
Good thing that the CC does not rely on only one saint’s* apologia* to encapsulate theology for the Incarnation.
So are you saying that different saints have different teachings? That truths differ from saint to saint?