M
Marybeloved
Guest
Samuel,
Sorry if I appeared to be talking down to you, I get a gut reaction whenever I witness some kind of denigration of her by non-catholic Christians…force of habit? Anyway, I just wanted to clarify catholic view of Mary.
Yes, Our Lady is holy and filled with every virtue. To us, no one can be as Christ-like as she, which is what we are all destined to be- Christ-like or saint. Catholic theology places her above the highest Angels that are closest to God! The Church says of her Holiness that it is so great that under God (here we always include Christ’s humanity as well because Christ is God)…under God, none greater can be imagined. Basically, if the individual stars in the universe represented saints, Mary would be several galaxies. So yes, you’re right- She was not God, but neither was she ordinary.
What you’re describing is Our Lady suffering, But her suffering was tainted not by the slightest selfish motive. She suffered solely for pure love of Christ- He was her love, her life, her everything and so his slightest suffering caused her to suffer. But about her expecting worldly ambitions? I don’t believe so. She knew Jesus, had raised him, she was in constant prayer- What Mary had was total faith in darkness, akin to Abraham- A faith that expects nothing, desires nothing, a faith that simply obeys- Mary knew that no one knows the ways of YHWH, no one knows his mind, and she always knew (having been trained well by Christ perplexing her in his childhood) that only God knows the plan, her part is to obey and remain faithful- And that was her mind, not a mind filled with ideas and expectations of kingly glory- She knew that Jesus’ life had never fit into earthly greatness- She simply watched what God did and obeyed perfectly.
Peace.
Sorry if I appeared to be talking down to you, I get a gut reaction whenever I witness some kind of denigration of her by non-catholic Christians…force of habit? Anyway, I just wanted to clarify catholic view of Mary.
Yes, Our Lady is holy and filled with every virtue. To us, no one can be as Christ-like as she, which is what we are all destined to be- Christ-like or saint. Catholic theology places her above the highest Angels that are closest to God! The Church says of her Holiness that it is so great that under God (here we always include Christ’s humanity as well because Christ is God)…under God, none greater can be imagined. Basically, if the individual stars in the universe represented saints, Mary would be several galaxies. So yes, you’re right- She was not God, but neither was she ordinary.
What you’re describing is Our Lady suffering, But her suffering was tainted not by the slightest selfish motive. She suffered solely for pure love of Christ- He was her love, her life, her everything and so his slightest suffering caused her to suffer. But about her expecting worldly ambitions? I don’t believe so. She knew Jesus, had raised him, she was in constant prayer- What Mary had was total faith in darkness, akin to Abraham- A faith that expects nothing, desires nothing, a faith that simply obeys- Mary knew that no one knows the ways of YHWH, no one knows his mind, and she always knew (having been trained well by Christ perplexing her in his childhood) that only God knows the plan, her part is to obey and remain faithful- And that was her mind, not a mind filled with ideas and expectations of kingly glory- She knew that Jesus’ life had never fit into earthly greatness- She simply watched what God did and obeyed perfectly.
Peace.