Biblereader,
Correct. However, what you fail to understand it seems is, is what the term “conception” means in this dogma:
Sin can never take effect in a non-rational soul. Consequently, the dogma above is only teaching that at the moment God infused Mary’s body with a
rational soul, she was preserved exempt from all stain of original sin. It says nothing either for or against delayed ensoulment theories.
In other words, before the infusion of the rational soul, Mary was not sanctified, as she didn’t need to be. Prior to her animation with a rational soul, Mary could have been ensouled just as St. Thomas describes, with a non-rational soul and then later with a rational soul. The Catholic Church has left such speculations to the field of free opinion, as this is a philosophical matter having nothing to do with Catholic faith or morals. If it is a free opinion now, the Church certainly cannot bind St.Thomas to a more strict standard that was even more speculative during his day.
So, the doctrine of the Immaculate Conception, which was also a matter of free opinion during St. Thomas’ day, affirms nothing more or nothing less than: at the first moment of her animation
with a rational soul] she was preserved from all stain of original sin. Moreover, this sanctification is to be understood to have occurred as described by Duns Scotus (d. 1308) (in III Sent., dist. iii, in both commentaries): “***the sanctification after animation – sanctificatio post animationem – demanded that it should follow in the order of nature (naturae) not of time (temporis)” ***(ibid.)
So, it is Catholic theology that Mary was sanctified
post animationem (after animation) in the order of nature, but not in the order of time.
Catholics normally do not dig that deep into Catholic theology, unless they have to because some pesky professor of religious studies makes them dig that deep.
So, the “moment in time” in which the rational soul is infused is as of yet a free philosophical opinion according to the Catholic Church.
What I find striking in your argument is that you give me your mere opinion, whereas I quote from theological source material and magisterial texts on the matter.
You ought to have suspected your understanding as incorrect given its contradiction with what the ***Congregation for the Doctrine of Faith ***affirmed in
1974: "
the moment when the spiritual soul is infused… is a philosophical problem from which our moral affirmation remains independent"
As for proofs of God’s existence, I’ll stick with the clear teaching of the Church on the matter. If you have more than your opinion as to why the Church has erred these past 2000 years in this regard, please share it with us.
If you’d like to start another thread refuting the Catholic Church’s teaching that “proofs for the existence of God” do exist, then be my guest. I recommend you stay away from building the strawman of Catholic teaching that you seem to want to build, simply for the purposes of knocking it down. Stick instead to the Catechism’s understanding of what “proofs” are. We can know by reason alone that God exists. There’s no such pretense that we can know everything about God by reason alone. Nobody, not even Aquinas, has claimed such a thing.