M
mardukm
Guest
Dear brother Ignatios,
Ignatios:
Nor is there any indication, as brother Ignatios wrongly stated, that St. Mary was sanctified long before she came to be. Rather, St. Palamas simply states that Mary was chosen long before her conception.
What St. Palamas teaches is this:

Whether you call it “discourse” or “sermon,” I should hope that he was not teaching anything heterodox. So what exactly is your point?
Blessings
Forgive me, brothers Ghosty, Dvdjs, and Ignatios, but there is a problem with his entire discussion. Namely, you are all basing your conception on Fr. Gillet’s own interpretation of St. Palamas’ belief. But his Sermon does not actually contain any notion that there was a progressive sanctification in St. Mary’s lineage that culminated in the perfect creature named Mary. What he describes is merely the holy lineage of Mary, or, more specifically, he points out that Mary’s lineage can be traced through a long line of persons chosen by God for their holiness to be the descendants of Mary.The approach (mechanism) is what makes the diffrence between the I.C. of the RCC and the Mariology discourse of Saint Palamas.
The I.C. of the RCC:
In the Constitution Ineffabilis Deus of 8 December, 1854, Pius IX pronounced and defined that the Blessed Virgin Mary “in **the first instance **of her conception, by a singular privilege and grace granted by God, in view of the merits of Jesus Christ, the Saviour of the human race, was preserved exempt from all stain of original sin.”
Saint Palamas beleieved not in:
-The idea of the I.C. because he beleived that Mary was sanctified long before the “primus instans conceptionis“.
Vs.
The RCC I.C.:
-pronounced and defined that the Blessed Virgin Mary "in the first instance of her conception
St. Palamas: -That progressively purified all Mary’s ancestors, one after the other and each to a greater degree than his predecessor so that at the end, eis telos, Mary was able to grow, from a completely purified root, like a spotless stem “on the limits between created and uncreated”.
Vs.
The RCC I.C.:
-by a singular privilege and grace granted by God
Nor is there any indication, as brother Ignatios wrongly stated, that St. Mary was sanctified long before she came to be. Rather, St. Palamas simply states that Mary was chosen long before her conception.
What St. Palamas teaches is this:
- It was necessary for Jesus to come from flesh that was “both new and ours.”
- God chose the woman who would fulfill this requirement from the beginning.
- God had a plan to produce this woman and directed her ancestry through a line of holy persons.
- “When the chosen time had come,” he chose the two finest in the line of David, Sts. Joachim and Hannah. Their prayers bore fruit, and she whose flesh was “both new and ours” was conceived (in the words of St. Andrew of Crete, she was “the Immaculate fruition,” immaculate not in virtue of her manner of conception, but in the holiness of her being). From the beginning of her existence in St. Hannah’s womb, she is called the “all-virtuous child” by St. Palamas.
Brother Dvdjs is correct. The dogma does not speak about any kind of process or manner through which the IC came about. It doesn’t dogmatize the “how” of the matter. It just states that this is what God did. Your quotation from Pope Alexander doesn’t explain any kind of method or process. It is simply a statement that the IC refers to her spiritual conception (that statement from Pope Alexander is actually in the context of condemning the idea that she did not have a natural physical conception).Are you talking about this:
… Hence the words of one of our predecessors, Alexander VII, who authoritatively and decisively declared the mind of the Church: "Concerning the most Blessed Virgin Mary, Mother of God, ancient indeed is that devotion of the faithful based on the belief that her soul, in the first instant of its creation and in the first instant of the soul’s infusion into the body,
“Discourse” is a common term for “Sermon.” Perhaps you’ve heard or read of Jesus’ Sermon on the Mount referred to as His “Discourses?” I would think that this would have been obvious, since this “Discourse on the Entry into the Temple” was given by St. Gregory Palamas to his congregation on that Feast Day.Marduk you are wrong as most of the times, only this time from the get-go.
your qoute of St Palamas was not a Teaching, it was a “Discourse”
Whether you call it “discourse” or “sermon,” I should hope that he was not teaching anything heterodox. So what exactly is your point?
Blessings