V
Vico
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brb3,
Did you know that the Franciscans and the Dominicans debated the issue for hundreds of years until the Holy Father said enough!, under pain of excommunication?
The faith of the Immaculate Conception was expressed in the 1661 A.D. Apostolic Constitution Sollicitudo Omnium Ecclesiarum of Pope Alexander VII. But there has been additional commentary and so the dogma includes:
2. The proclamation of the dogma of the Immaculate Conception expresses the essential datum of faith. Pope Alexander VII, in the Bull Sollicitudo of 1661, spoke of the preservation of Mary’s soul “in its creation and infusion into the body” (DS 2017). Pius IX’s definition, however, prescinds from all explanations about how the soul is infused into the body and attributes to the person of Mary, at the first moment of her conception, the fact of her being preserved from every stain of original sin.
The freedom “from every stain of original sin” entails as a positive consequence the total freedom from all sin as well as the proclamation of Mary’s perfect holiness, a doctrine to which the dogmatic definition makes a fundamental contribution. In fact, the negative formulation of the Marian privilege, which resulted from the earlier controversies about original sin that arose in the West, must always be complemented by the positive expression of Mary’s holiness more explicitly stressed in the Eastern tradition.
Pius IX’s definition refers only to the freedom from original sin and does not explicitly include the freedom from concupiscence. Nevertheless, Mary’s complete preservation from every stain of sin also has as a consequence her freedom from concupiscence, a disordered tendency which, according to the Council of Trent, comes from sin and inclines to sin (DS 1515).
The Virgin Mother received the singular grace of being immaculately conceived “in view of the merits of Jesus Christ, Saviour of the human race”, that is, of his universal redeeming action.
The text of the dogmatic definition does not expressly declare that Mary was redeemed, but the same Bull Ineffabilis states elsewhere that “she was redeemed in the most sublime way”. This is the extraordinary truth: Christ was the redeemer of his Mother and carried out his redemptive action in her “in the most perfect way” (Fulgens corona, AAS 45 [1953], 581), from the first moment of her existence. The Second Vatican Council proclaimed that the Church “admires and exalts in Mary the most excellent fruit of the Redemption” (Sacrosanctum Concilium, n. 103).
vatican.va/holy_father/john_paul_ii/audiences/1996/documents/hf_jp-ii_aud_19960612_it.html
catholicculture.org/culture/library/view.cfm?recnum=5646
The Dominicans followed St. Thomas Aquinas that sanctification of the Blessed Virgin cannot be before animation because it is 1) the cleansing from stain of original sin, and 2) sin cannot be taken away except by grace for the rational creature alone. So there can be no sanctification before the infusion of the rational soul.
The Franciscans followed Duns Scotus that sanctification after animation must follow in the order of nature rather than of time so the redemption of the Blessed Virgin was through preservation from all sin.
Did you know that the Franciscans and the Dominicans debated the issue for hundreds of years until the Holy Father said enough!, under pain of excommunication?
The faith of the Immaculate Conception was expressed in the 1661 A.D. Apostolic Constitution Sollicitudo Omnium Ecclesiarum of Pope Alexander VII. But there has been additional commentary and so the dogma includes:
- freedom from the stain of original sin,
- freedom from concupiscence, and
- is a singular privilege which was never granted to another person.
2. The proclamation of the dogma of the Immaculate Conception expresses the essential datum of faith. Pope Alexander VII, in the Bull Sollicitudo of 1661, spoke of the preservation of Mary’s soul “in its creation and infusion into the body” (DS 2017). Pius IX’s definition, however, prescinds from all explanations about how the soul is infused into the body and attributes to the person of Mary, at the first moment of her conception, the fact of her being preserved from every stain of original sin.
The freedom “from every stain of original sin” entails as a positive consequence the total freedom from all sin as well as the proclamation of Mary’s perfect holiness, a doctrine to which the dogmatic definition makes a fundamental contribution. In fact, the negative formulation of the Marian privilege, which resulted from the earlier controversies about original sin that arose in the West, must always be complemented by the positive expression of Mary’s holiness more explicitly stressed in the Eastern tradition.
Pius IX’s definition refers only to the freedom from original sin and does not explicitly include the freedom from concupiscence. Nevertheless, Mary’s complete preservation from every stain of sin also has as a consequence her freedom from concupiscence, a disordered tendency which, according to the Council of Trent, comes from sin and inclines to sin (DS 1515).
- Granted “by a singular grace and privilege of almighty God”, this preservation from original sin is an absolutely gratuitous divine favour, which Mary received at the first moment of her existence.
The Virgin Mother received the singular grace of being immaculately conceived “in view of the merits of Jesus Christ, Saviour of the human race”, that is, of his universal redeeming action.
The text of the dogmatic definition does not expressly declare that Mary was redeemed, but the same Bull Ineffabilis states elsewhere that “she was redeemed in the most sublime way”. This is the extraordinary truth: Christ was the redeemer of his Mother and carried out his redemptive action in her “in the most perfect way” (Fulgens corona, AAS 45 [1953], 581), from the first moment of her existence. The Second Vatican Council proclaimed that the Church “admires and exalts in Mary the most excellent fruit of the Redemption” (Sacrosanctum Concilium, n. 103).
vatican.va/holy_father/john_paul_ii/audiences/1996/documents/hf_jp-ii_aud_19960612_it.html
catholicculture.org/culture/library/view.cfm?recnum=5646
The Dominicans followed St. Thomas Aquinas that sanctification of the Blessed Virgin cannot be before animation because it is 1) the cleansing from stain of original sin, and 2) sin cannot be taken away except by grace for the rational creature alone. So there can be no sanctification before the infusion of the rational soul.
The Franciscans followed Duns Scotus that sanctification after animation must follow in the order of nature rather than of time so the redemption of the Blessed Virgin was through preservation from all sin.