J
JustaServant
Guest
Fixed it for you.Anger? Does this cute face look like the face of anger?![]()
Fixed it for you.Anger? Does this cute face look like the face of anger?![]()
The work of salvation didn’t take place until the cross of Christ. Not prior to it. Only ONE MAN could accomplish it, only ONE Man “finished” it. Neither Abraham, Moses or Mary had anything to do with it. Salvation rested on Christ and His sacrificial work alone, and the aforementioned are merely beneficiaries of it - “by grace through faith” - not participants of it. If Jesus would have ascended back to heaven prior to the cross there would have been no salvation: IOW, no forgiveness of sins; no expiation; no justification; no reconciliation; no sanctification; no propitiation; no glorification. All would have remained as it was since the fall of Adam. ALL, to this day, including Mary, will have died in their sins - but for one Man, and Him alone.Just like, all salvation rested on the consent of Abraham, or Moses, or any other pivotal person in salvation history.
You are thinking temporally, not eternally. The salvific work of the Cross is an eternal event that continues in the Liturgy, as evidenced in RevelationThe work of salvation didn’t take place until the cross of Christ. Not prior to it. Only ONE MAN could accomplish it, only ONE Man “finished” it. Neither Abraham, Moses or Mary had anything to do with it. Salvation rested on Christ and His sacrificial work alone, and the aforementioned are merely beneficiaries of it - “by grace through faith” - not participants of it. If Jesus would have ascended back to heaven prior to the cross there would have been no salvation: IOW, no forgiveness of sins; no expiation; no justification; no reconciliation; no sanctification; no propitiation; no glorification. All would have remained as it was since the fall of Adam. ALL, to this day, including Mary, will have died in their sins - but for one Man, and Him alone.
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I see you’re experienced with tampering with the text in order to make it say what you want.Fixed it for you.
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“It is finished.” You just don’t believe it.You are thinking temporally, not eternally. The salvific work of the Cross is an eternal event that continues in the Liturgy, as evidenced in Revelation
Why would say such a mean thing as this?“It is finished.” You just don’t believe it.
From Scott Hahn’s talk on The 4th Cup“It is finished.” You just don’t believe it.
There are some problems with your interpretation. What is “it” referring to? It cannot be the salvifvic work, because we are not saved by His death, but his resurrection. As the Apostle said, “if Christ has not been raised, then our preaching is in vain and your faith is in vain.” (1 Corinthians 15:14). Could “it” be referring to His earthly ministry? No, because he spent forty days catechizing the Eleven be fore He ascended into heaven. I propose “it” refers to the Jewish passover liturgy. As our Great High Priest, He was offering Himself as a sacrifice as the spotless Lamb. We must also remember that “It is finished” only appears in John’s Gospel, a Gospel that has liturgy as one of its themes. “It” is the Passover Liturgy which was started the night before. When he took the wine from the hyssop (this in itself has liturgical connotations), he drank from the 4th cup, completing the liturgy. At any rate if “it is finished” refers to the sacrifice, it makes it temporal, rather than eternal, and any sins after calvary would not be washed away, plus Revelation 4 makes no sense if not viewed as heavenly liturgy.“It is finished.” You just don’t believe it.
I hope you don’t think I was trying to say I was agreeing with those heresies because they are just that , false teachings.3:23 cannot be considered absolute because Jesus was not God who simply appeared as a man (as the Gnostics believe), neither were his Human and Divine natures untied extrinsically (as Nestroians hold) but he his both fully God and fully man. Romans 3:23 does not say “all except Jesus,” therefore “all” means" “as a general principle but not absolutely all.” This does not mean it is common, for the Church also teaches that the only way this is possible is through spechial divine graces.
I’m actually much less concerned about the degree of open/close-mindedness than truthfulness.I for one dislike your close-mindedness.
Sorry, I can’t agree that dialog works in the way you suggest. Not all explanations are turthful so I cannot and must not accept all explanations. But I do hope that I present what I have to say in a civil manner.It is rude to come on a Catholic website, accuse us of heresy, and reject any and all explanations. THat is not how dialog works,
I see you’re experienced with tampering with the text in order to make it say what you want.Yup “you” fixed it.
Nothing like calling people you don’t know from Adam liars.I’m actually much less concerned about the degree of open/close-mindedness than truthfulness.
Sorry, I can’t agree that dialog works in the way you suggest. Not all explanations are turthful so I cannot and must not accept all explanations. But I do hope that I present what I have to say in a civil manner.
I just want to clarify that I have nothing but respect for Mary and for the role that she was used in while here on earth. However, I truly believe that she is being elevated above the status of what any human being should be. There is no room or value for devotion to any human being or angel in heaven or earth, for:Jesus is God, ergo Mary is the mother of God. Do you say that your mother is just the mother of your body? Of course not. Mary was the Mother of Jesus, who had a human nature and a divine nature united intrinsically (hypostatic union).
ElaborateFor the sake of our souls, it needs to be wholly to God.
You have a problem with false dichotomies.I just want to clarify that I have nothing but respect for Mary and for the role that she was used in while here on earth. However, I truly believe that she is being elevated above the status of what any human being should be. There is no room or value for devotion to any human being or angel in heaven or earth, for:
“9 Therefore God also has highly exalted Him and given Him the name which is above every name, 10 that at the name of Jesus every knee should bow, of those in heaven, and of those on earth, and of those under the earth, 11 and that every tongue should confess that Jesus Christ is Lord, to the glory of God the Father.” From Philippians 2
Jesus Christ is vastly superior over every creation and that includes the most revered saints, including Mary. Why should one minute of devotion be expended to someone less than Christ? Each of us needs to decide where our allegiance is - is it to God or His creation? For the sake of our souls, it needs to be wholly to God.
I think another problem she has is that - as she expressed it - Mary was “used” by God. All the other problems follow from that.You have a problem with false dichotomies.
First, no Catholic considers Mary to be ‘equivalent’ to Christ. Mary is a creature. Christ is Creator.
Second, do you love your parents? Why? Why spend one minute of ‘devotion’ to mere human beings instead of Christ?
Well, you’ll say, in loving my parents (as the commandments tell us to do), I am showing my devotion to Christ.
So ‘showing devotion’ (to a parent, a spouse, a child) is not ‘taking away’ from Christ.
Oh, my father (rest his soul) has been gone over 40 years now. He hasn’t stopped being my father though, and I haven’t stopped loving and respecting him as my father. So those in heaven are still ‘part of the human family’.
By my still retaining love and devotion to my dear departed dad, am I somehow ‘taking away’ from the devotion I give to God? Not hardly.
You remind me of some people I’ve known in life who feel that a person has a ‘finite’ capacity for love, and that if, for example, their spouse has a child, that the ‘love’ the spouse gives the child is ‘taking away’ from the ‘fund of love’ that the deluded spouse thinks is exclusively’ his.’ They can’t seem to grasp that one can have ‘infinite’ love and that with the addition of a child, instead of ‘taking away’ from the love already there, the person’s capacity for love actually increases to embrace that child or further children.
We have an infinite love for Christ, but along ‘with’ that infinite love for Him we can also have a ‘lesser’ love for our family, our friends, our fellow humans. . . including Mary and the saints. By loving them fully we ‘increase’ our capacity to love Christ to the HIGHEST level.
Dittoes!Tantum ergo, what a great explanation of our capacity for love.
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As I told Moondweller, you don’t have to bring Mary down to elevate Jesus. Jesus is God. He can’t get any higher…I just want to clarify that I have nothing but respect for Mary and for the role that she was used in while here on earth. However, I truly believe that she is being elevated above the status of what any human being should be. There is no room or value for devotion to any human being or angel in heaven or earth, for:
“9 Therefore God also has highly exalted Him and given Him the name which is above every name, 10 that at the name of Jesus every knee should bow, of those in heaven, and of those on earth, and of those under the earth, 11 and that every tongue should confess that Jesus Christ is Lord, to the glory of God the Father.” From Philippians 2
Jesus Christ is vastly superior over every creation and that includes the most revered saints, including Mary. Why should one minute of devotion be expended to someone less than Christ? Each of us needs to decide where our allegiance is - is it to God or His creation? For the sake of our souls, it needs to be wholly to God.