Hi Jon, Another point I would like to make is that these discussions (particularly here, but in many other places in general as well) tend to start from a western point of view, with western assumptions, and it colors the discussion.
For instance, to most eastern Christians grace is not a ‘thing’ to fill one up with (as if I were filling my glass with apple juice here just now). Grace is ‘uncreated’, it is God.
It is not so clear that to be ‘full of grace’ is to be sinless. That too is an assumption. We can accept it as an idea for purposes of discussion, but we cannot assume that is the only explanation.
The corollary to that is that to be sinful is to be graceless, or ‘out of grace’, which to Orthodox implies ‘bereft of God’. I don’t know that such a thing is possible - maybe yes - maybe no. But this makes the point where God filled her with Grace (Himself) open to some completely different possible interpretations than what one normally assumes here at CAF.
St Paul did say ‘where sin increased, grace overflowed all the more’.
But the biggest problem here, as I am sure you have seen before and remember, is the basic assumption of what Original Sin really is. I think Lutherans, Anglicans and Roman Catholics are very close on this all-important point, so close that it is rarely discussed before the arguments about an Immaculate Conception commence.
In this case Orthodox do not see a need for such a dogma, but probably not for the same reasons most non-Roman Catholic westerners do. Orthodox do not see a need for such a dogma because they do not see the First Sin committed by Adam being attributable to anyone else, not contractually nor any other way, and thus not an obstacle to Saint Mary giving birth to Jesus Christ. In fact, any woman potentially could, and even the idea that Saint Mary may have been (or may not have been) preselected for the task does not imply that another woman could not have done so.
For our part, Orthodox see Saint Mary as a very good person of heroic stature, no wonder she was chosen to bear the Son. Most of us wish we could have been so good in our lives, be she stands as an example to us, someone to emulate.
So what about this Orthodox notion of ancestral sin, Adam’s fall and all that?
It’s real alright.
As far as Orthodox are concerned, Adam and Eve are forgiven already long since (depicted in popular iconography with Jesus grasping the two and pulling them out of hell). People innocent of any personal sin are not destined for hell (nor limbo) because of the sin of another person, even of an ancestor, and they are not thereby automatically assumed to be unfit to bear the Incarnate Lord.
So why then do we have baptism?
Baptism is dying with Christ and rising with Him. Dying to an old sinful world and rising to a life in Christ, partaking in the Divine nature. This has strong connections to
Theosis.
This kind of talk seems odd to western Christians, probably even disturbing. If there ever is to be a reconciliation between our churches (Lutheran-Roman Catholic-Orthodox Catholic) this will be an enormous challenge to us all.
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/2/29/Offthecross.jpg