CentralFLJames:
You have one standard? No, you have 2 standards. You have a Catholic Bible or a bible derived from Catholic tradition and you have a private interpretation. That is not an objective standard that is an opinion. So now you have measured yourself and found yourself to be lacking since you admit that you are fallable and axiomatically expressing error here.
What part of Luke 1:28 – “Hail Mary, full of grace, the Lord is with you” do you not understand? If a vessel is full of something good it is elementary logic to take that to mean there is no room for sin.
James, Mary’s name isn’t in that specific verse (see the translation of your own
Catholic Douay-Rheims Bible), and there’s nothing in the Greek text to indicate a “filling” of grace, or anything else.
The literal translation of
kecharitomene is, [the]** one being favored/graced,** so it is a substantive, and functions as both a verb, and a noun in the passage.
Nothing about
full of anything in the passage.
CentralFLJames:
QED
You are wrong and are just promoting the non-bliblical fundamentalist tradition of being anti-Catholic and obstinate in your sins and lack of faith in scripture. There is not one single verse in scripture that contradicts The Catholic Church simply because scripture is Catholic and its impossible for The Catholic Church to be non-biblical in its teaching and dogma.
If you read the scripture carefully, James, you will find myriad warnings of false teaching creeping in.
CentralFLJames:
It’s time to sign up for rudimentary Catholicism class since its clear your logic and your private interpretation of scripture and your erroneous tradition and private opinion is not going to save you.
Went to Catholic school, and served as an altar boy,
here, many years ago, and for many years.
As a reminder, Ott states that, “…individual Greek Fathers (Origen, Basil, John Chrysostom, Cyril of Alexandria) taught that Mary suffered from venial personal faults, such as ambition and vanity…” (
Fundamentals of Catholic Dogma (Rockford: Ill, Tan Books, 1974). 203 (are ambition and vanity sins?). The
Catholic Encyclopedia states that as well, all the while attributing error to those Fathers who taught that. Ott also states, “Neither the Greek nor the Latin Fathers explicitly teach the Immaculate Conception of Mary,” (Ibid, 203).
Schaff also mentions the different historical oppositions and opinions concerning the sinlessness and IC of Mary.