T
tomberg
Guest
This is almost a silly argument to even be having. The truth of the matter is there is absolutely no internal evidence from the Bible itself that tells us that Mary was to remain a perpetual virgin. There is actually much more evidence from the Bible itself to contradict this assertion. The Protestants have much more convincing arguments with actual textual evidence leaning towards their beliefs. Catholics have to repeatedly explain away clear evidence that Mary did not remain a Virgin, for example the mention in the Gospels themselves and in Paul’s letters about the brothers of Jesus, and the passage where it says “Joseph knew her not until she gave birth.” The textual evidence is far from pointing to Mary being a perpetual Virgin. Yes it can be explained away, but it creates a tortuous, and biased reading. The plain reading is pretty clear. The perpetual Virgin reading can only be superimposed with reference outside of the text itself. There is simply no denying this.
Similarly Jews have repeatedly pointed out that their is absolutely nothing in ancient or modern Jewish tradition that is special or sacred about virginity, except as it relates to marriage. Jews have repeatedly asserted that there is absolutely nothing in Jewish history (And I think they know there own history and traditions better than Christians do) that indicates that there were ever dedicated Temple virgins that were to remain Virgins for life. This is unheard of in Jewish religion, it simply did not occur. So the only evidence that we as Catholics have for this is the book of Proto-James which is not Canon and actually contradicts Canon is numerous places so it is about worthless as a source. We might as well cite The Apocalypse of Peter to inform our understanding about the Resurrection if we are going to go around citing non-canonical books as evidence of Orthodox belief.
We believe this because our tradition claims it as true. That is fine, we have an Old and Ancient tradition that is supposed to supplement what is in the gospels accounts and that is why we believe it. Not all spiritual proofs need be proven, they are a higher truth than actual historical factual truth.
Similarly Jews have repeatedly pointed out that their is absolutely nothing in ancient or modern Jewish tradition that is special or sacred about virginity, except as it relates to marriage. Jews have repeatedly asserted that there is absolutely nothing in Jewish history (And I think they know there own history and traditions better than Christians do) that indicates that there were ever dedicated Temple virgins that were to remain Virgins for life. This is unheard of in Jewish religion, it simply did not occur. So the only evidence that we as Catholics have for this is the book of Proto-James which is not Canon and actually contradicts Canon is numerous places so it is about worthless as a source. We might as well cite The Apocalypse of Peter to inform our understanding about the Resurrection if we are going to go around citing non-canonical books as evidence of Orthodox belief.
We believe this because our tradition claims it as true. That is fine, we have an Old and Ancient tradition that is supposed to supplement what is in the gospels accounts and that is why we believe it. Not all spiritual proofs need be proven, they are a higher truth than actual historical factual truth.