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However, to say that Jesus birth violated Mary's virginity would contradict Holy Scripture. "a virgin shall conceive and bear a son". Mary had a virgin conception and birth of Jesus Christ according to Holy Scripture which was prophecied and is miraculous.Teaching that Mary retained the tokens of her virginity throughout the birth of Jesus does not conflict with any doctrine of scripture.
What causes you to think of Zwingli. He was one of the reformers, prominent in Switzerland.Originally posted by Brother Adam:
DHK,
You really believe those verses apply to the traditions and writings of Ulrich Zwingli? You may have never heard of him, but you follow his teachings and interpretations of the Bible. He pioneered the "symbolic baptism". You know, the one that rips baptism right out of the context of the New Covenant and divine sonship of Christ, and our adoption as sons of God.
If your interested I can take you right through the covenants of the Bible and the family of God. Or we can do an inductive Bible study on Hebrews.
History of the BaptistsThe utmost that can be said in the present state of historical research is that a moral certainty exists of a connection between the Swiss Anabaptists and their Waldensian and Petrobrusian predecessors, sustained by many significant facts, but not absolutely proved by historical evidence. Those who maintain that the Anabaptists originated with the Reformation have some difficult problems to solve, among others the rapidity with which the new leaven spread, and the wide territory that the Anabaptists so soon covered. It is common to regard them as an insignificant handful of fanatics, but abundant documentary proofs exist to show that they were numerous, widespread, and indefatigable; that their chief men were not inferior in learning and eloquence to any of the reformers; that their teachings were scriptural, consistent, and moderate, except where persecution produced the usual result of enthusiasm and vagary.
Though the Anabaptist churches appear suddenly in the records of the time, contemporaneously with the Zwinglian Reformation, their roots are to be sought farther back.
The leader in this reformation was Ulric Zwingli, born in 1484, at Wildhaus, in the canton of St. Gall, educated at the University of Vienna, a teacher at Basel and then pastor at Glarus in igo6, later at Einsiedeln, and finally at Zurich. He was during his earlier priesthood unchaste and godless, like many of the clergy, but he was led to the study of the Greek Testament, and God’s grace touched his heart and made a new man of him. His preaching became noted for spiritual power and eloquence. As in Luther’s case, he was first brought into prominence by opposition to the sale of indulgences. One Samson, a worthy companion to the infamous Tetzel, came to Switzerland hoping to conduct a brisk traffic in indulgences, and was roundly rebuked by Zwingli: "Jesus Christ, the Son of God, has said, ‘Come unto me all ye that labor and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest.’ Is it not, then, most presumptuous folly and senseless temerity to declare on the contrary— Buy letters of indulgence, hasten to Rome, give to the monks, sacrifice to the priests, and if thou doest these things I absolve thee from thy sins?’ Jesus Christ is the only oblation, the only sacrifice, the only way.
However, to say that Jesus birth violated Mary's virginity would contradict Holy Scripture. "a virgin shall conceive and bear a son". Mary had a virgin conception and birth of Jesus Christ according to Holy Scripture which was prophecied and is miraculous. </font>[/QUOTE]Agreed. I don't believe anyone on this thread has said that Jesus' birth violated Mary's virginity. However, if you equate maintaining the tokens of virginity with maintaining virginity itself, then wouldn't that require that all tokens be maintained? I don't understand how the RCC can say that the closed womb is not necessary but that other barrier(s) are necessary.Originally posted by Kathryn:
</font><blockquote>quote:</font><hr /> Teaching that Mary retained the tokens of her virginity throughout the birth of Jesus does not conflict with any doctrine of scripture.
The RCC has strayed from the teachings of the church fathers (Aquinas, Augustine). Of course, the fathers can err. But at least the fathers are consistent in upholding the principle of Mary's physical virginity.Originally posted by Kathryn:
There is no Catholic Church dogma that Mary's womb had to have been closed. Mary's virginity was not violated, but sanctified by the word of God. She was a virgin before the birth and after, just as Holy Scripture prophecied. "a virgin shall conceive and bear a son".
You say this is Catholic dogma and is the same as Clauso Utero, and ask:was Jesus born in a miraculous way by passing through Mary's intact abdomen?
There is nothing in Holy Scripture that Jesus passed through Mary's intact abdomen. Mary must bear him and be a virgin according to prophecy.Could you explain how passing "through the barriers of nature without injuring them" and "penetrated another body after the manner of spirits" differs from "Clauso Utero"?
Use your head here Adam. The Reformation was anything but political. It was religious in nature. The Reformation, as its name says was a movement to reform the Catholic Church--a religion that was and is heretical. The reformers thought that they could correct these heresies from within the church, so they didn't leave. Instead they preached against the church heresies from within church, and were themselves declared heretics and cast out, burned alive, martyred, etc. Politics? Church politics--maybe.Originally posted by Brother Adam:
As your quote points out,
"The leader in this reformation was Ulric Zwingli"
Zwingli founded an interpretive movement. The quote also points out something else important: Splits usually start on political grounds.
Mariolotry, purgatory, the sacrifice of the Mass, confession of sins to a priest, transubstantiation, baptismal regeneration
Then they should stop practicing it.Mariolotry is a damnable heresy, as confirmed by the Catholic Church.
A Muslim and a Buddhist might differ on what it is too. You also might differ with me on the color of black and white, or green and blue. That doesn't matter, and neither do your opinions. We have but one standard. Our standard is the Word of God--the Bible. It is not the Catholic Church, not the Magesterium, not the Pope, not Oral Tradtion, not any other authority. It is the Bible. The doctrine of purgatory is not found in the Bible. It is a damnable heresy. I will challenge you or any other Catholic (as I have in the past) to prove purgatory using the Scriptures alone. Don't just post Scriptures that might explain the possibility. I have seen that already. Explain using the Scriptures the existence of Purgatory with a proper exegesis of Scripture.Your understanding of purgatory would probably be "damnable", thankfully the Church differs on what it is
1 Timothy 2:5 For there is one God, and one mediator between God and men, the man Christ Jesus;, confession and the divine intercession Jesus offers through the New Covenant are two different things,
Are you putting words in my mouth or what? I called it for what it is. It is "the sacrifice of the mass." That is the term that all use--Catholics and non-Catholics alike.the mass is not a re-sacrifice,
Baptismal regeneration can be understood for the heresy for what it is, and always has been--that baptism is part of your salvation, and without it you cannot be saved. I debated this with Catholic Convert and others. I know what the Catholic Church teaches. "Except a man be born again he cannot enter into the kingdom of God." Ask any Catholic--to be born again is to baptized under Catholic theology. That is serious heresy.and baptismal regeneration cannot be understood in the business atmosphere of a Baptist Church, but the covenant theology Jesus lived and taught.
You say this is Catholic dogma and is the same as Clauso Utero, and ask:Originally posted by Kathryn:
In describing Clauso Utero you say:
</font><blockquote>quote:</font><hr /> was Jesus born in a miraculous way by passing through Mary's intact abdomen?
There is nothing in Holy Scripture that Jesus passed through Mary's intact abdomen. Mary must bear him and be a virgin according to prophecy.</font>[/QUOTE]You're a better judge of RCC dogma than I. I was giving my understanding of classic "Clauso Utero" from the writings of the fathers. I thought that coincided with RCC dogma. I was wrong. I apologize.Could you explain how passing "through the barriers of nature without injuring them" and "penetrated another body after the manner of spirits" differs from "Clauso Utero"?
To say that Jesus Christ passed through the barriers of nature without injuring them does not violate Holy Scripture. Remember, a virgin will conceive and bear a son. She gives birth. She has a virgin birth. Jesus Christ passed through the birth canal without violating Mary's virginity. Her uterus and hymen could have been open just enough for the light of the world to pass through without violating her virginity and still fulfill Holy Scripture.
The RCC view is not all that mystical. Once you opine that the tokens of Mary's virginity did not remain completely intact during the birth of Jesus, the differences between RC and Baptist views become quantitative rather than qualitative (e.g., How many centimeters did Mary dilate?).Originally posted by Christ4Kildare:
As usual I think we have become bogged down in semantics and wandered off into this mystical view of the virgin birth.
I believe the teachings of the RCC are topical because they are based on scripture and/or church fathers. Do you not agree?Was Jesus born in the normal way by passing through Mary's birth canal? Or, was Jesus born in a miraculous way by passing through Mary's intact abdomen? Please provide supporting evidence for your opinion from scripture and/or church fathers.
The phrase "as it is believed" indicates that "Clauso Utero" was a commonly held opinion at the time (1580). The writers of the Formula do not raise "Clauso Utero" to the level of doctrine; however, they do not reject it either.the incomprehensible, spiritual mode, according to which He neither occupies nor vacates space, but penetrates all creatures wherever He pleases [according to His most free will]; as, to make an imperfect comparison, my sight penetrates and is in air, light, or water, and does not occupy or vacate space; as a sound or tone penetrates and is in air or water or board and wall, and also does not occupy or vacate space; likewise, as light and heat penetrate and are in air, water, glass, crystal, and the like, and also do not vacate or occupy space; and much more of the like [many comparisons of this matter could be adduced]. This mode He used when He rose from the closed [and sealed] sepulcher, and passed through the closed door [to His disciples], and in the bread and wine in the Holy Supper, and, as it is believed, when He was born of His mother Formula of Concord, Solid Declaration, Art. VII
The Catholic Church does not opine that the tokens of Mary’s virginity did not remain completely intact during the birth of Jesus . They did remain completely intact. It was a virgin birth.The RCC view is not all that mystical. Once you opine that the tokens of Mary's virginity did not remain completely intact during the birth of Jesus, the differences between RC and Baptist views become quantitative rather than qualitative (e.g., How many centimeters did Mary dilate?).
There is nothing here about Jesus exiting via a closed abdomen. You originally asked if Jesus left the womb via a closed abdomen and not the birth canal. “Was Jesus born in the normal way by passing through Mary's birth canal? Or, was Jesus born in a miraculous way by passing through Mary's intact abdomen?” There is nothing here about passing through an “intact abdomen”.the incomprehensible, spiritual mode, according to which He neither occupies nor vacates space, but penetrates all creatures wherever He pleases [according to His most free will]; as, to make an imperfect comparison, my sight penetrates and is in air, light, or water, and does not occupy or vacate space; as a sound or tone penetrates and is in air or water or board and wall, and also does not occupy or vacate space; likewise, as light and heat penetrate and are in air, water, glass, crystal, and the like, and also do not vacate or occupy space; and much more of the like [many comparisons of this matter could be adduced]. This mode He used when He rose from the closed [and sealed] sepulcher, and passed through the closed door [to His disciples], and in the bread and wine in the Holy Supper, and, as it is believed, when He was born of His mother Formula of Concord, Solid Declaration, Art. VII