annsni said:
I said:
Please provide scriptures that say she cannot hear our prayers or provide intercessory prayer. And I assume you think a person can never lead another to Christ?
You said:
A person can certainly lead another to Christ but there is one requirement: the person must be alive.
Can you show me ONE Scripture where anyone prays to anyone who'd dead other than the pagans? One place where God tells us "Pray to John the Baptist" or "Pray to Abraham"? It wasn't even a consideration or practice from the beginning of creation to the covenant with the chosen people to the beginning of the church. So there was no need to address it in the Bible. Let's see what Jesus said about honoring His mother: Luke 11:27-28
As he said these things, a woman in the crowd raised her voice and said to him, "Blessed is the womb that bore you, and the breasts at which you nursed!" But he said, "Blessed rather are those who hear the word of God and keep it!"
The Bible teaches us that there is one family of God that lives in both heaven and earth. It teaches us that when we now come to the New Jerusalem we are in the presence of not only the Father and Jesus but the saints as well. We are in their presence but they cannot hear us? It teaches us that there is one body of Christ and there is no division within it. It teaches us that we cannot say to any part of the body that we don’t need it. It teaches us that all parts care for each other. To believe that some members of the body of Christ can lead us to him and not others is a division in the body.
Those who you are calling dead are who Paul refers to as the family of God in heaven. They are more alive than we are. It would seem plausible to me that the reason there was no need to address it in the Bible is that these teachings of Paul’s are so clear about the body of Christ not being divided even by death and that when we now come to God we are also in their presence – it didn’t need to be specified that they were praying for us.
Do you know where the first recorded record of prayers to the saints is?
At any rate, since there does not appear to be any scripture which says they cannot hear us, does that not leave the only answer from a “Bible alone” perspective to be “We don’t know” as opposed to “They can’t”?
Regarding the pagans ‘praying to the dead’ – are there scriptures where the pagans make humble requests to those who have died to pray for them?
Regarding the Scripture about Jesus honoring Mary – language is indeed interesting, is it not? You are applying what MW has as the 4th definition of the word rather – on the contrary. Why not the first – “with better reason”. The better reason that Mary is blessed is not because of her physically carrying Christ – it is because she heard the word of God and obeyed it. As we all will be.
My interpretation is supported by Scripture in that we have no better example of someone who heard the word of God and obeyed it than Mary.
Your interpretation that Jesus is saying that Mary is not blessed contradicts this. It also is contradicted by Scripture in that Elizabeth calls her 'blessed', and Mary says that all generations will call her blessed. Aside from that, it also means that Jesus chose to make a point by publicly dishonoring his mother, which places him in violation of the commandment of God to “Honor your father and mother".