The source of all redemptive grace is Christ and his work on the cross.standingfirminChrist said:If you are looking to Mary for that redemptive grace, you are not going to ever see it. Mary cannot redeem anyone.
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The source of all redemptive grace is Christ and his work on the cross.standingfirminChrist said:If you are looking to Mary for that redemptive grace, you are not going to ever see it. Mary cannot redeem anyone.
D28guy said:mrtumnus,
The pronouncments of the leader of a countefiet christian group mean nothing, mrtumnus. They are 100% irrelavent. Please dont waste your time.
I could post a prayer from Pope John Paull II that was made during an ecumenical meeting where he was praying in unity with Voodoo practitioners, witch doctors, Sikhs, Buddhists, etc etc etc in order to bring peace in the world. Thats blasphemous.
The Catholic Church exterminated multiplied thousands for much less during the Inquisitions.
Mike
Joe said:Originally Posted by Joe
mrtumnus
Luke 1:46-47 And Mary said, My soul doth magnify the Lord, And my spirit hath rejoiced in God my Saviour.
Why is Mary is rejoicing in this verse?
What is God saving her from?
Your answer....
mrtumnus said:Originally Posted by mrtumnus
God absolutely did save her from sin. The question is -- when did he save her? Is it required that her sanctification and perfection as a Christian must occur after the cross, and after she had sinned?
Or does the omnipresence and omniscience of God allow for the possibility that He knew the choice she would make and opted to sanctify at the time of her creation in order to make holy the vessel in which He would dwell?
And if this were the case and you were Mary, wouldn't you absolutely be rejoicing in God your Savior, who had done great things for you?
The issue is that those who do not understand this doctrine try to make it about Mary. The only thing is has to do with Mary is that she was the one chosen by God for this purpose. The doctrine itself is totally about God, His nature and His grace.
The papal proclamation:
The most Blessed Virgin Mary was, from the first moment of her conception, by a singular grace and privilege of almighty God and by virtue of the merits of Jesus Christ, Savior of the human race, preserved immune from all stain of original sin.
Joe said:Your answer....
Again, mrtumnus, please answer my questions. They are simple.
It's polite to not answer a question with questionsThen I'll answer you ok
In all probability yes. But to believe that God is limited to waiting for heaven to bring to fullness the sanctification and perfection of a person would not be correct in my view.D28guy said:mrtumnus,
mrtumnus said:Quote:
"I didn't forget the "sinless" part. But after I am completely sanctified and perfected by redemptive grace, my expectation is to be sinless as well."
Yes, but you will be in heaven then....not here on earth.
I am glad to see that you understand that God is not bound by time and the sacrifice on the cross did not have to occur prior to her salvation.DHK said:After the cross? No, definitely not. She knew that Christ was the Messiah well before the wedding of Cana where Christ performed his first miracle and began his ministry.
mrtumnus said:Or does the omnipresence and omniscience of God allow for the possibility that He knew the choice she would make and opted to sanctify at the time of her creation in order to make holy the vessel in which He would dwell?
DHK said:Absolutely not! God does not go against his Word. Salvation is the same for all. It is by grace through faith, and not of works (Eph.2:8,). Mary was no exception. Mary admitted that she was a sinner; admitted that she was in need of a Savior; and also brought a sin offering to the priest at the time of her purification. That is very strong evidence that Mary knew of her sinful condition. Sinners need to be saved. They can only be saved when they are at an aged when they realize they are sinners and are able to volitionally accept the grace of God on behalf of their sins. Believe on the Lord Jesus Christ and thou shalt be saved. She must have believed. We know she believed. At what age? We don't know, but it had to be at an age of understanding and comprehension of who Christ was. Her own children: James and Jude did not believe that Christ was the Messiah until after the resurrection.
I have not made God a puppet. I do indeed believe that God acts according to His nature. This is why I would believe that it was within His power to sanctify Mary at the moment of her creation, that would be completely consistent with the Gospel, and He would do so because it would be contrary to His nature to have a dwelling place that was not sanctified. You seem to be comfortable to believe that it was within His nature to dwell in a vessel of sin. That would not be consistent with the nature of God as revealed in the Bible in my view.DHK said:However you seem to be one who is treating God like a puppet at your fingertips commanding him to do what you want. God acts according to His nature and according to His Word; not ours. It was His will that God the second person of the trinity, come to earth in the form of a man--born of a virgin, conceived by the third person of the Godhead, and being found perfect and complete in his humanity, and not giving up any part of his deity he lived and dwelt among men. And because of his love for man he finally died for man's sin. He could do so for he was perfect man without sin, and because he was God at the same time.
Eliyahu said:If God can protect anyone from sin even without the Blood of Jesus, why didn't He apply such Technique to all other human beings without the need for His Beloved Son to die the terrible death?
Joe said:mrtumnus
These are your statements to various people beginning with page 17. We are now on page 19
Quote:
Mary absolutely required a Savior and she absolutely recognized this
Quote:
"That does not necessarily lead to a conclusion that she sinned however."
Quote:
The problem with a definitive declaration that Mary sinned from a sola-scriptura POV is that scripture in no way states this.To go from her recognition that God is indeed her savior to that she actively committed sin is a leap without merit.
Quote:
God absolutely did save her from sin.
I am seeing this conversation going in circles and becoming quite fruitless. It's my bedtime, goodnight
Thank you for that Grace. Since Mary is hardly mentioned during the rite of the Mass (which is the central worship service of the entire church), I’ve always found it hard to understand how people have concluded we are centered on Mary.grace56 said:I have attended Catholic masses many times with my husband and can tell you that I've never heard anybody there say Mary was a goddess. They honor her as the mother of God just like Elizabeth did when Mary went to her when she was pregnant. Now when I go to my church nobody ever talks about Mary but then at my husbands church they showed me where the Catholics get there teachings from I was ver surprised to find it in the Bible.
Luke 1: 41-43 When Elizabeth heard Mary's greeting, the infant leaped in her womb, and Elizabeth, filled with the holy Spirit, cried out in a loud voice and said, Most blessed are you amoung women, and blessed is the fruit of your womb, And how does the happen to me, that the mother of my Lord should come to me?
Grace56
mrtumnus said:I’m sorry you see this as going in circles Joe. My perception is that occurs because people attempt to place God into human time (past, present and future) instead of understanding that omnipresent means always present in each moment of time. So while it may seem circular to us to entertain the thought that Mary’s salvation occurred prior to her birth or belief, it would not be so to God, who sees all of time as one moment, always present.
One does not have to have sinned therefore to be saved from sin. One can also be saved from ever falling into sin in the first place. This salvation can based upon the faith of the believer. This is all possible because God is not bound by time. He did not have to wait for Mary to sin or for the human time to come for her to profess faith.
I understand one may instead opt to believe that God chose to dwell in a vessel of sin.
But to state that scripture definitively proves that Mary sinned and her salvation was not obtained prior to that would be incorrect I believe.
I have enjoyed your posts very much Agnus_Dei.Agnus_Dei said:Mrtumnus, I have a pretty good understanding of the Immaculate Conception, I was set to swim the Tiber this Easter of ’08 and have been attending RCIA classes in preparation for a few years. I’m now an Orthodox Catechumen for reasons as such we are discussing.
You say I beg to differ…
The IC means that Mary’s conception was brought about the normal way, only she at her conception was without original sin…that’s what “Immaculate” means…without stain. Through this act of preserving Mary, sin wasn’t passed on to Jesus in her womb. <<<-This IS Roman Catholic teaching…period.
The Catholic Church and many Protestants teach that Adam’s guilt is passed on to us at our conception…This is purely Augustine theology…and the RC dogma of the IC is the answer to this. Pope Pius IX, dogmatized the IC centuries after the split between the Eastern and Western Church.
The West (Roman Catholic and maybe some Protestants), likes to believe that sin is something tangible, like it’s something you can see or touch, maybe even taste.
The Orthodox has no problem at all, b/c we don’t inherit Adam’s guilt, only the consequences and that’s death. Mary, even though she herself was a sinner, never passed on Adam’s guilt…Mary, just as you and I are responsible for our own sin.
ICXC NIKA
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I understand that you view my belief as being wrong based upon your interpretation of Scripture.standingfirminChrist said:Your belief is wrong according to Scripture
mrtumnus said:I’m sorry you see this as going in circles Joe. My perception is that occurs because people attempt to place God into human time (past, present and future) instead of understanding that omnipresent means always present in each moment of time. So while it may seem circular to us to entertain the thought that Mary’s salvation occurred prior to her birth or belief, it would not be so to God, who sees all of time as one moment, always present.
One does not have to have sinned therefore to be saved from sin. One can also be saved from ever falling into sin in the first place. This salvation can based upon the faith of the believer. This is all possible because God is not bound by time. He did not have to wait for Mary to sin or for the human time to come for her to profess faith.
I understand one may instead opt to believe that God chose to dwell in a vessel of sin.
But to state that scripture definitively proves that Mary sinned and her salvation was not obtained prior to that would be incorrect I believe.
There is nothing wrong with having a child. Women did it all the time. It was not wrong to conceive. It is not a sin. It seems that you have a wrong understanding of the purpose of the sin offering.mrtumnus said:There are several problems with this part in my view. First however, we do agree that salvation is the same for all – through the merits earned at the cross.
You are however, binding the power of God by believing that Mary’s belief had to come prior to her salvation, for God in his omniscience is perfectly capable of knowing what Mary’s response was to be. So the question becomes – could he have opted to save her at the moment of her creation based upon her belief? My answer to that is yes, that was within his power. Do you disagree with that?
I believe a quote from JFB explains it well. Mary was still under the law at that time. She was required to give a sin-offering. But it was evidence to her that she was a sinner. The pointed to her as a sinner. She could not escape that inevitable fact. A sinner needs a Saviour in which she rejoiced.6-8. the days of her purifying--Though the occasion was of a festive character, yet the sacrifices appointed were not a peace offering, but a burnt offering and sin offering, in order to impress the mind of the parent with recollections of the origin of sin, and that the child inherited a fallen and sinful nature. The offerings were to be presented the day after the period of her separation had ended--that is, forty-first for a boy, eighty-first for a girl. (Jamieson, Faucett, and Brown)
So to obey God's word; to be obedient to the Word, is a problem to you?The comments I see about her bringing a ‘sin offering’ proving that she was indeed a sinner are extremely problematic. First of all, she was following the Jewish law which she was under.
True. She had to bring a sin-offering according to the requirements of the law.To not have brought a ‘sin offering’ would have in fact been a sin, for she would not have submitted herself to the law.
False, It was for her own purification, not because she had a child. Having a child is not sin. Read Leviticus 12.Secondly, if you trace this law back to the OT, I believe she was required to make this sacrifice after childbirth.
Your conclusion proves you haven't studied the Bible.Your conclusion therefore that this ‘proves’ she was a sinner means that you believe that Mary committed a personal sin by giving birth to Jesus.
True. We cannot read into the Bible that which is not there. That is how the RCC get infant baptism. EX. Infant baptism is justifiable because there must have been infants in the jailor's household. But the Bible doesn't say that.The other problem I see with this reasoning is just because somebody follows the command of God to present themselves to partake of a ritual one cannot make any assumptions from that.
This proves you don't study the Bible. Jesus plainly said when he came to John that the purpose of his baptism was "to fulfill all righteousness." Am I to believe the Bible or your unbiblical inferences?If so, what would one have to conclude regarding Jesus? After all, he presented himself to be baptized by John, whose baptism was “repentance for the forgiveness of sins”. Using your logic, this would now prove Jesus was a sinner. That of course would be incorrect, as is the conclusion you’ve reached that the fact Mary provided a ‘sin offering’ proves she is a sinner.
Your point here is that human reasoning is more important than Scripture and should be put on a higher authority than God's actual words recorded in the Scripture.mrtumnus said:But my point to you folks (at least I hope) is not that I'm right and you're wrong, but that if you want to use scripture to prove to somebody their belief is incorrect, you should at least approach it from the position of understanding what the belief actually is. Otherwise your objections are meaningless.
mrtumnus said:Sorry Joe, I thought I had answered your questions.
Mary is rejoicing that God has saved her from sin.
You infer from that she has sinned. I would say that’s not something that can not be definitively stated, unless you believe it would be impossible for God by the grace merited by Jesus on the cross to have saved her from sin pro-actively and prior to her ever actually committing a sin.
I have attended Catholic masses many times with my husband and can tell you that I've never heard anybody there say Mary was a goddess. They honor her"
" In the Catholic Church of Rome...and the Eastern Orthodox as well...Mary has evolved, over the course of 1700 years, into a full blown GODDESS who is the recipient of full blown GODDESS WORSHIP, non-stop now, 24 hours a day for centuries.
She *supposedly* is the protectress of Humanity. The protectress of children. Millions offer their supplications up, not to God, but to (((MARY)))...seeking answers. She *supposedly* grants visitations and gives messages of wisdom. She is expected to grant miraculous interventions and healings. Millions travel the word to visit her "shrines". She is hailed as the (((MOTHER OF GOD))) and the (((QUEEN OF THE UNIVERSE))).
The diefication of Mary is not conjecture...its REALITY."