Interesting that no early Christian that actually wrote scripture - ever said that in an actual text of scripture.
Certainly a "detail" of that magnitude would be important enough to at the very least - make "honorable mention" in a text of scripture.
In fact she was given "honorable mention" in scripture, maybe a bit more then a simply 'honorable", a royal mention. An envoy from God, "hailed" Mary like one does did in the courts of kings and queen. He said,
God did not "make them evil". God made them without a sin nature. By choosing sin - they took the sin nature upon themselves.
The result is Rom 3:9-18
We aren't told in Scripture that man was "re-made". Mankind has the same nature as Adam and Eve, albeit hampered from a lack of original justice. Original Justice is Adam and Eve's state of being before the fall. "It was the simultaneous possession of sanctifying grace, with its right to enter heaven, and the preternatural gifts. Had Adam not sinned, original justice would have been transmitted to all his descendants."
We bear the guilt and the punishment of original sin, as an adult or as an infant simply because we are progeny of Adam. The original justice accompanying Adam's creation was a moral quality or habit that perfectly joined the will of Adam to an enlightened understanding of the will of God. This grace inexplicably joined to the other cardinal virtues, justice gives the rights to honorable prudence, temperance, and fortitude in moral acts. Prior to his original act of rebellion it could be said Adam 'abides' in God, much like we are invited to abide in Christ partaking in the Eucharist. [Cf. John 6:57]. The punishment of original sin is something lacking from the original justice that once belonged to the patriarch of all men and something we would have rightly inherited had it not been for one man’s sin. Prior to the fall, Adam stood before God as a just man. The original man was created with a soul that was perfectly joined to the intellect and perfectly united with the will of God, overflowing the knowledge of truth; the intellect functioned in the light of God's will disciplining the lower appetites through reason alone. However, because of his unjust act we bear the just punishment for the sin of one man.
Justification, "the sanctification of the whole being" [Cf. CCC
1995] is received in Baptism as an effect of grace, re-introducing man to the mercy of God, weakening the original privation of justice whereby a new man is 'born again' into the “rectitude of divine love”. [Cf. CCC
1991].
The way God punished man for a voluntary immoral deed was to remove His justice. The punishment for the original sin is a privation of an original justice Adam once held for himself and his progeny. No longer joined with the will of God, no longer would cardinal virtues, justice giving rights to honorable prudence, temperance, and fortitude in moral acts. Now mankind is hampered with disordered desires, concupiscence. Mankind was not re-made again nor was he originally mad evil.
Romans 3:9-18 does not make man evil, you've simply misunderstood what St. Paul is saying. St. Thomas Aquinas explains it this way.
271. After showing the Jews’ advantage over the Gentiles so far as God’s blessings are concerned [n. 248], the Apostle now rejects their vainglory, by which they preferred themselves to Gentiles converted to the faith. First, he states his point; secondly, be proves it, there [v. 9b; n. 274] at For we have charged. 272. First, therefore, he says: I have asked what advantage has the Jew. The first is that God’s words were delivered to them. What then shall we Jews say to converts to 141 the faith? Are we Jews any better off than Gentiles converted to the faith? For this was a matter discussed among them: "A dispute also rose among them, which of them was to be regarded as the greatest" (Lk 23:24). He answers this when he says, No, not at all. 273. But this seems to be at variance with an earlier statement (v. 2), which said that their advantage was much in every way. The gloss [of Lombard, col. 1356] explains that in the first statement the Apostle was thinking of the Jews in the time of the Law, but now he is speaking of the time of grace because, as is written in Col (3:11): "In Christ there cannot be Greek and Jew, circumcised and uncircumcised," since these make no difference so far as the state of grace is concerned. But this explanation does not seem to be altogether in keeping with the Apostle’s intention, because later he will show that even while they were under the Law, they were under the power of sin, just as the Gentiles were, and even more so: "This is Jerusalem; I have set her in the center of the nations, with countries round about her. And she has wickedly rebelled against my ordinances and become more wicked than these countries" (Ez 5:5). Hence, it seems that above he was showing the excellence of God’s blessings; consequently, he did not say that the Jew was more excellent, but that something greater had been conferred on the Jew. Here he is rejecting the notion that they are excellent persons, because in spite of receiving God’s blessings they did not use them properly. 274. Then when he says For we have charged (v. 9b) he establishes his points: first, that the Jews do not excel the Gentiles so far as the state of sin is concerned; 142 secondly, so far as the state of justice is concerned, there [v. 2; n. 299] at But now apart from the law. He establishes the first in two ways: first, from what has been stated above; secondly, from an authority, there [v. 10; n. 176] at As it is written. 275. First, therefore, he says: We have already charged, i.e., we have supported with reasons, that Jews and Greeks, i.e., Gentiles, are all under the power of sin: "From the sole of the foot even to the head there is no soundness in him" (Is 1:6). For he showed, first of all, that the Gentiles suppressed the truth they knew by their wickedness and unrighteousness; secondly, that the Jews, after receiving the Law, dishonored God by transgressing it. . . . Consequently, the Law is not enough to make one just; another remedy is needed to suppress concupiscence. [Thomas Aquinas, on Romans 3:9]
JoeT