It is my understanding that in the Catholic church Mary, the Mother of God, is considered a co-redeemer, is this also the case in Orthodox theology?
Thanks, God bless
Thanks, God bless
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It is my understanding that in the Catholic church Mary, the Mother of God, is considered a co-redeemer, is this also the case in Orthodox theology?
No, it isn't.Erik3 said:It is my understanding that in the Catholic church Mary, the Mother of God, is considered a co-redeemer, is this also the case in Orthodox theology?
Thanks, God bless
Erik3 said:It is my understanding that in the Catholic church Mary, the Mother of God, is considered a co-redeemer, is this also the case in Orthodox theology?
Thanks, God bless
stray bullet said:As far as I am aware, every Christian believes that Mary gave birth to Jesus and she was obedient to the will of God in doing so. I believe that is what is meant by co-redeemer, that she had no power to save mankind, but simply played a part in that in doing God's will. I think we all agree on that![]()
Vasya Davidovich said:Might I point out that, strictly speaking, this movement within the Catholic Church does not seek to have Mary made co-redeemer with Christ but, rather, co-redemptrix with Him.
It is a fiddly detail, but it bothered me.
-Vasya.
As far as I am aware, every Christian believes that Mary gave birth to Jesus and she was obedient to the will of God in doing so. I believe that is what is meant by co-redeemer, that she had no power to save mankind, but simply played a part in that in doing God's will. I think we all agree on that
NewToLife said:That is consistent with what I understand this term to mean also and given that definition I would think that Orthodox could accept this without problem. That said, I think that the phrase is badly chosen seeing that so many do not understand what co means ( ie co is from the latin cum and means 'with' in a sense of co-operate with rather than equal with ).
The idea of Mary being a Co-Redmptrix is completely inconsistent with all Orthodox thought. Her yes to the Angel Gabriel at the Annunciation did in fact enable redemption. I will grant that much. However, she did not do the redeeming. Christ did. Only Christ who was both God and Man could do such a thing. Giving such titles to Mary in totally inconsistent with how the Orthodox Church has always done things. If you look at most icons of Mary she is almost always depicted with Christ in the icon and almost always she is pointing to Christ.
NewToLife said:All that said I feel that the term, though perhaps technically correct, is nevertheless badly chosen due to the fact that most misunderstand the meaning of it.
Matrona said:No, it isn't.
Mary's obedience and self-sacrifice made the Incarnation possible, but we Orthodox believe she is a regular human woman.
The thing is, I dont misunderstand it. I was raised Roman Catholic, studied in a Roman Catholic seminary and have read the Papal Letter explaining what the Pope meant by coining that term. The meaning which Rome ascribes to that term is inconsistent with Orthodox Christianity.
NewToLife said:Could you provide a link to a Catholic source giving their ascribed meaning? I am quite curious at this point.