kepha31
Regular Member
The Church has never formally defined whether she died or not, and the integrity of the doctrine of the Assumption would not be impaired if she did not in fact die, but the almost universal consensus is that she did die. Pope Pius XII, in Munificentissimus Deus (1950), defined that Mary, "after the completion of her earthly life" (note the silence regarding her death), "was assumed body and soul into the glory of heaven."Immaculate Conception and Assumption | Catholic AnswersThat is a real stretch. It would be equal to saying that Mary was an albino because she was sinless. The fact, according to Romans 6:23, is that the wages of sin is death. If Mary was sinless then she would not have suffered the wages of sin. However, your Oral Tradition maintains that, in fact, she did die. Thus, you are faced with a contradiction between the Bible and your Oral Tradition, are you not?
Adam and Eve were created without sin, and remained so until The Fall. Angles were created without sin (until some rebelled) so why is sinlessness so unthinkable to Protestants?
Rom. 3:23 – Some Protestants use this verse “all have sinned” in an attempt to prove that Mary was also with sin. But “all have sinned ” only means that all are subject to original sin. Mary was spared from original sin by God, not herself. The popular analogy is God let us fall in the mud puddle, and cleaned us up afterward through baptism. In Mary’s case, God did not let her enter the mud puddle.
Rom. 3:23 – “all have sinned” also refers only to those able to commit sin. This is not everyone. For example, infants, the retarded, and the senile cannot sin.
Rom. 3:23 – finally, “all have sinned,” but Jesus must be an exception to this rule. This means that Mary can be an exception as well. Note that the Greek word for all is “pantes.”
1 Cor. 15:22 – in Adam all (“pantes”) have died, and in Christ all (“pantes”) shall live. This proves that “all” does not mean “every single one.” This is because not all have died (such as Enoch and Elijah who were taken up to heaven), and not all will go to heaven (because Jesus said so).
What makes it so difficult to explain is the rejection of the doctrine of original sin, a recent man made tradition. OS is detailed in Romans 5.
You can't be "Full of Grace" with sin on the side.
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