- Nov 26, 2019
- 15,668
- 8,258
- 50
- Country
- United States
- Gender
- Male
- Faith
- Generic Orthodox Christian
- Marital Status
- Celibate
Her being His Mom would make her aware of His abilities, but that does not mean we should pray to her. Jesus never once says to do that. Yes she is blessed. So are we as Christians. She found favor by being a virgin and Elizabeth found favor also, even though she was an old barren woman. The Bible does not say too much about Mary after Jesus died, and from what I have heard from people who can see in the spirit, they say that all of the earthly prayers given to Mary actually grieve her because she was not divine, could not perform miracles, and as a woman cannot intercede for anyone. She may be Jesus mother, but in heaven there is a hierarchy and women know their place. No one can intercede for us but Jesus and maybe the Archangels, but the truth is that Mary was a human soul that died like everyone else dies. She never performed miracles. She was not a Saint. She did not remain a virgin and she was not without sin. The only man who knew no sin is Jesus Christ. This is why I have a problem when people say that Jesus robbed the grave. Our Lord never stole anything and to accredit Him to a common thief is blasphemous to me.
My dear Jaxxi, I fear you have gotten ahead of me. My point is that we should give her credit where it is due. I also said that if someone feels uncomfortable with the Hail Mary then they should not say it. There is also one particular Orthodox version in the pocket-sized prayer book the Antiochian Orthodox Church publishes, which is very nice, which blesses her but does not ask her for anything. However, regarding her perpetual virginity, remember that there is enough evidence of that so that all of the Reformers up to and including John Wesley believed in it.
Also, a Saint is anyone who is a Christian and is therefore holy by their faith in Jesus and the indwelling of the Holy Spirit. I am a saint and you are a Saint. Some of us, however, will not persevere. But if someone is in Heaven, and you and I agree that Mary is in Heaven, they are still a Christian; those Christians alive in this world are the Church Militant, and those in Heaven are the Church Triumphant, so Mary is absolutely a saint, as are all other Christians alive in Heaven and alive in this world. This is why you see Protestant churches dedicated to Saint Mary.
The only reason not to call every departed Christian a saint is that we don’t always know who persevered in the faith and who did not. But according to Jesus Christ, “He who confesses me before men I will confess before the Father,” so it is a safe assumption that everyone ever killed for refusing to renounce their faith in Christ, as recently several Coptic and Ethiopian Christians were killed by ISIS in Libya for refusing to profess the Islamic creed (the Shahadah, in which a Muslim or someone converting to Islam declares there is no God but God and Mohammed was his prophet), along with a Ghanaian who was with the Copts, who declared “Their god is my God” whose prior religion was unknown, but most likely Christian based on the demographics of Ghana, for the other major religion there is Islam, but even if he had been a Muslim or an adherent of Voodoo or an indigenous religion (a tiny minority of Ghanaians believe in those), the act of dying for Christ is called Baptism by Blood; one becomes a Christian and a saint the moment they are killed for confessing a belief in Jesus Christ.
This fellowship in the Church, between the saints who persevered, were saved and are in Heaven, and the saints who are on Earth hoping to persevere and be saved, is referred to by the Apostle’s Creed as “The Communion of the Saints.”
Remember always the important and unifying feature of Christianity is love. The worst thing we can do with regards to Mary is hate each other over differences in doctrine between denominations regarding her specific role. God has commanded us to love one another. This is why I address you as a saint, because St. Paul, who was beheaded by the Romans for his faith in Christ (he was beheaded rather than crucified because his status as a Roman citizen granted him that privilege of a swift death), and is thus a saint, addressed his Epistles “to the saints in (the name of the city he was writing to).” Because we are holy, and our holiness comes from love, which makes us closer to God, because as it says in the Bible, God is love.
Upvote
0