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I've already answered this position.I think the Scriptures I quoted give a basis for the PIOUS OPINION of all but Orthodox that Mary and Joseph were husband and wife, but again, that's not a dogma and that's not the dogma we are discussing here. That dogma is about Mary and it's that she had no sex ever. The particular issue of this thread is if it is distinctively LOVING toward her to insist that all the world and all generations KNOW (to the level of dogma) how often Mary had sex - if at all. Is THAT distinctively LOVING toward HER. No Catholic or Orthodox yet has insisted that they would regard it as supremely honoring, extremely important for all the world to know, and above all LOVING if we all knew and accepted as doctrine/dogma how often they have had sex, so there is some question about that issue.
Mary is lovely
You sure, bro?Lionroar; Dude. One Dogma Immaculate Conception. Born with out the stain of original Sin.
Born with a complete human nature and not a wounded one.
Can't get any more human then that.
In part yes, but I said reclaiming her humanity is about de-literalizing metaphors.Excuse me ?
Reclaiming our humanity is about SEX ?????
I agree in large part.Mysogeny is about sex !
Yes, but the depersonalization of mysogeny is also about the extended roles assigned to the sexes & the power of those roles in their suppressionIts about sexualizing the female body, instead of seeing a woman as a complete person.
That is the truth, but not the whole truth. Fear as well as lust drives mysogeny.Mysogeny is about so elevating sex, so objectifying a woman's body that I can't even feed my infant in public because society has so sexualized the female breast.
I think mysogeny is more about personal power & fear of female sexuality.Its about so elevating sex that Mary - or anyone - can't be a "human" without sex.
Oppresion is not about sex; [/quote]
Oppression isn't only about sex.
Truth is liberating.Christ is the only answer to oppression.
Yes,... as I said, my comment & mysogeny are not only about sex, but the roles assigned to the sexes. Issues that reside within the tensions in & between patriarchal & matriarchal approaches to social order.He alone allows me to reclaim my body, and the body is reclaimed and fulfilled finally at the resurrection. If the body is what defines me, if its sex that is the 'height', then why are we not given in marriage in heaven ? If my freedom is found in my "sexuality", why don't Christians have sex in the temple, like the pagans -- elevating sex as the fulfillment of personhood belongs to pagan practice, not Christian.
I agree except that the elephant in the room isn't so much sex, but the societal filter that religion has installed thru literalization of scriptural metaphors.The elephant in the room is the societal filter that aligns woman's oppression and freedom with sex. A society that is so dualistic that it sees sex and women as the greatest height and the most debased expression. Thats not balance, and its dehumanizing !
Not my argument. My argument is that the myths generated by literalizing metaphors has contributed to a pattern of viewing women & identifying them primarily in terms of sexual function (other than sex itself).So the argument seems to be that we don't talk about sex and Mary because sex is "dirty" ?
I haven't heard that before but it is easy to see that the reformation was primarily soteriological & most eccllesiology was left in place with only cosmetic changes.Its the reformation that was repulsed by the image of Mary nursing Christ.
What we lack in insight we make up for in denial.Where is the source of that distortion? Not with EO or OO or RC. here is the origin of THAT distortion; not with the Yeah, I'm dancing around the elephant -- the one that distortion dropped into the room. The distortion that I am made person and fulfilled as - object, in sex. That everything must be about sex. That my personhood, or Mary's virginity is "about sex". Thats repressive -- my personhood, Mary's virginity is about Christ NOT sex.
While part of the truth may give us an epiphany, it rarely gives us closure.Its about the culture that replaced communion with the birth control pill !![]()
Mary was a lovely sister in the Lord. She was a humble handmaiden of the Lord. We see many a lovely sisters in the Lord and humble handmaidens of the Lord to this Day.
You sure, bro?![]()
1. There is no dogma of "Mary - The Unmarried Bride." The dogma we are discussing is "Mary Had No Sex Ever."
Pax
- Josiah
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So, is it your conclusion that Mary's heart was pierced by the embarrassing, painful, hurtful, offensive things being said about Her - especially dogmatically/doctrinally as found in Scripture? Will Matthew and Luke be held eternally accountable for what they have said about Mary by discussing her sex life in Scripture? Isn't that an extremely private, very intimate, potentially very hurtful aspect of Our Mother and the Mother of Our Lord - one you love, adore, revere and hold in highest esteem? And if what is said about Her matters to you, to Her and most importantly, to Jesus, why are you not offended that Matthew and Luke opted to publicly announce to the world that she was a virgin at the time Christ was conceived?Luke 1:34 and Matthew 1:25.
What you have repeatedly 'pointed out' is that the doctrine of EV is held by two of 30,000 denominations. What is the point with the numbers if not to attempt to portray it as minority position?Whoever suggested that it is a minority position????
What I've been pointing out is that it IS a position in those two denomination. It's not in all the others. There has been a very, very focused and strong attempt for over 200 pages to suggest that the RCC and EO have no position and thus no substantiation is needed by them, there's no teaching or condemnation by them but that the other 29,998 denomination have dogma on this issue and they must prove it. THAT is what I've addressed - they've got it reversed.
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And let's do remember, that 2 of the 3 major branches of Christianity, representing about 65% of all Christians accept this doctrine, so your repeated attempts to present it as a small minority position fall quite flat.Josiah said:Whoever suggested that it is a minority position????
What I've been pointing out is that it IS a position in those two denomination. It's not in all the others. There has been a very, very focused and strong attempt for over 200 pages to suggest that the RCC and EO have no position and thus no substantiation is needed by them, there's no teaching or condemnation by them but that the other 29,998 denomination have dogma on this issue and they must prove it. THAT is what I've addressed - they've got it reversed.
That must be a Lutheran Dogma, because the CC has no such Dogma.
I care to discuss why you do not find Matthew and Luke guilty of not being distinctively LOVING towards Mary for discussing how often she had sex (or not).Perhaps you didn't read what you quoted from me. Again, I never remotely suggested that it is a minority position, my obvious point (as I've reminded you of twice now) is that it IS the position of those groups, thus those groups have the position. The other groups do not have an official position. Obviously, those with the position have the "burden of proof" in spite of 200+ pages of Catholics and Orthodox working very, very hard to suggest it's the other way around.
I hope this yet another explanation is helpful to you.
Did you care to discuss the Dogma? Particularly in the light of the question of this thread which is whether the discussion of how often one has had sex (or not) is distinctively LOVING toward them?
Thank you!
Pax!
- Josiah
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In part yes, but I said reclaiming her humanity is about de-literalizing metaphors.
I thought you said mythology
But if its metaphor, the "metaphor" is deliteralized or more accurately, analyzed, by returning it to its component comparisons (deconstruction), not attempting to degrade it. But truthfully, I don't know what metaphor you're referring to... maybe you could describe it.
Yes, but the depersonalization of mysogeny is also about the extended roles assigned to the sexes & the power of those roles in their suppression
of personal expression & fulfillment of our humanity.
So a woman is "made free" by becoming a lawyer etc., rather than a traditional role ? Then all female lawyers are "saved", "redeemed", "fulfilled" ? I disagree -- suppression is a result of the fall. It is Christ that saves, not "works" a la the work ethic and which job one has (thats the distortion of 'no works theology'). We all have a "skopos" calling/purpose which may include a role -- Paul describes this and says not to be 'jealous'. Oppression is lifted by responding and 'fulfilling' our call (teleios/finishing/filling).
Fear and lust are distortions, extremes. We refer to them as "passions"; the evidence of self-centerdness.That is the truth, but not the whole truth. Fear as well as lust drives mysogeny.
I think mysogeny is more about personal power & fear of female sexuality.
Elevating sex is a broader problem than simple mysogeny.
see above
Oppression isn't only about sex.
in this thread it is
Truth is liberating.
Yes,... as I said, my comment & mysogeny are not only about sex, but the roles assigned to the sexes. Issues that reside within the tensions in & between patriarchal & matriarchal approaches to social order.
You confuse the call from God with societal issues.
I agree except that the elephant in the room isn't so much sex, but the societal filter that religion has installed thru literalization of scriptural metaphors.
The Bible is not literature.
Not my argument. My argument is that the myths generated by literalizing metaphors has contributed to a pattern of viewing women & identifying them primarily in terms of sexual function (other than sex itself).
I don't know which "metaphors" are being literalized.
I do know Christ makes whole -- everything He does is actual. It may be described using rhetorical devices -- but that is often a function of the limit of language, not the content of what Christ does.
I haven't heard that before but it is easy to see that the reformation was primarily soteriological & most eccllesiology was left in place with only cosmetic changes.
It over-intellectualized and kicked the body out of salvation; it dualized.
What we lack in insight we make up for in denial.
I'm not sure what I'm supposed to be denying, but my referent in this statement was to the reformation and beyond sense of repulsion toward the body.
While part of the truth may give us an epiphany, it rarely gives us closure.
"Closure" doesn't apply, imo -- its "bearing fruit", and that happens only in Christ.
It would seem to me that if you believe you never remotely suggested such a thing, and your sole intent was to present the concept that others disagree, you could simply say that other groups disagree without continually prancing out the numbers in accentuated type. It portrays the concept that you believe the actual numbers do have a significance in and of themselves, not simply noting that other groups disagree. I therefore see no need for you to continue doing so in the future, since you have asserted that your intention is to simply note that other groups disagree. I think in the future that would be sufficient to get your point across and eliminate any possible confusion as to your intent.Perhaps you didn't read what you quoted from me. Again, I never remotely suggested that it is a minority position, my obvious point (as I've reminded you of twice now) is that it IS the position of those groups, thus those groups have the position. The other groups do not have an official position. Obviously, those with the position have the "burden of proof" in spite of 200+ pages of Catholics and Orthodox working very, very hard to suggest it's the other way around.
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It would seem to me that if you believe you never remotely suggested such a thing, and your sole intent was to present the concept that others disagree, you could simply say that other groups disagree without continually prancing out the numbers in accentuated type. It portrays the concept that you believe the actual numbers do have a significance in and of themselves, not simply noting that other groups disagree. I therefore see no need for you to continue doing so in the future, since you have asserted that your attention is to simply note that other groups disagree. I think in the future that would be sufficient to get your point across and eliminate any possible confusion as to your intent.
Fine, let's discuss the dogma. You've expressed multiple times your concern that it is not being distinctively LOVING towards Mary for discussing how often she had sex (or not). Please explain why you do not hold the same concern for the fact that Matthew and Luke chose to do so in Scripture.I've address your erronious assumption 3 times now. This makes #4.
I really wonder why you are keeping this up....
Let me try #4: The point kept being made that I and Christ and those who have no position on how often Mary had sex during her lifetime must give proof that she did have sex - and that absent, it MUST be that she did not. This attempt to "turn the tables" is the keystone of a common apologetic here and in other threads on this dogma. MY point (once again) is to note who has the position (and thus has the "burden of proof" or the necessity of substantiation) and who does not. It rests with those who have the position It is MY point that on this issue, there is ONE denomination that has dogma on this (thus that ONE denomination has the burden of proof to that level, and I noted that same denomination notes that without substantiation, it is a SIN to share a story/report about a person) ONE that has doctrine on this (thus that ONE has the burden of proof to that level) and all the rest HAVE NO POSITION and thus have no burden of proof to any level. Yes, Catholics here at CF have for at least 3 years been droning on and on about the "30,000 denominations" in the world, so yes, I used their figure. I tired of those threads and I posted MANY times in response to that number - but long ago gave up, if they INSIST that there are 30,000 - I'll go with that. And have ever since. So, do the math. 30,000 minus two equals. It's not too hard. Does that mean that the one denomination is wrong? Of course not! Does it mean that the 29,998 are wrong? Of course not. And I never remotely so stated or implied and as you well know, that wasn't the context - but in spite of telling you this three times before - you insist on saying I did.
Now, why the diversions? After over 200 pages, I am increasingly of the conclusion that some here will do anything, about anything - over and over if need be - rather than discuss the dogma of the Perpetual Virginity of Mary. Why, I don't have a clue, but I don't want to explore my mystery - I want to discuss the dogma - even after all this. Would you now accept that any "implications" you erroniously THOUGHT I might be making in spite of the reality that I never remotely indicated such and that was not the context was simply wrong? Or will we have to go over this a dozen more times, just to divert the discussion still more? Or can we discuss the dogma?
Patience is a virtue....
BUT the topic requires the hard work here.
If it was MY mother you were talking about, I would be VERY concern.
Wait a minute... it is!
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Fine, let's discuss the dogma. You've expressed multiple times your concern that it is not being distinctively LOVING towards Mary for discussing how often she had sex (or not). Please explain why you do not hold the same concern for the fact that Matthew and Luke chose to do so in Scripture.
I'm sorry. That's just wishful thinking.Yet you call Joseph Mary's husband without any substantiation from the text.
no, it's not. We just don't carte blanche believe whatever comes down the pipe. We know God has set some aside. Bible says so. Take Paul for instance. He talked about how he was celibate.As you are so fond of stating Catholics have to submitt to the teachings of the Church and no where in the those quotes from the CCC has the word sex in it.
So no it's not what I want to belive but, it's about the Truth that the Church has protected.
The idea that God can set aside a person for Himself is just too foreign to the humanism and secularism that has invaded protestanism.
Peace
your hair splitting is wildly amusing.CITED TEXT:
Lumen gentium 57
This union of the Mother with the Son in the work of salvation is made manifest from the time of Christ's virginal conception up to His death it is shown first of all when Mary, arising in haste to go to visit Elizabeth, is greeted by her as blessed because of her belief in the promise of salvation and the precursor leaped with joy in the womb of his mother.(288) This union is manifest also at the birth of Our Lord, who did not diminish His mother's virginal integrity but sanctified it,(10*) when the Mother of God joyfully showed her firstborn Son to the shepherds and Magi. When she presented Him to the Lord in the temple, making the offering of the poor, she heard Simeon foretelling at the same time that her Son would be a sign of contradiction and that a sword would pierce the mother's soul, that out of many hearts thoughts might be revealed.(289) When the Child Jesus was lost and they had sought Him sorrowing, His parents found Him in the temple, taken up with the things that were His Father's business; and they did not understand the word of their Son. His Mother indeed kept these things to be pondered over in her heart.(290)
NOTES
288) Cf. Lk. 1, 41-45.
289) Cf. Lk. 2, 34-35.
290) Cf. Lk. 2, 41-51.
Supplementary Notes (*) (10) Cfr. Conc. Lateranense anni 649, Can. 3: Mansi 10, 1151. S. Leo M., Epist. ad Flav.: PL S4, 7S9. - Conc. Chalcedonense: Mansi 7, 462. - S. Ambrosius, De inst. virg.: PL 16, 320.
Don't see the word sex there either.
Peace
of course, that only impresses people who have decided to believe that "tradition" in the first place.No, he has set up a false dichotomy.
He defines the doctrine as rumor because is it not explicitly defined in the Bible.
However, Catholics (and Orthodox) accept the whole of Sacred Tradition in forming doctrine, not just Scripture. The belief that all doctrine in order to be correct must be explicitly stated in the Bible is the only real rumor running amok in this thread.
It's quite easy to argue a point when you get to define the position of the other person based upon your terms and not theirs. That is what Josiah has done, which would only impress others who tend to do the same thing.
how in the name of Ritz crackers did you come up with this?By stating "no position" to the question of her ever-virginity, you are stating that she may or may not have had sex. There is no evidence that she was married. Your "no position" in the absence of evidence of her marriage implies that you believe that she might have had sex despite not being married.
In contemporary polite terminology, "no position" = *wink, wink* she may have been a woman of loose morals, but I'm too polite to say it. Though more polite, this supports the position of Celsus and some of the Jews that she was *indeed* a woman of loose moral character.
Nice job, Josiah.
Greetings Thekla. How did Jews get married in the NT days of Jesus?Originally Posted by Thekla![]()
By stating "no position" to the question of her ever-virginity, you are stating that she may or may not have had sex. There is no evidence that she was married. Your "no position" in the absence of evidence of her marriage implies that you believe that she might have had sex despite not being married.