The other thread discussing the title of Mary was close at the request of the OP. Myself, I wasn't through with the discussion. So, for those still interested we can continue our talk here. I'll be posting more later on today. 
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Beg to differ with this post. For Paul shows us who our mother is in scripture and this is not Mary.What Mary of Bethany said. Also, she is the Mother of the Church![]()
Read Galatians and you will see whom Paul calls our Mother. Very clear. It is not Mary. Mary was the Mother of Jesus. This would be the sign that God would give Isreal that a virgin would be with child , a son, and His name will be Emmanuel.Seeking, I am very worried, you said " God is not Jesus, though Jesus is God. Believe me, there is a difference" I do not think this way of looking at it is healthy. Think through the implecations of this unnatural disconect of Jesus and God.
IamA, what is The Church? are we not the Body of Christ? who would be our mother?
this says all I need to know. For God is a covenant God.24These things may be taken figuratively, for the women represent two covenants. One covenant is from Mount Sinai and bears children who are to be slaves: This is Hagar. 25Now Hagar stands for Mount Sinai in Arabia and corresponds to the present city of Jerusalem, because she is in slavery with her children. 26But the Jerusalem that is above is free, and she is our mother.
Nestorianism
What Augustine said about Mary:From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Nestorianism is the doctrine that Jesus exists as two persons, the man Jesus and the divine Son of God, or Logos, rather than as a unified person. This doctrine is identified with Nestorius (c. 386–c. 451), Patriarch of Constantinople. This view of Christ was condemned at the Council of Ephesus in 431, and the conflict over this view led to the Nestorian schism, separating the Assyrian Church of the East from the Byzantine Church.
. . . . . He was in an extraordinary manner begotten of the Father without a mother, born of a mother without a father;
without a mother He was God, without a father He was man; without a mother before all time, without a father in the end of times . . . .
Now, someone has put forth the argument that Augustine is only saying that Mary was not a Mother to Jesus’ divinity. That she was only mother to his human nature. Okay, a couple of thoughts about this. It has also been argued by proponents of the title “Mother of God” that a “mother” does not give birth to a “nature.” So, then how did Augustine argue that she was only mother to his human nature? As proponents of the title argue, one can only be a mother to a “person,” not simply a “nature.” So, what was Augustine’s point? Even if this argument holds, and I believe it does, Jesus’ “divinity” was/is one nature which combined with his human nature—hypostatic union—merges into one person. So, who is that person? The person formed by his human and divine nature is Jesus."At that time, therefore, when about to engage in divine acts, He repelled, as one unknown, her who was the mother, not of His divinity, but of His [human] infirmity" (Tract. in Ioannem CXIX, 1).
"It was as if [Jesus] said [in John 2], ‘You did not give birth to my power of working miracles, it was not you who gave birth to my divinity. But you are the mother of all that is weak in me" (Tract. in Ioannem VII, 9.)
Why, then, said the Son to the mother, "Woman, what have I to do with thee? mine hour is not yet come?" Our Lord Jesus Christ was both God and man. According as He was God, He had not a mother; according as He was man, He had. She was the mother, then, of His flesh, of His humanity, of the weakness which for our sakes He took upon Him. But the miracle which He was about to do, He was about to do according to His divine nature, not according to His weakness; according to that wherein He was God not according to that wherein He was born weak. But the weakness of God is stronger than men. His mother then demanded a miracle of Him; but He, about to perform divine works, so far did not recognize a human womb; saying in effect, "That in me which works a miracle was not born of thee, thou gavest not birth to my divine nature; but because my weakness was born of thee, I will recognize thee at the time when that same weakness shall hang upon the cross." This, indeed, is the meaning of "Mine hour is not yet come." . . . How then was He both David’s son and David’s Lord? David’s son according to the flesh, David’s Lord according to His divinity; so also Mary’s son after the flesh, and Mary’s Lord after His majesty. Now as she was not the mother of His divine nature, whilst it was by His divinity the miracle she asked for would be wrought, therefore He answered her, "Woman, what have I to do with thee?" (Tract. in Ioannem VIII, 9).
The other thread discussing the title of Mary was close at the request of the OP. Myself, I wasn't through with the discussion. So, for those still interested we can continue our talk here. I'll be posting more later on today.![]()
Nestorianism is the doctrine that Jesus exists as two persons, the man Jesus and the divine Son of God, or Logos, rather than as a unified person. This doctrine is identified with Nestorius (c. 386c. 451), Patriarch of Constantinople. This view of Christ was condemned at the Council of Ephesus in 431, and the conflict over this view led to the Nestorian schism, separating the Assyrian Church of the East from the Byzantine Church.
Whose Mother is Mary . . . .
I thought that the 'mother of God' was made because some Arius dude was spreading around that Jesus was not God.........so from then on, if Mary is known as 'mother of God', people would have a better understanding that Jesus is God.?
racer, about Nestorianism, there was a little more to it than just this:
Apparently, you are unaware of the fact there's more to what Nestorius believed that what your faith teaches . . . .Nestorius did not believe Mary to be the Theotokos. This thought is what lead to his attempted splitting of Christ.
WEll, there is verses in the Bible that state Jesus is God, so 'God-bearer' leaves no room for mistake that Jesus is the God who was beared.Why not simply say 'Jesus is God'? Why does the Lord need 'Mary' to confirm His diety? The Lord is His Own confirmation of His deity.
racer, about Nestorianism, there was a little more to it than just this:
Nestorius did not believe Mary to be the Theotokos. This thought is what lead to his attempted splitting of Christ.
Iollain said:.......so i take it, "God-bearer" and "the one who gives birth to God" is the proper translation of Theotokos?
Iollain said:The early church did not mean 'God-bearer' in a way that Mary is mother of the Alpha and Omega, who was, and who is and who is to come! Maranatha!