St. Worm2
Active Member
DrBubbaLove said:I believe He did do that for "everyone" with Adam. Like Mary, Adam was free to choose sin and he did.
Well, we certainly agree on that point. Of course, concerning the "Fall", I'm a Reformed Protestant and you're RC, and I don't believe there's a lot of dissention concerning this particular issue from our two respective faiths. You continue:
DrBubbaLove said:Suppose God could have done a "do over" for all mankind, but that is not fair justice for an infinite offense. For God to then redeem us all at birth would mean there was no justice/punishment to pay for Adam's sin.
It's really has to be Christ who pays that penalty, yes? How can a limited number of finite beings ever fully pay for an infinite offense?
This reminds me of another important question I meant to ask you, how was Mary able to avoid sinning (as the RCC claims she did) when our races perfect progenitors were not able to do so? Especially since, unlike Mary, they needed only obey a single command from God to avoid sinning. Did God make her differently perhaps? And if so, what does that imply about the rest of us? You continue:
DrBubbaLove said:That He gave Mary the Grace to be born that way we believe is what made it possible for Jesus to fully inherit from her all that she was, making Him 100% human, rather than requiring God to block the stain of sin from Mary from being passed to Jesus. There is a sense that the stain of sin is a part of what we are and does get passed on. It would be unseemly for Jesus to get that from Mary. No just Mary born sinless or rather without the stain of Adam's sin. She was not "separated" from God from birth. We believe that is why the Angel could say to her, before she was pregnant, that God was with her, that she was blessed among women and had found favor with God.
Well, of course, some of His huMANity had to come from somewhere else, yes? If Mary was the only one who contributed to it, how is it that Jesus was born a man and not a woman?
DrBubbaLove said:Good question though. Never thought of anyone questioning Mary's humanity since we know who both her parents were.
Never questioned that one myself. In fact, I still don't. But earlier you wrote: "If Mary was not Holy when Jesus was conceived and God just prevented Jesus from getting that fallen state of Her humanity, then He would less than what His Mother was, less than 100% human."
But let's just step this back a generation and I think you'll see what I'm getting at. "If Mary's Mom was not Holy when Mary was conceived and God just prevented Mary from getting that fallen state of her humanity, then she would less than what her Mother was, less than 100% human." And if Mary is less than 100% human, what she had to pass on to Jesus could not have amounted to any more either, could it? You continue:
DrBubbaLove said:Given what the Angel said about Her before she was pregnant, she had to have been Holy at that moment.
Why would you think that? To say Mary was "holy" based on the words of Gabriel would take some serious and, IMHO, dubious, "reading between the lines", and a denial of what the rest fo the Canon tells us about the spiritual condition of all human beings. For instance, "Full of Grace", while indeed being a literal rendering of the Text, is not what the Text actually means (or is saying) here. Even 'The New American Bible", a RC Bible (as I'm sure you know) translates κεχαριτωμένη as, "Favored one", not "Full of Grace". Quite frankly, there's nothing about the word κεχαριτωμένη Biblically OR extra-Biblically that would lead one to believe what the RCC has said about its meaning, that Mary was born immaculately (save what has been extensively written by the RCC herself, of course).
I just wish there was more written about Mary in the Bible that would less cryptically support the RC views about her (if they are indeed true ..
I must say, you've given me a bit to chew on though. I'll look over your thoughts again and see if I'm missing something, somehow.
Yours and His,
David
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