"Our earthly liturgies must be celebrations full of beauty and power: Feasts of the Father who created us—that is why the gifts of the earth play such a great part: the bread, the wine, oil and light, incense, sacred music, and splendid colors. Feasts of the Son who redeemed us—that is why we rejoice in our liberation, breathe deeply in listening to the Word, and are strengthened in eating the Eucharistic Gifts. Feasts of the Holy Spirit who lives in us—that is why there is a wealth of consolation, knowledge, courage, strength, and blessing that flows from these sacred assemblies." unknown source possibly YOUCAT Mal.1.11 For from the rising of the sun even unto the going down of the same my name shall be great among the Gentiles; and in every place incense shall be offered unto my name, and a pure offering: for my name shall be great among the heathen, saith theLord of hosts.

Friday, October 28, 2011

Quote from an Episcopal priest coming to RC

http://www.calledtocommunion.com/2011/10/into-the-half-way-house-the-story-of-an-episcopal-priest/#more-9564

The full article is at the above link. Here is a quote from it that speaks to me:

. My journey towards the Catholic faith has not, at core, been a journey of personal enlightenment or one in which I have held up the Church to my own opinions and finally found it acceptable. This would be to make the Church too small, and as G.K. Chesterton reminds us, the Church is ever so much larger on the inside than it seems from the outside. Mine has been a journey towards faith. I have learned to believe first so that I might later begin to understand rather than understand so that I might then believe. My intellect simply isn’t up to the challenge that the latter option presents. I trust that when Jesus breathed His Holy Spirit into His disciples He was anointing His Church to be, among other things, the guardian of the sacred and simple truth of the Gospel.

I have learned to rest in the truth that the Church teaches. I do not make my own salvation through knowledge or emotional experiences, through following this teacher or that. Whether I realize it or not, God is doing a great work in me. It was begun at the Cross, is sustained by the Holy Spirit, and will be completed at the final judgment.

I borrow this analogy from the English poet and convert John Dryden, but it fits me. In the Aeneid, Virgil writes about an encounter that Aeneas has in the forest outside of Carthage. He has wandered there after losing many of his men at sea during a storm. In the forest, a woman approaches him, falls into conversation with him, and comforts him in the midst of his troubles. It is only after she turns and walks away that he recognizes her. It is his mother. He recognizes her by the way that she walks.

I am sure that I could put up a good fight on all of the various theological and biblical reasons why I believe in the Catholic Church, but I would really prefer to say simply that the visible, undivided Church, the Church that Jesus prayed for in His last moments with His disciples, the Church that is the Mother of us all not on her own merits but because she holds Christ within her womb; this I have recognized by the way that she walks.

Even though I’m making a bit of an attempt, this is not the kind of thing that one explains between the soup and dessert course while at dinner. At least this is what Newman once said when asked “why become Catholic?” It is a deeply personal and intimate spiritual journey. It is the search for one’s mother. In this case, she has been here all along.

I can say this, in turning to the Catholic Church I do not turn to something foreign and alien to Anglicans or evangelicals. I turned, rather, to the Catholic Church in order to become more fully what I already was. I have been raised to expect joyfully the activity of the Holy Spirit in my life; I expect Him all the more. I have come to understand the beauty of the English liturgy, the patterns that are formed through Common prayer, the primacy of Scripture, and salvation through Christ alone apart from my own efforts; I believe in those all the more.

I have decided to give what I am to God, which means to take my place in his Body here on earth. My hope in Christ is that my gift given and carried along by the work of the Cross will be acceptable and pleasing to God, and that the promise to those who die to the old life is that they will have new life more abundantly.

I would like to quote from the late Fr. Richard John Neuhaus, also a convert to the Church, who spoke these words to his parishioners. I too spoke these words to my parishioners during a tearful farewell. I wish I had written them, but I will make these words mine: “To those of you with whom I have traveled in the past, know that we travel together still. In the mystery of Christ and His Church nothing is lost, and the broken will be mended. If, as I am persuaded, my communion with Christ’s Church is now the fuller, then it follows that my unity with all who are in Christ is now the stronger. We travel together still.”

Thursday, October 20, 2011

Original sin--links

on original sin
In answer to a question on original sin:{from comment 99 here http://www.calledtocommunion.com/2011/09/nature-grace-and-mans-supernatural-end-feingold-kline-and-clark/#comment-163868http://www.calledtocommunion.com/2011/09/nature-grace-and-mans-supernatural-end-feingold-kline-and-clark/#comment-163868

I suppose in this condemnation then, original sin in the Catholic view is a bit different that just “sin nature”, supposing that even without sin, Adam needed grace to confirm humanity in relationship with God?
You are correct. In Catholic theology, there is no “sin nature,” which would be a contradiction in terms (since sin is by definition a violation of nature). There is only a “fallen nature,” in that it is deprived of the grace that was provided in its original condition.
Can you explain original sin from the Catholic perspective?
Original sin is this deprivation of the grace with which Adam was gifted as a consequence of his sin. It is only “sin” by analogy, in that it is a deprivation associated with wrongdoing, but not one for which we ourselves our responsible. The Catechism of the Catholic Church explains:
404 How did the sin of Adam become the sin of all his descendants? The whole human race is in Adam “as one body of one man”. By this “unity of the human race” all men are implicated in Adam’s sin, as all are implicated in Christ’s justice. Still, the transmission of original sin is a mystery that we cannot fully understand. But we do know by Revelation that Adam had received original holiness and justice not for himself alone, but for all human nature. By yielding to the tempter, Adam and Eve committed a personal sin, but this sin affected the human nature that they would then transmit in a fallen state. It is a sin which will be transmitted by propagation to all mankind, that is, by the transmission of a human nature deprived of original holiness and justice. And that is why original sin is called “sin” only in an analogical sense: it is a sin “contracted” and not “committed” – a state and not an act.

405 Although it is proper to each individual, original sin does not have the character of a personal fault in any of Adam’s descendants. It is a deprivation of original holiness and justice, but human nature has not been totally corrupted: it is wounded in the natural powers proper to it, subject to ignorance, suffering and the dominion of death, and inclined to sin – an inclination to evil that is called “concupiscence”. Baptism, by imparting the life of Christ’s grace, erases original sin and turns a man back towards God, but the consequences for nature, weakened and inclined to evil, persist in man and summon him to spiritual battle.


http://www.calledtocommunion.com/2011/10/protestant-objections-to-the-catholic-doctrines-of-original-justice-and-original-sin/  This one is long and detailed and worth studying. He goes into detail on some of the Protestant objections and then explains why he feels they are wrong. (Needs a lot of thinking!). Here is a quote:

The problem with fallen man is not a matter of frequency of obedience. The problem with fallen man is that he is not a partaker of the divine nature, and so all his righteousness, no matter how frequent, falls short of the supernatural end to which God has graciously called us. Fallen man can do good works that are ordered to man’s natural good. This is why pagans can do virtuous deeds. If however, those persons are not in a state of grace, those deeds are not ordered to man’s supernatural end. Those works are still rewarded at the Judgment, but the reward is not man’s supernatural end; the hierarchy of hell is determined not only by punishments deserved but also by rewards on the order of nature, rewards infinitely inferior to the Beatific Vision.

http://www.calledtocommunion.com/2010/03/aquinas-and-trent-part-7/

below from comment 65  http://www.calledtocommunion.com/2010/12/signs-of-predestination-a-catholic-discusses-election/
 St. Augustine’s view was that babies who die unbaptized end up with a mild form of hell forever. That view stemmed directly from his conviction that original sin is personal culpa. Aquinas softened that by putting such babies in a permanent “limbo,” a place of purely natural happiness. That became the common doctrine until the mid-20th century. But in response to the Calvinist and Jansenist challenges, the Church came gradually to repudiate the underlying premise that original sin is personal culpa. See CCC §405. Once that happened, the rationale for a permanent limbo disappeared. The Pope does not believe there is such a thing.[not sure which Pope--may have written this article during Benedict's time]

from  comment 19 http://www.calledtocommunion.com/2011/10/protestant-objections-to-the-catholic-doctrines-of-original-justice-and-original-sin/ :

As explained in “Nature, Grace, and Man’s Supernatural End: Feingold, Kline, and Clark” and “Lawrence Feingold on Original Justice and Original Sin,” according to a Catholic anthropology, human nature is distinguished from the four preternatural gifts (i.e. integrity, infused knowledge, impassibility, and immortality), and from the supernatural gifts of faith, hope, agape and sanctifying grace. When Adam sinned, he retained human nature intact, but he lost all four preternatural gifts, and he lost all the supernatural gifts. Because he lost the supernatural gifts, he was without the life of God, and dead in sin, living for himself in the curved-inwardness of Godless narcissism. Because he lost the preternatural gift of integrity, he acquired the disorder of concupiscence. Because he lost the preternatural gift of infused knowledge, he acquired the condition of ignorance. Because he lost the preternatural gift of impassibility, he became subject to suffering. And because he lost the preternatural gift of immortality he became subject to death. All his offspring likewise were born in this condition, i.e. with human nature intact, but without these preternatural and supernatural gifts. To be conceived and born without the supernatural gifts is to be conceived and born in what is called “original sin.”


 Protestant anthropology does not distinguish between human nature, preternatural gifts, and supernatural gifts. Protestant anthropology distinguishes only between original human nature (which is righteous), and fallen human nature which is disposed to sin. According to Protestant anthropology, Adam and Eve were created with original human nature, but when they freely sinned, their nature fell. So all their children are born with fallen human nature, which is intrinsically subject to disordered desires, to ignorance, suffering and death. Because Adam and Eve lost their created nature, they were a different kind of creature before their fall, than they were after their fall. When they sinned, they changed species, not necessarily by a change in their DNA, but because of the change in their nature, i.e. the kind of being they were. What we call ‘human’ is what Adam and Eve became only after the fall; before the fall they were a higher kind of being, because they had a higher nature than the nature we now have.
Given Protestant anthropology, and given the patristic principle that what is not assumed is not redeemed, it is not difficult to see the motivation for claiming that Jesus must have assumed a fallen human nature, for if He assumed only an original human nature, he would have not have assumed ourfallen nature, but only that of the original pre-fall couple who, while they had that pristine nature did not [according to Protestant theology] need saving. (See “Pelagian Westminster?“) Moreover, if one does not distinguish between human nature and the preternatural gifts, then since we see clearly in Scripture that Jesus suffered and died, then it will seem that Jesus must have possessed a fallen human nature. At His resurrection He changed species, back to the original human nature of Adam. Salvation for us also will, at our glorification/resurrection, involve a species change, back to Adam’s original nature. If Jesus came “in the likeness of sinful flesh,” and suffered the curse from Genesis 3, and our only two options to choose from are Adam’s “original human nature” or Adam’s “fallen human nature,” then Jesus must have had Adam’s “fallen human nature.” And if Jesus received His humanity from Mary, then it is difficult to see how He could have received “original human nature” from Mary, unless she was immaculately conceived and never sinned (at least did not sin until after Jesus was conceived); that’s not really an option for Protestants. Either she was immaculately conceived or at the moment of Jesus’s conception, God took Mary’s [fallen] human nature and transformed it to a different nature, namely, Adam’s original human nature. But then Jesus’s human nature would have been a different created species than was Mary’s. And that runs against the meaning of Theotokos, which is not that Jesus merely used the womb of the Virgin, but that He took His flesh from her, and was truly her Son, bone of her bones, and flesh of her flesh, homousious with her according to His humanity, and homousious with God the Father according to His divinity. (See the Athanasian Creed, which says that as man He was born of the substance of His mother (et homo est ex substantia matris in saeculo natus.)
In the Catholic understanding there is no ‘fallen human nature.’ God did not make two species of human. There is either human nature accompanied by preternatural and/or supernatural gifts, and human nature unaccompanied by preternatural and/or supernatural gifts. Every human being who has ever lived has had the same human nature possessed by Adam before Adam’s fall. Otherwise we wouldn’t all be human, because either the pre-fall Adam wouldn’t be human, or the post-fall Adam wouldn’t be human. Jesus was conceived having two of the preternatural gifts (i.e. integrity and infused knowledge), but He purposefully gave up the other two preternatural gifts (i.e. impassibility and immortality), because He came into the world to suffer and die, as I explained in comment #12 above. This is the meaning of the verse teaching that Jesus came in the likeness of sinful flesh. By forgoing the preternatural gifts of impassibility and immortality, He made Himself subject to the suffering and death that was the result of the curse of Genesis 3, yet without sinning or being subject to the concupiscence resulting from original sin. He was conceived with the supernatural gifts (excepting faith and hope, because already He possessed the beatific vision), and thus without original sin. So the Catholic answer to the question “Did Jesus Assume a Fallen Human Nature?” is “It depends on what one means by “fallen human nature.” If one means a lower nature than that possessed by the pre-fall Adam, then no, because there is no such thing. And if one means “a human nature having concupiscence,” then no. Jesus did not have concupiscence, because he never had original sin. But if one means “a human nature subject to suffering and death,” then yes, not because He received a different human nature than that had by the pre-fall Adam and Eve, but because He chose not to receive the preternatural gifts of impassibility and immortality, so that He could fulfill the mission for which He came into the world, to suffer and die for our salvation.
This position does not suffer from the problems I described above. Everything we are in our human nature, Christ assumed. For example, He did not have to forgo the preternatural gift of integrity in order to become fully human. Adam prior to his fall was not less human than Adam after his fall. Moreover, on this anthropology, Christ’s passibility and mortality do not entail that He also possessed concupiscence, since these are each conditions due to the absence of preternatural gifts, not essential properties of a singular fallen human nature. Nor do His passibility and mortality indicate that He was internally at enmity with God, since the latter is the result of the absence of the supernatural gift ofagape, not something intrinsic to a particular kind of human nature that Christ would have had to assume in order to redeem us. And given Catholic anthropology, Jesus could receive from Mary the same human nature she had received from Adam, since there is only one human nature. What is known as “the sinful nature” is not a second human nature, but rather concupiscience, i.e. the absence of the preternatural gift of integrity. This “sin nature” is not redeemed and retained in the saints in heaven; it is removed, by the restoration of the preternatural gift of integrity. Salvation does not involve becoming a different species of human, but becoming a partaker of the divine nature, through the infusion of the supernatural gifts of sanctifying grace and agape, and at Christ’s return, the restoration of all the preternatural gifts.


Kuyper wrote the following regarding the Catholic doctrine of original righteousness and original sin:
However tracing the next step in the course of sin we meet a serious difference between the Church of Rome and our own. The former teaches that Adam came forth perfect from the hand of his Maker even before he was endowed with original righteousness. This implies that the human nature is finished without original righteousness, which is put on him like a robe or ornament. As our present nature is complete without dress or ornament, which are needed only to appear respectable in the world, so was the human nature, according to Rome, complete and perfect in itself without righteousness, which serves only as dress and jewel. But the Reformed churches have always opposed this view, maintaining that original righteousness is an essential part of the human nature; hence that the human nature in Adam was not complete without it; that it was not merely added to Adam’s nature but that Adam was created in the possession of it as the direct manifestation of his life
If Adam’s nature was perfect before he possessed original righteousness, it follows that it remains perfect after the loss of it in which case we describe sin simply as carentia justitiae originalis, i.e. the want of original righteousness. This used to be expressed thus: Is original righteousness a natural or supernatural good? If natural then its loss caused the human nature to be wholly corrupt; if supernatural then its loss might take away the glory and honor of that nature, but as a human nature it retained nearly all of its original power. (The Work of the Holy Spirit, by Abraham Kuyper, pp. 88-89.)

In the article to which the footnote above is attached, it states:

..........  the loss of sanctifying grace is an infinite loss, because it is the loss of participation in the divine nature, which is infinite in intellect and will and every perfection.2 By contrast, a corruption of human nature [ie Luther's view] is a finite loss, because what is lost is only finite. So, even according to the philosophical criterion Luther provides, original sin according to the Catholic doctrine is far more evil than original sin according to Luther’s theology. Luther’s theory therefore minimizes original sin far more than does the Catholic doctrine concerning original sin.

Luther urges his reader to believe that it was Adam’s nature to love God, believe God, to know God, just as natural for Adam as it is natural for the eyes to receive light. Luther reasons from the fact that Adam knew and loved God prior to the fall, to the conclusion that doing so was “truly part of his nature.” The problem with this claim, as was pointed out in “Nature, Grace, and Man’s Supernatural End: Feingold, Kline, and Clark,” is that it makes man by his very nature into God, and thus denies the Creator-creature distinction. God cannot create another God, because God by His very nature is uncreated. So any created being cannot in its primary nature be God; it can at most participate in the divine nature through a condecension by God to grant the creature the gift of participating in the divine nature. But if man by his very nature saw God, knew God, and loved God, this would entail that the Beatific Vision is intrinsic to man by his very nature. But the Beatific Vision can be intrinsic only to God, because the Beatific Vision is God’s vision of Himself. Hence Luther’s theology is fatally flawed here, by positing that God can make a creature that has as its primary nature something that can be had intrinsically only by God

from comment 180 below



As a starting point, while it’s hard to remember as limited human beings, we have to keep in mind that God is not at all like us. The instinct when we see anthropomorphic language in Scripture is to latch onto it and to apply it as if we know God in the same way we would know another human, but that instinct must be avoided. When we speak of God’s “sovereignty” or God’s “purpose” or even God’s “will,” it’s no more literally true of God than saying that God has hands or feet. God as God does not operate in a human way in any sense; these are (poor) analogies that are nonetheless the best we can do.
You appeal to one of those analogies as follows:
The flaw in your argument is the failure to understand God’s “revealed will” as opposed to His “decretive will”. The result of this logic requires God to be subject to fate. Since God created everything, this obviously cannot be, as fate itself was created by God.
This is, I would submit, an anthropomorphism of what is otherwise a helpful analogy. Clasically, there is no distinction between God’s “revealed will” and God’s “decretive will.” That was an invention of the Reformation by analogy to human beings, and it is simply inapplicable to God; God only has a single, perfect will that cannot be divided. The Scholastic distinction, which instead draws distinctions with respect to God’s effects, is the appeal to God’s “permissive will,” and this distinction was rooted solely in the Biblical and philosophical fact that God cannot sin. As St. Thomas succinctly says, “God therefore neither wills evil to be done, nor wills it not to be done, but wills to permit evil to be done; and this is a good.” That does not create a (false) separation in the will of God; instead, it says something about the existence of created things (and in this case, evil in created things) relative to God’s eternal will.
So just as when we see Scriptures describing God’s hands and feet as not being literal, we have to do the same when God is described as actively or positively causing evil. God isn’t surprised by evil either, but He “plans around” it by willing good to come of it rather. To say that God positively wills evil goes beyond a “hard teaching” over to blasphemy, although I recognize that you would not intend it that way. We have to stop short at that point. So the idea that people without a rational will, i.e., infants are born evil is impossible, because that would be God positively willing, rather than permissively allowing a rational will to exercise, evil. That is why the Catholic Church also rejects the idea that original “sin” is guilt of fault.
Now this is usually the point at which people pipe up and say “what about Augustine?” As we all know, Augustine said that infants and other unbaptized people fall into what he called a massa damnata et damnabilis, a damned and damnable mass. This was what he suggested Paul had in mind when he said vessels of mercy and vessels of wrath were formed from the same “lump,” taking that analogy quite literally. How did he, who recognized that evil had only a negative existence and that God could not cause it, somehow miss this basic fact?
The reason is that Augustine held an odd (although not for his time) belief about human souls calledtraducianism. This viewed the soul as a kind of metaphysical substance that was passed on to children in generation in the same way genetic material might be understood today. So from Augustine’s perspective, it was possible for this common “soul stuff” to be tainted by its previous holder’s sin. Hence, it wasn’t God creating something evil; rather, it was this defective “soul stuff” that Adam had tainted by his sin that caused the infant to be part of the lump. Hence, Augustine took the analogy too far based on a philosophical belief; he saw the lump of clay as the lump of “soul stuff” out of which humans were formed. This belief was also responsible for some of Augustine’s unusual beliefs about the evils of sex, some of which were shared even by other traducian Fathers who did not hold Augustine’s beliefs about original sin.
Now that we’ve developed considerably in the philosophy of the soul and that we understand that the soul is specially created by God in each infant, we have a better understanding that Augustine did. Therefore, because we cannot appeal to this idea of “soul stuff” that Augustine did, we realize that we have to stop short in saying that original sin involves actual evil or that the negative predestination of certain souls to damnation lies in anything other than the person’s own fault. In other words, now we know that what goes for evil in general (God is the cause of everything, but He does not cause evil positively) applies to predestination in the same exact way (God predestines everything, but He does not positively predestine faults leading to damnation). Hence, when we read in Romans 9 that God created vessels of wrath or hardened hearts, we have to remember that we are not allowed to interpret this as God positively creating the evil in anything, including the will, as if he were a human, so we can’t take this as negative predestination.
Is that clear so far? If you can understand that basic philosophical principle, then we can turn to how to apply it in exegesis.


You’re right that among the early Reformers the term “saving graces” was used. I noted as much incomment #3 of the “Pelagian Westminster?” thread, and in #87 above. But Clark has a good reason for wanting to use a different term for what the WLC refers to as “saving graces.” See Sinclair Ferguson’s statement in comment #54 of the “Nature, Grace, and Man’s Supernatural End” thread. Ferguson’s position is the contemporary Reformed (and Protestant) position. I see it over and over coming from Reformed leaders, not just Clark and Horton. Timothy George says something similar in his bookAmazing Grace. In fact, I can’t think of a single Reformed leader who would take issue with what Ferguson says there.
The reason Clark does not want to use the term ‘grace’ for what the early Reformers were referring to when they used terms like “saving graces” is that what they were referring to is entirely different from what in Catholic theology is meant by the terms ‘actual grace’ and ‘sanctifying grace.’ In Reformed theology these ‘saving graces’ are God working in us to repair our fallen nature. So we could more accurately describe them as divinely wrought repairs to our human nature. In Reformed theology nothing divine is actually “infused” into us; rather, God works in us to repair what is fallen to its original nature. That’s why it is misleading (given Reformed theology) to speak of graces being infused into the believer; it is like saying that a repair was infused into your car at the shop. Repairs are not the sort of things that are infused; repairs are made, effected or accomplished, not infused.
In Catholic doctrine, grace is ordered to our supernatural end, and human nature is not itself fallen, as I have described in “Nature, Grace, and Man’s Supernatural End: Feingold, Kline, and the Clark.” So in Catholic doctrine grace is rightly described as infused, because it is not a repair, but is a participation in the divine nature, not something we have by nature, or effected by repairing something we have by nature.
Of course Clark is not denying sanctification, and not denying that the Spirit effects sanctification through Word and sacraments. So he is not denying the selections from the WLC and the WSC to which you refer. He is trying to avoid semantic confusion between the Catholic understanding of grace as infused participation in the divine nature, and the Reformed notion of the Spirit working in us to repair our fallen human nature. See pages 575-579 of volume 3 of Bavink’s Reformed Dogmatics. Repairing our fallen nature does not entail that there is any ontological union with Christ, or any participation in the divine nature, i.e. theosis. So, I don’t see that the statements to which you are referring (in the WSC, WLC, etc.) falsify anything I said. No Reformed person I know would ever say that God doesn’t sanctify believers, and nothing I said, so far as I can tell, entails or implies that Reformed theology denies that God works in believers to sanctify them. So if sanctification is all that is meant by “infusion of graces,” then of course Reformed theology affirms that. But, at that point we’re meaning something so different by “infusion of grace” that we’re equivocating and possibly misleading, for the reasons I’ve just explained. And that’s what Clark is trying to avoid, it seems to me.

also comment 464 http://www.calledtocommunion.com/2012/08/imputation-and-paradigms-a-reply-to-nicholas-batzig/


The sense in which we all “sinned” in Adam is not the same as the sense in which Adam himself sinned. He sinned by a deliberate act of the will (from a state in which he possessed even the preternatural gift of infused knowledge, making him even more culpable); we “sinned” in him not by an act of our wills (which did not even exist), but because we all existed in him potentially, and acted (in an analogous sense) in the human nature he himself exemplified and instantiated at that time, through which he sinned, which he subsequently handed down to us, and by which we are what we are as human.

from comment 470: ..........................You’re not seeing the middle position between Adam’s descendants being “pure potentiality” (which would give them no relation to Adam), and Adam’s descendants being entirely actual in Adam. But there is a middle position, because through biological reproduction we receive human nature from Adam by coming from him, and in that sense (through that shared nature we received from him) we existed in him.

from comment 109 http://www.calledtocommunion.com/2011/09/nature-grace-and-mans-supernatural-end-feingold-kline-and-clark/


Feingold makes the point that mankind, even in a perfect state, in and of himself, cannot know God nor have a Fatherly love for God, nor can he live forever, without infused sanctifying grace.
Careful. Without sanctifying grace man cannot know God as Father, but he can know God as Creator, as First Cause.
Thus, original sin = being born without sanctifying grace.
Correct.
However, the complaint that Robert has is that it seems as though, from the Catholic perspective, man was made in and of himself with the propensity (?) or possibility of concupiscence, and natural break down and death in his body. And that without sanctifying grace, man in innocence would otherwise die. This, to Protestants at least, sounds like man was made incomplete or lacking.

I addressed this objection in the body of article above, in the Clark section, especially in the paragraph that begins “Another objection to the Catholic doctrine is the claim that it implies that human nature in itself (even prior to the fall) is defective or fallen.” I also addressed this objection in “Protestant Objections to the Catholic Doctrines of Original Justice and Original Sin.” I also addressed it in “Michael Horton on Terrence Malick’s “Tree of Life”,” and in comments #41 and #43 of “A Reply To R.C. Sproul Regarding the Catholic Doctrines of Original Sin and Free Will.”

from comment 111 on the same post :

I still don’t see how you escape the charge that God must elevate us beyond our humanity in order to make sin impossible. That points to a flaw in human nature, or at least a tendency to go bad.
As I’ve explained in the links in #109, “flaw” and “defect” are relative to a nature. For example, it is not a defect or deficiency in humans that we have only one stomach, while cows have four, or two legs while octopi have eight. That’s because having only one stomach and only two legs belongs to the very nature of the human person. Likewise, not having the ability to avoid sin necessarily, apart from grace, is not a flaw or defect in a nature of just that sort, i.e. one that does not naturally have that ability. Angels too, though greater in nature than humans, do not by their nature have the ability to avoid sin necessarily, which is why some fell, even while in a state of grace. (cf. Summa Theologica I Q.62 a.3) If it is possible to fall (i.e. to sin) while in a state of grace, then a fortiori it is possible to fall (i.e. sin) while not in a state of grace, all other things being equal. But that doesn’t entail that angel natures are defective or faulty. Rather, that’s necessarily a limitation of the very nature of any created thing. Only God by His very nature has the ability to avoid sin necessarily, because only God is by nature Goodness Itself. Just as human nature is not defective by not including omnipotence, so human nature is not defective by not including the ability to avoid sin necessarily. Claiming otherwise is using the divine nature as the standard for what counts as a defect or flaw in a human nature. And that would make every creature necessarily flawed and defective, for not being omnipotent, omniscient, etc., etc.

from comment 114
But the problem is that God doesn’t condemn cows for having 4 stomachs or human beings for lacking omnipotence. He does condemn human beings for being sinners, however. And if he created human beings with the necessary tendency to go bad, then creatureliness is a bad thing.
This is sloppy in its leaps, non sequiturs and over-simplifications. First, God never condemns or punishes anyone for doing what he could not help doing, that is, if he could not do otherwise. Only free choices to sin are punishable. Second, in actuality, God does not condemn human beings “for being sinners,” but rather for freely committing actual sins, freely refusing to repent, and freely refusing the [operative] grace of repentance at work in them. Third, lacking the ability to avoid sin necessarily is not the same as being ordered toward sin; a creature can be ordered to the good, and yet not have the ability to avoid sin necessarily. Lacking the ability to avoid sin necessarily does not entail being directed to evil, and therefore does not make the creature bad. Fourth, from the fact that all creatures as such necessarily lack the ability to avoid sin necessarily, it does not follow that creatureliness “is a bad thing.” That conclusion would follow only if the divine nature were the standard of perfection for every creature, thus entailing that all creatures are bad for lacking omnipotence, omniscience, omnibenevolence, etc. Created things as such are good even when they lack uniquely divine attributes. I explained that in my previous comment.
We must therefore become more than creatures to avoid condemnation. This starts to blur the Creator-creature distinction,
Not only does that conclusion not follow from the premises, but the shoe is on the other foot, as I’ve explained both in the article at the top of this page, but also in the two other articles linked in comment #109 above. In no way is the Creator-creature distinction “blurred,” if by “blurred” you mean eliminated. In Catholic doctrine every human person always remains a creature. Receiving grace does not make a creature into a non-creature. (Of course if by ‘blurred’ you mean only that in such a teaching you don’t see the Creator-creature distinction, that would be a statement about yourself, and your own epistemic limitations.)
and it once again makes God a being who created something that was already disordered but he then had to fix by adding grace to take it out of the realm of creatureliness.
Again, this conclusion also does not follow from the premises. From the fact that creatures as such lack the ability to avoid sin necessarily, it does not follow that they are disordered. Once again you are using a uniquely divine attribute as the standard by which to determine whether creatures are ordered or disordered. And the problem with that move, for you, is that either it makes all creatures necessarily defective (for not being omnipotent, omniscient, etc.), or your position is ad hoc in only arbitrarily picking one uniquely divine attribute (while leaving out the others) and using it as the standard by which to judge whether creatures are ordered or disordered.
In the peace of Christ,
– Bryan
P.S. I should add as well that if lacking [the ability to avoid sin necessarily] makes creatures bad and disordered, then in Reformed theology all the humans God has created were bad and disordered, because all the humans God has created have lacked the ability to avoid sin necessarily.

Friday, October 14, 2011

Mary--further explanations of the doctrine

from a comment here

http://www.calledtocommunion.com/2010/12/mary-without-sin-scripture-and-tradition/#comment-126889

If Mary was born sinless and lived a sinless life, why did Jesus have to come?
Because what saved Mary from both original sin and actual sin was Christ’s sacrifice, as explained in the lecture here, especially the section on Bl. Duns Scotus.
Mary would have been a qualified sacrifice already, negating the need for Jesus to be born.
No, because to make satisfaction for sin, the sacrifice needed to be divine, not merely innocent, or innocent and obedient. St. Thomas addresses this in a number of places, and I’ll point you to some of them, because they provide much more detail than I can in a combox comment. In the first three articles of Summa Theologica III Q.46, he explains that because God is omniscient, and because our sin is ultimately against Him, He could have forgiven our sin without Christ’s atonement. But then he goes on to explain why it was necessary in another sense, i.e. most fitting, to demonstrate both the justice of God and the love of God. If a mere man had done what Christ did, it would not have made atonement for our sins, and it would not have demonstrated the love of God for us.
We see this again in Summa Theologica III Q.1 art.2, where St. Thomas answers the question “Whether it was necessary for the restoration of the human race that the Word of God should become incarnate?” In the second paragraph of the “I answer that” you will find five reasons why it is was fitting for the Son of God to become man, in order to further man’s good. And in the third paragraph he gives five reasons why it is was fitting for the Son of God to become man, in order to free men from evil. And the second objection in that article is very helpful. It reads:
Further, for the restoration of human nature, which had fallen through sin, nothing more is required than that man should satisfy for sin. Now man can satisfy, as it would seem, for sin; for God cannot require from man more than man can do, and since He is more inclined to be merciful than to punish, as He lays the act of sin to man’s charge, so He ought to credit him with the contrary act. Therefore it was not necessary for the restoration of human nature that the Word of God should become incarnate.
St. Thomas replies:
Satisfaction may be said to be sufficient in two ways–first, perfectly, inasmuch as it is condign, being adequate to make good the fault committed, and in this way the satisfaction of a mere man cannot be sufficient for sin, both because the whole of human nature has been corrupted by sin, whereas the goodness of any person or persons could not be made up adequately for the harm done to the whole of the nature; and also because a sin committed against God has a kind of infinity from the infinity of the Divine majesty, because the greater the person we offend, the more grievous the offense. Hence for condign satisfaction it was necessary that the act of the one satisfying should have an infinite efficiency, as being of God and man. Secondly, man’s satisfaction may be termed sufficient, imperfectly–i.e. in the acceptation of him who is content with it, even though it is not condign, and in this way the satisfaction of a mere man is sufficient. And forasmuch as every imperfect presupposes some perfect thing, by which it is sustained, hence it is that satisfaction of every mere man has its efficiency from the satisfaction of Christ.
No mere man, says St. Thomas, could have made condign satisfaction for sin (i.e. an offering truly outweighing in its goodness the demerit of sin). That is because if a mere man were to offer satisfaction, it would not satisfy for the sins of the whole human race, and the harm done to the whole of human nature. The just penalty for sin against God (i.e. mortal sin) is an infinite penalty, because it is an offense against He who is infinite majesty. So the satisfaction had to have an infinite value, and the satisfaction offered by a mere man, or a group of mere men, would have only a finite value. To make a sufficient satisfaction for the sins of the whole world, the one making such a satisfaction must therefore be divine.
Similarly, because He is both God and man, He is the Mediator of God and men. A mere man could not be a proper mediator, as St. Thomas explains:
We may consider two things in a mediator: first, that he is a mean; secondly, that he unites others. Now it is of the nature of a mean to be distant from each extreme: while it unites by communicating to one that which belongs to the other. Now neither of these can be applied to Christ as God, but only as man. For, as God, He does not differ from the Father and the Holy Ghost in nature and power of dominion: nor have the Father and theHoly Ghost anything that the Son has not, so that He be able to communicate to others something belonging to theFather or the Holy Ghost, as though it were belonging to others than Himself. But both can be applied to Him asman. Because, as man, He is distant both from God, by nature, and from man by dignity of both grace and glory. Again, it belongs to Him, as man, to unite men to God, by communicating to men both precepts and gifts, and byoffering satisfaction and prayers to God for men. And therefore He is most truly called Mediator, as man. (Summa Theologica III Q.26 a.2)
A mediator is ‘distant’ from each extreme, and unites both by communicating to one what belongs to the other. Christ does this through His incarnation, because each of His two natures is distant from the other, and yet they are united in His Person through His incarnation, such that in Him God is man, and man is God. A mere man could not do that. We are united to God through this hypostatic union, through our union with the Body of Christ — both in the Eucharist and in the Church, which is His Mystical Body. But if there were no hypostatic union, then we could not be united to God through it. So this too is another reason why no mere man (or mere woman) could unite us to God
In the peace of Christ,

Thanks for your comments. I am glad that we share that principle of the communion of the saints, that the parts of the body help one another even as they are vivified by the Head. If we share that, I believe that we are close too on Mary’s role in mediating grace to us, for the head is attached to the body by a neck. Beth’s and Friar Charles’s comments are worthy of reflection. If I am to add something, I would point out that the point about Mary as the New Eve was very helpful for me personally in understanding her preeminent role as a creature in the work of redemption. This idea can be found in the fathers as early as St. Justin Martyr and St. Irenaeus of Lyon (see Dialogue with Trypho 100.5, and Against Heresies III.22.4 and V.19.1, respectively). The Catholic approach to interpreting Scripture is that, acknowledging that God brought about and preserved the inspired Scriptures in and through the Church, one should read Scripture in the Church and under the guidance of the Fathers.
The basic idea underlying Mary’s co-mediation of all grace is that of there being a Woman who is the helper fit for the Man. Although Adam was the head of the human race by natural descent, Eve was the help fit unto him. Now Jesus Christ is the New Adam (cf. Romans 5, 1 Cor 15), and Mary is the New Eve made fit to be his helper (cf. Luke 1). Eve was a sinless virgin who is called by Adam both “Woman” (Genesis 2:2:23), who would become the “Mother of all the living” (Genesis 3:20); Mary is a sinless virgin who is called by the New Adam “Woman” (Jn 19:26), who becomes the “Mother” of the Beloved Disciple (Jn 19:27). The Beloved Disciple is himself a type for each believer, and thus Mary is seen to be the mother of all the faithful. This is clearer in Revelation 12. Jesus Christ is the “offspring/seed” who fulfills the prophecy of Genesis 3:15 (cf. Galatians 3:16), and yet the rest of the Church is called the “rest of her [the Woman's] offspring” in Revelation 12:17 (cf. v. 1).
The point then is, by God’s wisdom in raising up the lowly in order to fulfill the promise to Abraham to bless the nations (cf. Mary’s son in Lk 1:46-55), Mary became co-redeemer with the New Adam just as Eve was a co-sinner in the fall of the first Adam (1 Tim 2:14). Where Eve said no to God, Mary said yes (“Let it be done unto me according to thy word”). So, just as Eve is the mother of all those who live by nature, so Mary is the mother of all who are alive to God through grace (and also of all who have the potential alive to God by grace, and so of all human beings). As St. Ireneaus put it, Mary undid the knot of Eve’s disobedience when Mary consented to bear the savior of the human race. Thus our salvation comes to us through Mary, in her consent to the Incarnation and at her consent to Christ’s sacrifice at the foot of the cross. Mary’s role as co-mediatrix is greater than any other Christian’s role as a co-mediator with Christ.
Friar Charles recommended Bl. John Henry Newman’s writings on this. Two other sources are worthwhile. The first is the encyclical letter Ad diem illum by Pope St. Pius X on the fiftieth anniversary of the definition of Mary’s Immaculate Conception. Also helpful is the section of Vatican II’s document on the nature of the Church, Lumen gentium, that contains a prolonged meditation on Mary from paragraphs 52-69. In particular, paragraphs 60-62 are most relevant to this question of Mary’s role in communicating the grace of Christ to us.
Another helpful resource is Dr. Larry Feingold’s lecture series on Mary, including the talk on Mary’s spiritual maternity and mediation


Good explanation here for evangelicals about the doctrine of Mary: http://www.firstthings.com/article/2009/10/do-whatever-he-tells-you-the-blessed-virgin-mary-in-christian-faith-and-life

Discussion of until  and the words heos hou  in the following link

 http://catholic-legate.com/Apologetics/MaryAndTheSaints/HeosHouPolemic/HeosHouAndProtestantPolemic.aspx
Here is just a tiny snippet:

Leaving aside post-Reformation quarrels, we must seek to reconstruct Matthew's intention, first from the immediate context and then from the whole Gospel.  How does "not know her until" fit into the immediate context?  In English when something is negated until a particular time, occurrence after that time is usually assumed.  However, in discussing the Greek heõs hou after a negative…K. Beyer, Semitishce Syntax im Neuen Testament (Gottingen: Vandenhoeck, 1962), I, 132(1), points out that in Greek and Semitic such a negation often has no implication at all about what happened after the limit of the "until" was reached…The immediate context favors a lack of future implication here, for Matthew is concerned only with stressing Mary's virginity before the child's birth, so that the Isaian prophecy will be fulfilled: it is as a virgin that Mary will give birth to her son.  As for the marital situation after the birth of the child, in itself this verse gives us no information whatsoever.  In my judgment the question of Mary's remaining a virgin for the rest of her life belongs to post-biblical theology […] Besides the question of fact, one has to ask whether Matthew was in a position to know the facts.  Did he think that the brothers were children of Mary born after Jesus; and if so, was this simply an assumption on his part?18  (emphasis added)

Another good article here and it too deals with the tenses and a lot more on Mary : http://matt1618.freeyellow.com/mary.html#%5B20%5D

and another article with lots of detail here:
http://www.philvaz.com/apologetics/num27.htm

from the catechism:


"Rejoice, you who are full of grace"
721     Mary, the all-holy ever-virgin Mother of God, is the masterwork of the mission of the Son and the Spirit in the fullness of time. For the first time in the plan of salvation and because his Spirit had prepared her, the Father found the dwelling place where his Son and his Spirit could dwell among men. In this sense the Church's Tradition has often read the most beautiful texts on wisdom in relation to Mary. Mary is acclaimed and represented in the liturgy as the "Seat of Wisdom."
In her, the "wonders of God" that the Spirit was to fulfill in Christ and the Church began to be manifested:
722     The Holy Spirit prepared Mary by his grace. It was fitting that the mother of him in whom "the whole fullness of deity dwells bodily" should herself be "full of grace." She was, by sheer grace, conceived without sin as the most humble of creatures, the most capable of welcoming the inexpressible gift of the Almighty. It was quite correct for the angel Gabriel to greet her as the "Daughter of Zion": "Rejoice." It is the thanksgiving of the whole People of God, and thus of the Church, which Mary in her canticle lifts up to the Father in the Holy Spirit while carrying within her the eternal Son.
723     In Mary, the Holy Spirit fulfills the plan of the Father's loving goodness. Through the Holy Spirit, the Virgin conceives and gives birth to the Son of God. By the Holy Spirit's power and her faith, her virginity became uniquely fruitful.
724     In Mary, the Holy Spirit manifests the Son of the Father, now become the Son of the Virgin. She is the burning bush of the definitive theophany. Filled with the Holy Spirit she makes the Word visible in the humility of his flesh. It is to the poor and the first representatives of the gentiles that she makes him known.
725     Finally, through Mary, the Holy Spirit begins to bring men, the objects of God's merciful love, into communion with Christ. And the humble are always the first to accept him: shepherds, magi, Simeon and Anna, the bride and groom at Cana, and the first disciples.
726     At the end of this mission of the Spirit, Mary became the Woman, the new Eve ("mother of the living"), the mother of the "whole Christ." As such, she was present with the Twelve, who "with one accord devoted themselves to prayer," at the dawn of the "end time" which the Spirit was to inaugurate on the morning of Pentecost with the manifestation of the Church.

also from Newman :Modern History Sourcebook: 
John Henry Newman 
On the Blessed Virgin Mary found here http://www.fordham.edu/halsall/mod/newman-mary.asp


http://www.patheos.com/blogs/standingonmyhead/2012/05/sorrowful-mother-and-co-redeemer.html

http://www.agapebiblestudy.com/documents/The%20Virgin%20Mary's%20Role%20in%20Salvation%20History.htm








http://www.calledtocommunion.com/2011/12/underlying-disagreements-in-ect-evangelicals-objections-to-the-dogma-of-the-immaculate-conception/ the comments on this link are helpful too. This is more on Mary--arguments against Protestant view. READ THE COMMENTS on this one!

In history of church:http://www.earlychristians.org/docs_interest/Mary.html



On Mary from anglican who believes in the Marian doctrines:http://peregrinus-peregrinus.blogspot.com/2011/08/blessed-virgin-mary-in-anglican-and.html

also http://principiumunitatis.blogspot.com/2009/11/early-church-fathers-on-mary-as-new-eve.html

On lady of Guadalupe:http://www.calledtocommunion.com/2010/12/our-lady-of-guadalupe/

more on Mary: http://www.defendingthebride.com/direct/#top

http://www.patheos.com/blogs/standingonmyhead/2012/04/do-catholics-worship-mary.html


http://www.montfort.org/content/uploads/pdf/PDF_EN_26_1.pdf  This is St Louis Marie de Montfort
True Devotion to the Blessed Virgin

This comment from Bryan is found http://www.calledtocommunion.com/2010/12/marys-immaculate-conception/#comment-38265 at comment 27

A reader sent in the following question: “I have read in multiple places that Mary was free from all motions of concupiscence as a result of being immaculately conceived, without the stain of original sin. Is this really the case? If Mary did not have concupiscence, could she have a completely free will?” In other words, if Mary was sinless and without concupiscence, then how could she have free will, her obedience be meritorious, and her fiat be venerable, if she was never even tempted to sin?
According to the teaching of the Church, Mary was free from concupiscence. So was Jesus. So were Adam and Eve prior to their sin. (On concupiscence, see section 5 here.) Concupiscence is one source of temptation for us now, but not the only source, otherwise Adam and Eve would not have been able to be tempted. But Adam and Eve were tempted, and succumbed. Jesus was tempted in the desert, but did not succumb. So it is possible for a person to be tempted, without concupiscence, because Adam and Eve and Jesus were tempted without concupiscence.
Jesus’s situation is unique in this respect, because He is a divine Person with a human nature, and therefore He could not sin. The Fifth Ecumenical Council (AD 553) condemned the claim of Theodore of Mopsuestia that Jesus became impeccable only after His resurrection. In contrast, Adam, Eve, and Mary were able to sin. Yet all were tempted without concupiscence. In the case of Christ, by His obedience in His human will He merited from God for Himself and for us (see Summa Theologica III Q.19 a.3-4,). So the problematic assumption in the question is that neither freedom nor temptation nor merit are possible apart from concupiscence.
It is important to understand rightly what true freedom is. The ability to sin (which is more accurately understood as the inability necessarily to avoid sin) is not part of the essence of free will. Otherwise God would not have free will, neither would Jesus or the saints in heaven. See “Lawrence Feingold on Freedom of the Will.”) The ability to sin is a temporary condition for us creatures now in this probationary period, in order that those who persevere in grace and living faith may attain the perfect freedom, i.e. moral freedom, which is freedom for the good, a freedom had only by those who have received the ability necessarily never to sin, but necessarily to act in agape. Those who die in a state of mortal sin lose even the ability not to sin, because their will is then ‘fixed’ (i.e. made permanently immutable) in obstinate rebellion as is already the case for demons (cf. Summa Theologica I Q.64 a.2.


and this is a good one on her immaculate conception: http://www.christendom-awake.org/pages/marian/scotus&immac.htm


from comment   94     here: http://www.calledtocommunion.com/2010/11/mary-as-co-redemptrix/#comment-46287


"In the last fifty years, the teaching authority of the Church has spoken again and again about proper and improper understandings of Marian devotion and practice.
For example, from 1964, there is chapter 8 of “Lumen Gentium,” which deals very carefully with Mary’s relationship to Christ and to the Church:http://www.vatican.va/archive/hist_councils/ii_vatican_council/documents/vat-ii_const_19641121_lumen-gentium_en.html
From 1974, there is Pope Paul VI’s “Marialis Cultus,” especially “Section Two: Four Guidelines for Devotion to the Blessed Virgin: Biblical, Liturgical, Ecumenical and Anthropological.”http://www.vatican.va/holy_father/paul_vi/apost_exhortations/documents/hf_p-vi_exh_19740202_marialis-cultus_en.html
There is Blessed Pope John Paul II’s 1987 encyclical on Mary, which is very clear about the right, Christological understanding and role of Marian devotion in the Church:http://www.vatican.va/holy_father/john_paul_ii/encyclicals/documents/hf_jp-ii_enc_25031987_redemptoris-mater_en.html
Now, if one has read the writings of the Saints of the Church (such as St. Alphonsus Liguori), and of the more recent Popes, on the subject of Mary, and one *still* thinks that the Church has not spoken out sufficiently about “improper” Marian devotion, the question arises: if Christ founded the Church, and the Holy Spirit guides the Pope and the Magisterium, in teaching on matters of faith and morals, should we not trust the Holy Spirit, working through the Pope and Magisterium, on Marian teaching? The alternative would seem to be to trust in our own understanding, and Scripture obviously teaches against that idea (Proverbs 3:5)."

from comment 97 of the above link:


"You seem to be approaching the question as though Scripture alone is the authoritative source for the Church’s doctrine. But in the Catholic paradigm, not only Scripture but Tradition as well is authoritative. So is the Church. See David Anders’s recent post on the subject of Tradition. See also sections 7-10 of Dei Verbum. From the Protestant perspective, Pope Pius XI is just another man with mere opinions like everyone else. But from the perspective of the Catholic paradigm, Pope Pius XI was a successor of St. Peter, and a steward of the keys of the Kingdom which Christ gave to St. Peter. As the Vicar of Christ we are to give religious assent to his teaching, because Christ guides and teaches the Church through him.
Regarding sharing in the work of redemption, St. Paul says as much in Colossians, when he writes that in his flesh he does his share on behalf of Christ’s body, which is the church, in filling up what is lacking in Christ’s afflictions. (Col. 1:24) And that isn’t blasphemy; it is part of the generosity of Christ, that we are given the opportunity to share in His sufferings, and thereby participate in His redemption of the world. The whole Old Testament is a preparation by God for the coming of the Messiah, and in this way all the righteous figures of the Old Testament participate in Christ’s work of redemption. Mary especially participates, by being the very mother of the Savior, giving to Him His very flesh, the flesh that would be nailed to a cross. If participation in Christ’s redemption were blasphemy, there would have been no Old Testament, no Jewish people, and no Mary. Instead, Christ would have come down from heaven with a body made ex nihilo, with no lineage, into no special people, with no expectation of His coming. Nor would there be a Great Commission by which the work of redemption is continued throughout the whole world by Christ’s followers, until He returns."

end of quote

from the encyclical mentioned up above by John Paul II here is a statement on Mary's mediation:http://www.vatican.va/holy_father/john_paul_ii/encyclicals/documents/hf_jp-ii_enc_25031987_redemptoris-mater_en.html


In effect, Mary's mediation is intimately linked with her motherhood. It possesses a specifically maternal character, which distinguishes it from the mediation of the other creatures who in various and always subordinate ways share in the one mediation of Christ, although her own mediation is also a shared mediation.96 In fact, while it is true that "no creature could ever be classed with the Incarnate Word and Redeemer," at the same time "the unique mediation of the Redeemer does not exclude but rather gives rise among creatures to a manifold cooperation which is but a sharing in this unique source." And thus "the one goodness of God is in reality communicated diversely to his creatures."97

The teaching of the Second Vatican Council presents the truth of Mary's mediation as "a sharing in the one unique source that is the mediation of Christ himself." Thus we read: "The Church does not hesitate to profess this subordinate role of Mary. She experiences it continuously and commends it to the hearts of the faithful, so that, encouraged by this maternal help, they may more closely adhere to the Mediator and Redeemer."98 This role is at the same time special and extraordinary. It flows from her divine motherhood and can be understood and lived in faith only on the basis of the full truth of this motherhood. Since by virtue of divine election Mary is the earthly Mother of the Father's consubstantial Son and his "generous companion" in the work of redemption "she is a mother to us in the order of grace."99 This role constitutes

concerning Mary having other children: from comment 48 here http://www.calledtocommunion.com/2013/01/holy-church-finding-jesus-as-a-reverted-catholic-a-testimonial-response-to-chris-castaldo/#comment-46784

Fourth, you claim that the Catholic doctrine of the perpetual virginity of Mary is contrary to Matthew 12:46-47, 13:55, Mark 6:3, John 2:12, John 7:3-5, Acts 1:14, 1 Cor 9:5, Gal 1:19, and Psalm 69. But the terms translated there as ‘brothers’ and ‘sisters’ have a broader semantic extension than do the terms ‘brother’ and ‘sister’ in English, and can refer to half-brothers/sisters or cousins. (See, for example, Gen. 14:14, 29:15, Lev. 10:4, 2 Sam. 1:26; Amos 1:9) So for that reason alone none of the passages to which you refer here are incompatible with the doctrine of Mary’s perpetual virginity. You referred to Galatians 1:19, which speaks of “James the Lord’s brother,” as evidence of the falsehood of the doctrine of Mary’s perpetual virginity. But this James (i.e. James the lesser) was the son of Mary the wife of Clopas (John 19:25, Mt. 27:56, Mk 15:40), also known as Alphaeus (Mt. 10:3), not the son of the Virgin Mary. This James is called “the Lord’s brother” because according to Hegesippus, Clopas was the brother of Joseph. Regarding Psalm 69, the meaning of ‘brothers’ here is His people (the Jews), and “mother’s sons” has the same meaning (cf. Ezekiel’s use of the term ‘mother’ to refer to Jerusalem in Ez. 19). So the Catholic doctrine of the perpetual virginity of Mary does not contradict any of these verses.

from comment 48 from the above link:

 Finally, you claim that the Catholic doctrines of Marys’ immaculate conception and perpetual sinlessness are contradicted by Rom 3:23, Lk 1:47, and Lk 2:22-24. By ‘all’ [πάντες] in Romans 3:23, the Holy Spirit is not referring to “every human exhaustively, taken individually,” but is teaching that the righteousness of Christ is for both Gentiles and Jews, which is why he says in the previous verse, “for there is no distinction.” He is saying that the need for, and gift of the righteousness that comes through Christ is not limited to Gentiles alone, or to Jews alone, but belongs to both without distinction. Hence the ‘all’ is an all of catholicity. Of course it is true that every human being is either a Jew or a Gentile, and therefore falls under the ‘all.’ But because here this term is not intended to mean that every human individually has sinned, this passage is not in conflict with the Church’s doctrine of Mary’s sinlessness for the same reason that this passage is not in conflict with the Church’s doctrine of Christ’s sinlessness; the ‘all’ is not intended in an individually exhaustive way, so as to rule out exceptions such as Christ and His Mother. Regarding Lk 1:47, in Catholic doctrine, Jesus is Mary’s Savior, and saves her (by His Passion and Death on the Cross) more perfectly than He saves any other human being, namely, by preventing her from contracting original sin and ever falling into sin. I have explained this in more detail in the section on Scotus in “Mary’s Immaculate Conception.” Lastly, regarding Mary’s sacrifice of a pair of turtledoves or two young pigeons at the Presentation, in obedience to the Law of Moses, this no more entails that Mary was sinful than does Christ’s baptism by John the Baptist entail that He was in need of repentance, as I explained in “Feast of the Presentation of the Lord.” Circumcision symbolizes the removal of original sin. Yet Jesus who had no original sin, was circumcised on the eighth day (Luke 2:21). So obedience to the ceremonial law does not entail that the one obeying this law is sinful, because Jesus too obeyed the ceremonial law, and yet He was sinless. Thus there is no contradiction between Mary’s immaculate conception and perpetual sinlessness on the one hand, and the Scriptures you cite here on the other hand.

end of quote


Thanks for your reply.
Your replies were all the standard responses that I’ve come to expect from Roman Catholics. When I first read them, I sighed as I usually do at the inability for someone who otherwise seems intelligent to see the obvious right in front of him. It never ceases to amaze me the mental gymnastics that someone will go through to convince themselves and others that X is actually Y.
One of the things about ad hominems is that they can easily be returned, and thus cancelled out. So if your response to my replies is to attack my intelligence, I could (but I won’t) easily say the same thing to you, namely, that the reason you insist on claiming that there are five contradictions internal to Catholicism, even after I showed that these five cases are no contradictions at all, is merely because of an intelligence problem. So resorting to ad hominems doesn’t make one’s case. It generally indicates that one doesn’t have the evidence or argumentation to make one’s case, so one’s only remaining option (besides conceding the point) is to attack the person, character, intelligence, etc. of one’s interlocutor. Otherwise one would simply let one’s evidence and argumentation do the work of refutation.
I could go into quite lengthy responses to each of the 5 contradictions that I mentioned to show how you actually miss the point (and even contradict yourself at times), but I’ve learned that it will be almost entirely pointless.
If you believe I have contradicted myself, then instead of merely hand-waving with a general criticism, please point to the specific place where you think I contradicted myself. Hand-waving general criticisms are easy, but unhelpful. It makes it seem either that you don’t want to help me come to see the error of my position, or don’t want to learn that you might be wrong about your claim that I have contradicted myself.
Vast amounts of books have been written by others outlining each of these contradictions (and dozens of other contradictions in Roman Catholicism).
Many books have been written about many topics. And even though you don’t identify the books you have in mind, it is probably the case the many books have been written refuting the ones you have in mind. So, again, merely trading references to books does not make your case for you, because I could do the same. To make your case, you have to show actual contradictions (i.e. x and ~x) within Catholicism. And you have not yet done that.
As a Roman Catholic, you must fundamentally believe that there are no contradictions in your faith, and so you will have some explanation for anything that is presented to you as a contradiction.
This too is an ad hominem. If I do have explanations for the alleged contradictions, then this is not a problem for me, but for the person claiming that there are contradictions internal to Catholicism. Your task, in such a case, is either to show how the contradictions remain in spite of these explanations, or to concede that you do not know of any contradictions internal to Catholicism.
For example, on the first point about justification by faith, you take the clear words of Trent and add in extra interpretation. The comment by Trent speaks of nothing in the way of receiving ‘the grace of justification at baptism’, nor do either of the quotes by Paul. The words of Paul match the words of Trent (though in the opposite way) almost perfectly.
Here’s one of the general principles of ecumenical dialogue: Out of respect and charity, each person gets to define, articulate and specify what is his own position, such that no one ought knowingly to attribute to or impose upon another, a position the other person denies is his own. So as a Catholic, I get to explain and specify how Trent is to be understood. And if you (as a non-Catholic), insist that Trent means something else, and then criticize that interpretation of Trent, you’re criticizing a straw man of your own making, and the contradictions to which you refer are contradictions only within Catholicism-as-you-interpret-it, rather than in Catholicism as it is believed and understood by Catholics.
The Canons of Trent 6 are based on the Chapters of Trent 6. And Canon 9 of Trent 6 is based on Chapters 7-8 of Session 6. That’s the source of the “extra interpretation,” as you put it.
This goes to the heart of the point I’ve just made above – the belief that something is not a contradiction, combined with the authority to interpret what something actually says, means that any apparent contradictions, no matter how clear the language may be, can simply be interpreted away.
An atheist who thinks Christianity is full of contradictions could say the same to a Christian. In such a case, this is a problem not for the Christian, but for the atheist attempting to demonstrate his claim that Christianity is full of contradictions. Instead of complaining that the Christian can “interpret away” these alleged contradictions, the atheist needs to show how the “interpreting away” does not actually remove the contradictions. Otherwise he is merely conceding that he cannot substantiate his claim.
And the same is true here. So regarding your first alleged contradiction, you haven’t demonstrated a contradiction internal to Catholicism, but only between Catholicism and your own interpretation of Scripture/Trent.
Again, on the second point, I could point out that Paul makes a clear dichotomy between works and faith in Romans 4:4-5. But you won’t accept that dichotomy, because it would result in a contradiction, which Roman Catholicism must not have. So once again you explain it away under the guise of authoritative interpretation.
The “you won’t accept that dichotomy” is an ad hominem, attacking the person of your interlocutor. But neither what you could do (i.e. “point out that Paul …”), and what I allegedly “won’t do” (i.e. “accept that dichotomy …”) show that there is a contradiction within Catholicism. Again, complaining about the fact that I can “explain away” the alleged contradiction does not make your case. It concedes that you cannot substantiate your claim. If you wish to make your case, you need to show how the explanation I have given is false and/or does not remove the alleged contradiction internal to Catholicism.
So regarding your second alleged contradiction, here too you haven’t demonstrated a contradiction internal to Catholicism, but only between Catholicism and your own interpretation of Scripture.
The same can be said of point three and your dismissal of all the counter evidence showing Peter’s non-primacy role.
This too, fails to show that there is any contradiction involving the Catholic doctrine of Peter’s primacy. It just hand-waves by referring generally to “all the counter evidence.” So regarding your third alleged contradiction, here too you haven’t demonstrated a contradiction internal to Catholicism.
The same can be said about point four and your reinterpretation of the terms ‘brother’ and ‘sister’ and ‘mother’ and ‘sons’. I could bring up how you interpret the terms ‘brothers’ and ‘mothers sons’ in Psalm 69 in a non-literal sense, despite all the other aspects of that prophecy that were quoted in the New Testament in a literal sense. Such multiple, repetitive, clear teachings, in multiple gospels and letters by multiple writers is blatantly obvious, but with the authority to interpret however the Roman Catholic Church sees fit, along with the fundamental presupposition that there are no contradictions in Roman Catholic doctrine, there comes an answer for everything.
The Pharisees could have said the same to Jesus: “You have an answer for everything.” And yet He is the Truth, and was not thereby refuted by having an answer for everything when they raised objections against His teaching. So the fact that Catholics have an “answer for everything” when charges of contradiction are laid against them does not show that they are wrong, or that there really are contradictions internal to Catholicism. It tacitly concedes that the accuser (in this case, you) is unable to make his case and substantiate his claim.
Also, regarding the interpretation of ‘brothers’ and ‘mothers sons’ in Psalm 69, you’ll need to present an argument showing why if other passages of the Psalms are prophecies meant in a literal sense, then ‘brothers’ and ‘mother’s sons’ in its prophetic sense Psalm 69 must be taken to mean birth-mother and sons of the same mother. Here, it turns out, your charge of contradiction is not a contradiction internal to Catholicism but a contradiction between the Catholic doctrine of Mary’s perpetual virginity, and your own interpretation of Psalm 69. But a contradiction between Church doctrine and your interpretation of Scripture is not a contradiction internal to Catholicism. So regarding your fourthalleged contradiction, here too you haven’t demonstrated a contradiction internal to Catholicism, but only between the Church’s teaching and your own interpretation of Scripture.
On point five, I could point out that, despite the fact I mentioned there are numerous other verses to support the points being made, you only focused on one: Romans 3:23. I could just have easily provided other verses that clearly show the sinfulness of all mankind (Romans 5:12 or Galatians 3:22, or countless others) I’m sure someone as studied as you knows many such verses, but you chose to ignore them.
What I said concerning Rom 3:23 applies also to Rom 5:12 and Gal 3:22.
The bible clearly teaches all have sinned, and yet you want to claim that it’s not true.
No. I do not claim that what the Bible teaches is not true. Rather, I claim that your interpretation of the ‘all’ is not true.
I could point out that your exegesis of Romans 3:23 is claiming that ‘all’ only refers to both Gentiles and Jews because the previous verse says “for there is no distinction”, despite the fact that if you go back and start at verse 10 and read everything in context, Paul is pounding home the fact, with multiple Old Testament references, that ‘all’ does actually mean all! “Not even one” is a pretty clear statement, especially when repeated for emphasis, no matter how much you want to reinterpret it away.
The claim that I “want to reinterpret it away” is an ad hominem, criticizing my person. The question has to do the scope of the reference of the ‘all.’ Does the Holy Spirit mean it to include Mary, or not? As Catholics, we believe that babies are persons, both in the womb and already born. And we believe that they have not sinned, not yet, not until they reach the age of reason. So babies are evidently not among the all who “have sinned,” if “have sinned” is understood to mean having committed an actual sin. And in that case the Holy Spirit’s meaning with regard to the ‘all’ is already a much smaller number than all the human persons who have ever lived and will live, because it wouldn’t include all the babies who have died (and will die) prior to reaching the age of reason. If so, then the Spirit’s meaning regarding the ‘all’ isn’t as comprehensive as you claim, but is intended to be interpreted with qualifications, among which could be the Mother of God. So either we must qualify the ‘all,’ or qualify the “have sinned” to mean [in reference to babies] that under the post-Fall economy, they too are in need of a Savior, because they come into the world without grace. And Mary too, was in need of a Savior, because she too was conceived in this post-Fall economy, and according to the doctrine of the Immaculate Conception, was saved by Christ in the prevenient way I described in the article linked in my comment #48. Either way you take this verse, therefore, either by qualifying the ‘all’ or by qualifying the ‘have sinned,’ the Church’s teaching concerning the Immaculate Conception is compatible with Romans 3:23. And in neither case is there shown to be a contradiction *internal* to Catholicism, but only between the Catholic doctrine and your own interpretation of Scripture.
I could point out the fact that your exegesis even goes against your own church’s understanding of Romans 3:23 applying to all men. In the link to the vatican provided by Christopher Lake (#49, right after your post, the second link out to the vatican.va site), point #10 clearly states that “All human beings are in need of God’s righteousness, “since all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God””. (yes, I do read the articles that are linked) It references Romans 3:23, showing that the Roman Catholic Church doesn’t actually exegete Romans 3:23 the way that you do, in a way that simply means ‘Gentiles and Jews’ without distinction.
One of the paradigmatic differences between Protestantism and Catholicism is that in the Catholic paradigm there are types and levels of causes that can act simultaneously, levels of meanings that can be true of a passage simultaneously, and forms of participation and union by which persons can participate in the life, work, suffering, and even nature of another. Here too, what I said about the distinction between Jews and Gentiles, is fully compatible with the verse applying to the rest of us, who fall into those two categories, with the proper qualifications referred to above.
The Roman Catholic Church exegetes the verse to mean “all human beings”, directly contradicting your comment of “here this term is not intended to mean that every human individually has sinned”.
The ‘all’ here is intended in a qualified sense; it is not intended to mean that Mary sinned and fell short of the glory of God. So what you are doing here is criticizing a straw man of your own making, by misconstruing the meaning of a Catholic document, so as to make it seem to contradict a Catholic dogma.
Or I could take a different track altogether. I could point out how your comparison of Mary’s sin offering to Jesus’ baptism is entirely irrelevant, since 1) John’s baptism had nothing to do with Old Testament law; and 2) Jesus’ baptism was clearly a unique event, as evidenced by the Holy Spirit’s descending upon Him and the Father speaking of Him, and as such clearly had nothing to do with repentance.
I grant that Jesus’ baptism was a unique event, and that John’s baptism was not required under OT law. But that does not refute my point. My point is that just because someone undergoes a ritual purification, this does not entail that he is or was morally impure. My point is substantiated by the example of Jesus undergoing John’s baptism. And my point demonstrates that from Mary’s obedience to the ritual purification law of Moses, it does not follow that she was morally impure.
I could also point out that your comparison of Mary’s sin offering to the circumcision of Jesus is also entirely irrelevant, since 1) although circumcision does symbolize the removal of sin, this is not in regards to the individual himself – it is in reality the sign of the covenant in general to Jews (all of Abraham’s household, actually), not to a specific person, and as such was perfectly normal for Jesus to be circumcised; and 2) the act of circumcision is an act of obedience by the parents, not the child (since he couldn’t really do it to himself) and so the circumcision of Jesus speaks to the obedience of Joseph and Mary, and again has nothing to do with any sin of Jesus.
I agree that circumcision is a sign of the covenant, but it is also a symbol of the removal of sin from the individual incorporated into the covenant, i.e. the infant being circumcised. The example of Jesus being circumcised is one more example substantiating my point that just because someone undergoes a ritual purification, this does not entail that he is or was morally impure. And therefore, just because Mary obeyed the ritual purification law of Moses, it does not follow that she was morally impure.
I could also point out even further biblical teachings that show Mary wasn’t sinless, like Luke 18:18-19 when a man refers to Jesus as good, but he claims that no one is good except God alone (being sinless would qualify Mary as good – after all, it was enough for Adam and Eve in Genesis 1).
Jesus wasn’t going all Manichean here, denying the goodness of creation. The meaning of the passage is that God alone is goodness, and the source of all goodness. Otherwise, Jesus was contradicting what He said earlier in Luke when He said, “The good man out of the good treasure of his heart brings forth what is good” (Luke 6:45), and when He said, “these are the ones who have heard the word in an honest and good heart.” (Luke 8:15). And St. Luke himself (and the Holy Spirit inspiring him) would subsequently be contradicting Jesus by referring to Joseph of Arimethea as “a good and righteous man” (Luke 23:50).
Or how in Matthew 11:11 Jesus actually places John the Baptist as greater than Mary (not possible if Mary truly was sinless the way the Roman Catholic Church claims).
In Matthew 11:11, Jesus is contrasting the Old Covenant and the New Covenant. John the Baptist was the greatest in the Old Covenant. But, says Jesus, even the least in the New Covenant is greater than he, because he that is least among the children is greater [as such] than he that is the greatest among the bondslaves. (Gal 4:24-25) Hence Jesus says “The Law and the Prophets were proclaimed until John; since that time the gospel of the kingdom of God has been preached, and everyone is forcing his way into it.” (Luke 16:16), and “many prophets and kings wished to see the things which you see, and did not see them, and to hear the things which you hear, and did not hear them.” (Luke 10:24) This is the greatness of the New Covenant in relation to the Old: “But before faith came, we were kept in custody under the law, being shut up to the faith which was later to be revealed.” (Gal 3:24) And Mary was within the New Covenant as the Mother of the Church (John 19:26-27 and Acts 1:15). So this passage does not teach that Mary is less than John the Baptist, let alone that she ever sinned.
So, here too, regarding your fifth alleged contradiction, you haven’t demonstrated a contradiction internal to Catholicism, but only between the Church’s teaching and your own interpretation of Scripture.
I could go on and on and on, pouring on contradiction after contradiction, but there’s really no point, is there.
Regarding any future claims you might make regarding alleged contradictions within Catholicism, I cannot say whether there is a point, because you haven’t yet specified what they might be. I can only say that the five you have already alleged, have turned out to be contradictions not internal to Catholicism, but between Catholicism and your own interpretation of the Bible.
Bryan, as I said before, when I originally read your replies, I just sighed at how old and predictable they get, but also how frustrating it is to deal with.
I’m not so concerned about how old or predictable my replies are, because old and predictable replies can still be true, and my desire is for truth, not novelty or unpredictability.
The bottom line, no matter how many sighs, and how much frustration you feel, is that so far you are unable to substantiate even a single contradiction within Catholicism. Instead of sighing with frustration, you should either concede that you cannot show there to be any such contradiction, or show your claims of contradiction stand in spite of what I’ve said.
It’s like trying to discuss math with someone who fundamentally believes that 2+2=5.
Again, with ad hominems, I could say the same to you, and they would cancel each other out and we would be right back where we started. So it is better simply to refrain from ad hominems, and focus on the substance of the disagreement.
But when I came back to your post again after reading what John Thayer and Benjamin Keil wrote, I was able to understand why Roman Catholicism can’t see the glaringly obvious contradictions. Your responses were the perfect practical example of the truth I was talking about above. Roman Catholicism fundamentally presupposes that there can be no contradictions in its doctrines! As such, it doesn’t matter how blatant something may otherwise be, Roman Catholicism simply can’t accept that it could ever be wrong about such issues. And when we add in the authority to be the sole and final interpreter of everything, Roman Catholicism can redefine any contradictions right out of the way, making it appear internally consistent.
This is all an ad homimen. You have claimed that there are contradictions internal to Catholicism. When I refute each of your claims, you respond by saying that Catholics cannot see them. Once more, I could turn that same kind of ad hominem right back at you: you are blind to the truth of Catholicism, and therefore cannot see its internal consistency, or something like that. And then we’d be right back where we started. So the “you’re blind,” .. “No, you’re blind,” … “No, you’re blind” dialectic is pointless. Again, we have to discipline ourselves to focus on the evidence and argumentation, and refrain from attempting to make our case by relying on an “all who disagree with me are blind” ad hominem.
Now, this is something that I (and hundreds of millions of others) have known about Roman Catholicism for a long time – that the Roman Catholic Church sets itself up as its own authority, presupposing the truth of itself. In many ways, it’s really not that different from Mormonism or Jehovah’s Witnesses. Instead of accepting God as the ultimate authority and the necessary presuppositional starting point, the Roman Catholic Church declares itself as the ultimate authority and the necessary presuppositional starting point.
No, Catholicism does not claim or believe that the Catholic Church is the “necessary presuppositional starting point.” The Catholic Church rejects fideism, as I have explained in “Wilson vs. Hitchens: A Catholic Perspective.” The divine authority of the Church is established not by the divine authority of the Church (that would be circular), but by the motives of credibility. So what you are criticizing here is a straw man.
Oh, the Roman Catholic Church will SAY that God is the ultimate authority, but as I mentioned before, they will then tuck Him back in underneath their own authority – they are the only ones who can tell us what God says, who can interpret what He means, can tell us how to live, can provide a pathway to God, and on and on and on.
The very same objection could have been made by persons listening to the Apostles preach on Pentecost. This objection presupposes that Christ has not given divine authority to anyone, and thus begs the question, i.e. presupposes precisely what is in question between Protestants and Catholics.
But this whole conversation has shed a new light on things for me also, and it is this: the typical Roman Catholic will likely never realize this vital point about the Roman Catholic Church being the actual ultimate authority. The typical Roman Catholic will likely go through life thinking that God is their ultimate authority, not realizing that they have actually accepted the Roman Catholic Church as their ultimate authority in God’s place.
Or, on the flipside, the Protestant who remains Protestant his whole life, will go through his whole thinking that he is submitting to God, not realizing that he is actually merely submitting to his own interpretation of Scripture.
These question-begging criticisms are unhelpful, precisely because they presuppose the point in question.
I’ve got some ideas, but there’s a whole lot more left to research and think about on this. But I do need to thank those of you here for the conversation – you have truly helped me to understand things much better, become closer to God through it all, and move forward better equipped to help evangelize Roman Catholics in general, and my friend in particular, and share the gospel of Jesus Christ with them.
You’re welcome. By this interchange you’ve also demonstrated that by “the contradictions of the Roman Catholic Church” you are actually referring to contradictions between Catholic doctrine and your own interpretation of Scripture. And so when you say, as you said in comment #26, “It still shocks me when someone spends that much time studying the bible and yet still falls for the contradictions of the Roman Catholic Church,” it turns out that what you really mean is simply that you are shocked when people who spend so much time studying don’t adopt your interpretation of the Bible. And the same shock was shared by Luther, when other Protestants didn’t adopt his interpretation of the Bible, and the proliferation of Protestant sects (including various Lutheran sects) began, and has continued to this day.
In a way, this shock is not compatible with itself, because it presupposes that others are no less intelligent and truth-loving than oneself, and that Scripture is perspicuous. Otherwise there would be no shock, but the divergent interpretations by persons devoting equivalent time and effort into the study of Scripture, would be entirely expected. But then, to cope with this discrepancy, the divergent interpretations are “explained away” (as you put it) by imputing to all such persons either a lack of intelligence (see above), blindness, malice, or deceiving spirits. And in this way, the paradigm is propped up and perpetuated. So, again, the same sort of charge of resorting to moves that preserve one in ignorance or deception can be applied to the Protestant as well. And therefore, again, exchanging such charges is pointless. So it is better to evaluate the paradigms on their own terms, according to evidence and standards that are not question-begging.

from a sermon by the Cardinal Bergoglio [as of yesterday now Pope Francis March 13, 2013] found here http://jmgarciaiii.blogspot.com/search?q=bergoglio  under the sept 30, 2008 sermon thing


I conclude [this section] with a quote from the homily of John Paul II on the occasion of the 150 years of the proclamation of the dogma of the Immaculate, in which Mary is qualified as an “Eschatological icon of the Church,” as the one who pronounces the first “yes” of the Covenant between God and humanity and precedes the people of God in the path to Heaven, and the Church sees in her its salvation “anticipated”:
“She, the first one redeemed by her Son, fully participates in His sanctity, already becoming what the whole Church wishes and hopes to be. She is the Eschatological icon of the Church. For this the Immaculate, is “the source and image of the Church, the bride of Christ, filled with youth and of limpid beauty” (Preface), precedes always the people of God in the pilgrimage of the faith towards the kingdom of Heaven. In the immaculate conception of Mary the Church sees itself projected, anticipated in its most noble member, the salvific grace of Easter. In the event of the Incarnation we find, indissolubly united the Son and Mother: ‘He that is its Lord and its head and she who, pronouncing the first yes of the new Covenant, prefigures its condition of bride and Mother’.”
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Notwithstanding, it might do us good to draw several conclusions, in light of the riches we have seen, that these may be helpful in our ecclesial life. The affection and veneration we all feel, almost “spontaneously,” for the Virgin and before the Eucharist we must cultivate for the Church. These must be the same, given that as we have seen, Mary and Church are “vessels” transformed at the core for He who desired to “dwell” in them. The effect of of such an incarnation comes from the fact that these “wineskins” are transformed fully in the highest reality that includes them. Just as the Word in taking flesh from Mary sanctifies her totally (including prior to the Eucharist, in the Immaculate Conception), so is the Church holy and sanctifying due to the Covenant the Lord desired to make with her.
Therefore the Christian, when looking at the Church, sees her as holy, spotless and without blemish, as [he would] Mary, bride and Mother. The Christian sees the Church as the Body of Christ, as the vessel that guards with absolute integrity the deposit of faith, as the faithful Spouse who communicates without addition or subtraction all that Christ entrusted. In the Sacraments the Church communicates to us the fullness of life the Lord came to bring us. Although as sons we sometimes/often break our Covenant with the Lord at an individual level, the Church is the place where that Covenant – which we are given for ever in Baptism – remains intact and we might recover it with the [Sacrament of] Reconciliation.

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 The Church as a fully “sanctified” reality and capable of receiving and of comunicating – without error or defect, from its own poverty and even with its own sins –the full sanctity of God, is not a “complement” or an “institutional addition” to Jesus Christ, but a full participation of his Incarnation, of His Life, of His Passion, death and Resurrection. Without these are the “new wineskins” that are the Church and Mary – a concrete universality sin parallel, whose relation is paradigmatic of all else – the coming of the eternal Word into the world and assuming flesh, the Word in our ears and His life in our history, could not be received adequately.
To contemplate the mystery of the Covenant between God and humanity – Covenant that comes from the Old Testament and that is to be extended to all men of good will – the first thing is to situate the Church in the midst of this mystery as the “vessel fully sanctified and santifying,” just like Mary, from where springs the gift of God for the life of the world. As the Pope said, citing Vatican II.
Let us consider, then, the Church-Mary that have their center in the Eucharist: the Church-Mary that lives of the Eucharist and we makes us live thans to the Eucharist. Let us consider the Church-Mary that receive from their spouse the totality of the gift of the Bread of life along with the mission of distribuiting it to all, for the life of the world.
In them the Covenant of God with the humanity is give and is received and comunicated without fissures or defect. The selfgiving to the end, by the bridegroom makes the bride –Mary/Church – all holy, purifies and always creates anew in faith and in charity and the gates of Hell shall not prevail against her.
I finish by saying that this reassurance of the sanctity of the Church, is not a question of personal or social privilege, but rather that the Church is ordained to service. Let me explain. As the Church always defends its integrity – as always there have been and are those who take evil advantage of the strength of an institution (which is pathetic for how reductive it is to use something so beneficent as eternal life for the pleasures of transitory life), world has the impression the Church always defends its power and it is not so. In defending its purity, its indefectibility, its sanctity as the bride, the Church is defending the “place” through which the gift of the life of God passes on to the world and the gift of the life of the world to God. This gift – the fullest expression of which is the Eucharist –is not another gift among ourselves but the supreme gift of the most intimate life of the Trinity that poured forth for the life of the world and the life of the world assumed by the Son that is offered to the Father.
.......
“In uniting to Christ, instead of sealing itself off, the People of the new Covenant are converted into a “sacrament” for all humanity, sign and instrument of salvation, in a work of Christ, into a light of the world and salt of the earth (cf. Mt 5:13-16), for the redemption of all. The mission of the Church continues that of Christ: “As the Father hath sent me, I also send you.” (Jn 20:21). Therefore, the Church receives the spiritual strength necessary to accomplish its mission of perpetuating in the Eucharist the sacrifice of the Cross and being in communion with the body and the blood of Christ. So, the Eucharist is the source and, at the same time, the summit of all evangelization, given that its objective is the communion of men with Christ and, in Him, with the Father and with the Holy Spirit.”

 here is another reference http://matt1618.freeyellow.com/mary.html


from comment  14    here   referring to Revelation

While ‘”metaphor” may be applied here secondaraily, it must be noted that 11:19 starts out with the temple of God being opened and the Ark of the Covenant appearing – ie: Mary. I’m sure you don’t allegorize the red dragon (Satan). Consistent exegesis would apply. Additionally, reading forward the story of the child (Christ) is clear; 12:6 in particular. God elevated “the Woman” in Genesis and this just completes the picture.

from an Amazon comment on  Four Witnesses by Rod Bennett:

Hello T,

Just a few more thoughts re your comments pertaining to the book, Four Witnesses, and the response comments you put forth to my previous thoughts. These are in regard to Mary's Virginity.

Protestants often point to Matt 1:25 and the word "until" seeming to imply that Mary and Joseph had marital relations after the birth of Jesus. The problems with this understanding is that it forces a modern English use of "until" on the Bible. The Greek and Hebrew words for "until" means only that some action did not happen to a certain point. It does not imply anything changed after that time. Scholars agree on this point. Dr William Hendriksen, for one, formerly of the Calvin Seminary in MI agrees. Consider this quotation from Samuel: "And so Saul's daughter Michal was childless "until" the day of her death. Are we to conclude that she bore children after her death? How about the raven released from the ark? We read that the raven "flew back and forth "until" the waters dried off from the earth (Gn 8:7)" Does that mean the raven returned to the ark when the earth dried? Other examples are replete in old and new testament.

The Catholic Church agrees with you re intercourse being divinely approved. But that does not mean that it is divinely commanded. God commanded Jeremiah not to marry (Jer 16.2)

In Mt 12:46-47 two references are made to Jesus's "brothers" Similar statements appear in other passages. Neither Aramaic or Hebrew has a separate word for brother, cousin, or uncle. Hence the single term "adelphos" was used in scripture. In a number of additional passages the term was used to denote an even broader meaning than these. Additionally the named brothers of Jesus in the new testament refer to sons of another Mary, Mary of Clophas; others the son of James, another Mary in Mark 15:40 and probably the same Mary in Jn 19:25.

But Jesus is called Mary's firsborn son in Luke 2:7. This objection ignores the ancient Jewish idiomatic use of the word "firstborn" which refers to the first son of the open womb irregardless of other children. The term was in fact a legal term under Mosaic Law.

Some biblical bases for Mary's perpetual virginity include the following:
1. Jesus's action at the foot of the cross, when he entrusted his mother to John, makes no sence if Mary had other sons. The social customs of the time would have made such an action unthinkable.
2. In the account of Jesus being found in the temple at age 12, there is no hint of other children.
3. In the passages that refer to Jesus's brothers, the sacred authors are careful to only call Jesus the son of Mary, no one else.
4. In referring to Jesus as the son of Mary (Mk 6:3), the force of the Greek implies that was Mary's only son, not a son.
5. In the Jewish society in which Jesus lived, younger sons never gave public advice to an older brother, much less, the older son. Yet we see this happening in Jn 7:3-4 and Mk 3:21. These passages are understandable, however, if these bretheren were in fact Jesus's uncles or some other older relatives.

I'll end this simply by pointing out some views of the reformers:

Luther, in 1546, wrote that Mary was "a virgin before the conception and birth; she remained a virgin also at the birth and after it".

Zwingli wrote in 1528 "I speak of this in the holy church of Zurich and in all my writings. I recognize Mary as ever virgin and holy".

Calvin in his commentary on Matthew called objectors to Mary's perpetual virginity "pig headed and stupid". Later he wrote that "all relatives were called bretheren".

Of course Protestants have broken away from the beliefs of their founders in a similar manner to their breaking away from the Catholic faith, and continue to break away from each others beliefs in the form of thousands of denominations, implying thousands of differing beliefs. That's a very sad fact as far as I'm concerned. I would much preferred to have seen them work within the Church to bring about warranted reforms. Once a breaking away mindset begins, it seems to never end. How great would be the unity of all Christian believers.

One other comment. It pertains to your sarcastic comments about the unnecessary burdens laid on by Catholic beliefs, as well as your previous presumptious comments about living more freely in the grace of Christ than me or others. What immediately came to mind as I read such statements and perceived their tone was the Pharisee's declaration in Luke 18:9-14.

Will get back to you on a final point.

God bless, Mike

from comment 300 http://www.calledtocommunion.com/2013/01/holy-church-finding-jesus-as-a-reverted-catholic-a-testimonial-response-to-chris-castaldo/#comment-62299

First, consider the difference between Marian devotion and the actual doctrines on Mary that have been propagated by the Church through official teaching deemed to be infallible and binding on the conscience, whether they be the immaculate conception, Mary’s assumption/dormition, her lack of sin, etc. These doctrines, I know, can be difficult to understand or appreciate from a Protestant perspective. However, as I studied each, I found the biblical warrant and logic of each, and reminded myself of what so many devout Catholics, including priests, professors, and laymen had told me: anything the Church teaches regarding Mary can only give more glory to Christ. Marian devotion, on the other hand, takes many forms – some easy to digest and accept, others which I still find either concerning or maybe dangerous. We as Catholics are not demanded to accept every form of Marian devotion as legitimate, even if taught by Alphonsus Liguori or another saint. We are only expected to believe those doctrines on Mary, or anything for that matter, taught by the Magisterium.

Second, consider that there are many “extreme” forms of Protestantism that exist. Simply because one denomination, or pastor, or religious community starts misunderstanding or misappropriating a certain teaching, doesn’t necessarily make that doctrine wrong. I’m assuming you’re currently Protestant – if a pastor or particular community were to start offering nachos and soda as communion instead of bread and wine, I hope that wouldn’t lead you to question the validity and significance of communion, but rather lead you to a more diligent reflection on what communion is or is not. Simply put, extreme forms of devotion, whether they be right or wrong, will exist in any Protestant, Catholic, or Orthodox community, and don’t necessarily define what that community teaches as truth

st Augustine on mary


"O Blessed Virgin Mary, who can worthily give you the just dues of praise and thanksgiving, you who by the wondrous assent of your will rescued a fallen world?


"Accept, then, such poor thanks as we have to offer here, though they be unequal to your merit; and, receiving our vows, obtain by your prayers the remission of our offenses. Carry our prayers within the sanctuary of the heavenly audience and bring forth the gift of our reconciliation....


"Take our offering, grant us our requests, obtain pardon for what we fear, for you are the sole hope of sinners. Holy Mary, help the miserable, strengthen the fainthearted, comfort the sorrowful, pray for your people, plead for the clergy, intercede for all women consecrated to God." St. Augustine of Hippo, in Thanksgiving and Prayer to Mary.

http://www.celtic-catholic-church.org/library/prayer/Marian_prayers.html
  4



The incarnation begins with Mary, God´s marvelous beachhead in the redemption of humankind. Mary, the handmaid of the Lord, was made full of grace, kecharitomene, and becomes the first and greatest beneficiary of her Son´s salvific gift. As the Nicean fathers rightly stressed, Jesus was born of Mary (ex Maria virgine), not through Mary. That is, Jesus did in fact take upon himself Mary´s nature. But her nature had been made ready, had been thoroughly graced by God, so that in Mary, Jesus takes on full, true human nature, except for original sin. God´s graceful gift to Mary was fitting and proportionate to her glorious task. Yet, God´s grace requires and relies upon Mary´s yes, freely given. That is, God´s preserving Mary from original sin does not detract from her humanity nor from her freedom, but, rather, elevates them.
While as an Evangelical I was fully orthodox in my embrace of the Nicene and Chalcedonian symbols, I had missed a fundamental dimension of the incarnation. The Marian dogma of the Immaculate Conception has been for me the easiest to accept, because it is fundamentally Christological, and the truth it expounds was clearly understood by the fathers, by Augustine and even by Luther. Immaculate Mary is the paradigm and mirror of the Church, whose glorious end is to be made “immaculate” (me echousan spilon, Eph. 5:27). This blind side of mine manifested itself in other ways. As Cantalamessa points out, the same God who became flesh in Mary´s womb also comes to us in the heart of matter, in the Eucharist, and those who cannot comprehend the former, are not likely to grasp the latter. (Cantalamessa, p.65)

From comment 10 here  http://www.calledtocommunion.com/2014/04/ancient-marian-devotion/
It must be frustrating trying to bring this argument to what is in Sacred Scripture while us Catholics seem to be avoiding the issue like professional contortionists.
I don’t know if this would help, but I’ll try to explain why we are doing this.
We acknowledge that revelation came in the person of Jesus Christ, the Son of God, and that the Truth He conveyed “Sets us free”. We all agree on this.
Where we disagree is how that revelation is transmitted to us. You acknowledge only method “S”, Scripture. We acknowledge “S”–Scripture, “T”–Tradition, and “M”–the Magisterium, which is the Holy Spirit guiding the Church to all Truth in its interpretation and understanding of “S” and “T”.
You are trying to argue against devotion to Mary based on “S” alone, but we don’t rely on “S” alone, but also acknowledge “T” and “M”. For us to engage in discussing with only “S” as an authority would be to presume your rejection of “T” and “M”, and we could not present the full Catholic understanding, which would cripple the discussion.
It would be legitimate to discuss whether the Catholic understanding of “T” contradicts “S”. Therefore we ask you not to demand where we justify something in “S” alone, because we don’t acknowledge “S” alone. Rather, on the subject of “S”, you would need to show that the (accurate) Catholic Teaching on devotion to Mary contradicts Scripture, and not just demand that we justify it, especially since our reading of Mary’s place in Scripture is heavily influenced by “T” and “M”.
Why Fred keeps driving the point of the canon and our fallible intellects is because, as we argue, you cannot have “S” without “T” and “M”, which gets to the root of the disagreement, for if without “T” and “M”, we cannot have “S”, then, since we all agree that “S” is the inerrant word of God, you will need to acknowledge the need for “T” and “M”. But if we just sling Bible verses back and forth, from within different ways of understanding the role of the Bible and how we are to go about interpreting it, we will quite literally get nowhere.
Finally, I wanted to point out the irony of you quoting 2 Peter 2:1. We to acknowledge that; however, we also acknowledge that God intervenes and gave the Body of Christ an “Immune System”. We acknowledge that such false teachers have come: Arius, Marcion, Nestorius, … Luther, Calvin, Zwingli, etc. However, thanks be to God, the Magisterium of the Church defended the Faith given to us by the Apostles and condemned these false teachers.
Fred is pointing out that, yes, false teachers will arise, but how do we know we aren’t being false teachers? If from the 200′s to the 1500′s no one had a problem with devotion to Mary and the saints, by what right can we say they got it wrong, but we got it right! And in such an obvious way that it would fall into the “Essentials” (I presume you believe that devotion to Mary and the Saints is a violation of the “essential doctrines).

The first, which some have pointed out, is the Angel telling Mary that the Holy Spirit will overshadow Her, like the Shekinah which filled the Tabernacle and, later, the Holy of Holies. She conceives and carries He who is the fulfillment of the contents of the Ark of the Covenant: the fulfillment of the Law (10 Commandments), the Bread of Life (Manna), and the True High Priest (Aaron’s Staff). Textual parallels between II Sam 6 and Luke 1 portray Mary as the Ark of the Covenant, and, finally, the end of Rev. 11 introduces the revealing of the Ark, which is then shown to be a woman. Finally, consider what happened to poor Uzzah when he merely touched the Ark of the Lord.

Joseph knew Mary had born within Her God Himself. As a Jew, he would have the characteristic reverence they had toward sacred objects towards Mary.

from comment 77:

Just a couple of points; first, as Fred says, if Mary were not a Perpetual Virgin, the idea of the Virgin Birth would have been undermined completely.
As I Isaiah says, “A Virgin” will give birth. Mary remained a virgin in partu. I can’t go into detail here but a Fr. Potterie brings out that in John 1, it says Jesus was not “born of bloods” in the original. Notice the plural. “Bloods” in the OT meant either menstrual or parturition blood. Contact with blood would have rendered Jesus ritually unclean. Virginity in partu proven.

another good link http://www.veritasbible.com/resources/articles/The_%22Brethren%22_Of_The_Lord
This explains brother etc

from a comment at 156 http://www.calledtocommunion.com/2014/04/ancient-marian-devotion/


To tie up some loose ends before getting back on topic.
@ All
Perhaps it would be good to have an article on the Perpetual Virginity, and also move the debate over whether the NT is the only thing remaining of the teaching of the Apostles (one other possibility it is difficult for Protestants to “get” Tradition is that they are not organically united to it since the Reformation). Two posts which would help the understanding (they did mine) would be:
http://www.calledtocommunion.com/2013/02/on-the-usefulness-of-tradition-a-response-to-recent-objections/
http://www.calledtocommunion.com/2010/02/the-tradition-and-the-lexicon/
@ Kevin
I will repeat my earlier comment that you don’t understand the basics of Mariology. In Theology in general, one needs work from the foundation up. You can’t understand our salvation unless you understand God Himself died and rose again, you can’t understand God dying unless you understand the Incarnation, and you cannot fathom the Incarnation until you have a general idea of the Trinity. It is similar with you objections to Mary. You have received a caricature of Marian doctrine close enough to be able to object to it, but you have no exposure (I presume) the foundations of those same doctrines.
To give some general perspectives:
Any Marian doctrine or devotion that does not ultimately point to Jesus and to the Father is vain, heretical, diabolical, and should be denounced with the utmost vigor.
Any Marian doctrine or devotion that seeks to elevate Mary to a divine person is vain, heretical, diabolical, and should be denounced with the utmost vigor.
Any Marian doctrine or devotion that denies the unique role of Jesus as the sole mediator between God and man is vain, heretical, diabolical, and should be denounced with the utmost vigor.
And I say this as a member of a religious order which is “consecrated” to Mary, whose entire purpose is “to give Mary to souls, to cause them to discover and know Her, to make all Hearts love Her, availing ourselves of every means in order to that She may bring souls to Jesus and transform them into other Christs “in the swiftest, surest, most beautiful way.”
Mary is the masterpiece of God, and by loving, extolling and glorifying Her, we are loving, extolling, and glorifying God. Mary is the means God chose to come to us, and is the means He chose to bring us to Him. Mary is all about Jesus, entirely from God and for God, Her entire being was created Immaculate, United with God, so that she would be the worthy Mother of God. She cannot be understood apart from Jesus, and without realizing this fundamental fact, you cannot understand Mary.
Again, Kevin, I understand, appreciate, and applaud your jealousy for the Glory of God, the question, however, is “Does He share His glory and thereby increase it?” Consider the parables of the talents and the servants. The third servant was jealous to protect his talent for his Master, but failed to realize the Master is glorified by his servants to bring return on the gifts they received from God. You say “Soli Deo gloria,” we say “Ad maximum Dei gloriam.”
Some good articles to get a better understanding on who Mary is in the Catholic understanding:
Father Hardon on Marian Doctrine
http://www.therealpresence.org/archives/Mariology/Mariology_044.htm
Father Hardon on Marian Devotion
http://www.therealpresence.org/archives/Mariology/Mariology_013.htm
I think Bl. John Henry Cardinal Newman is very helpful on Mary. As a Protestant, the issue of Mary kept him out of the Catholic Church for almost two decades. His approach is very good, and was instrumental in my own conversion (as well as having my anti-Mary arguments ground to powder by Catholics).
Father Hardon on Cardinal Newman’s apologetic on Mary (useful since it was addressed to Protestants hostile to Catholic teaching on Mary)
http://www.therealpresence.org/archives/Mariology/Mariology_039.htm
Collection of excerpts on Mary from Cardinal Newman
http://www.christendom-awake.org/pages/mcgovern/newman.html
The book that helped me a lot “the Mystical Rose” (It also contains reflections over titles such as “Gate of Heaven)
http://www.fordham.edu/halsall/mod/newman-mary.asp
Kevin, please do read and consider. A turning point in my life, and many others here, is when I actually learned what the Church taught! I would ask you to try to understand the Catholic teaching on Mary from knowledgeable Catholics, and not simply rely on the mischaracterizations, misunderstandings, and even lies from anti-Catholics apologists. As Christians, we should seek the Truth, and not be satisfied with unTruth.
Finally, @ George (148), you may be interested in a book our publishing company just sent to the printers. It is an examination of the parallels between Catholic Scotistic thought and Eastern Orthodoxy (particularly Palamas and Mark Eugenicus).

from comment239 on the ctc link:

Maybe it becomes more clear that adelphos can also mean kindred when we read that the parents of James and Joseph are Clopas and Mary, the wife of Clopas. Compare John 19:25, Matthew 27:56, and Mark 15:40.

from comment 232

 Reformer Turretin’s defense of Mary’s perpetual virginity.
Hence Helvidius and the Antidicomarianites (so-called because they were opponents of [antidikoi] Mary)are deservedly rebuked by the fathers for denying that Mary was always a virgin (aei Parthenon). They held that she cohabited with Joseph after delivery; yea, also bore children from him. As Augustine remarks, they rely on the shallowest arguments, i.e., because Christ is called the ‘firstborn’ of Mary (cf. De Haeresibus 56, 84 [PL 42.40, 46]). For as Jerome well remarks, she was so called because no one was begotten before him, not because there was another after him. Hence among lawyers: ‘He is the first whom no one precedes; he is last, whom no one follows.’ The Hebrews were accustomed to call the firstborn also only begotten; Israel is called ‘the first-born of God’ (Ex 4:22), although the only people chosen of God. Thus ‘the firstborn’ is said to be ‘holy unto God’ (Ex 13:2), who first opened the womb, whether others followed or not. Otherwise the firstborn would not have to be redeemed until after another offspring had been procreated (the law shows this to be false because it commands it to be redeemed a month after birth, Num. 18:16).
Not more solidly have they been able to elicit this from the fact that in the New Testament certain ones are called ‘the brothers of Christ.’ It is common in Scripture not only for one’s own and full brothers by nature to be designated by this name, but also blood relatives and cousins (as Abraham and Lot, Jacob and Laban). Thus James and Joses, Simon and Judas are called brothers of Christ (Mt. 13:55) by a relation of blood. For Mary (who is called their mother by Matthew and Mark) is called by John the sister of the Lord’s mother. However what is said in Jn. 7:5 that ‘neither did his brethren believe him’ must be understood of more remote blood relations.
Nor is it derived better from this-that Joseph is said ‘not to have known Mary till she had brought forth her firstborn son’ (Mt. 1:25). The particles ‘till” and ‘even unto’ are often referred only to the past, not to the future (i.e., they so connote the preceding time, concerning which there might be a doubt or which it was of the highest importance to know, as not to have a reference to the future-cf. Gen 28:15; Pss 122:2; 110:1;Mt.28:20, etc.). Thus is shown what was done by Joseph before the nativity of Christ (to wit, that he abstained form her); but it does not imply that he lived with her in any other way postpartum. When therefore she is said to have been found with child ‘before they came together’ (prin e synelthein autous), preceding copulation is denied, but not subsequent affirmed.
Although copulation had not take place in that marriage, it did not cease to be true and ratified (although unconsummated) for not intercourse, but consent makes marriage. Therefore it was perfect as to form (to wit, undivided conjunction of life and unviolated faith, but not as to end (to wit, the procreation of children, although it was not deficient as to the raising of the offspring.”

[Francis Turretin, Institutes of Elenctic Theology, vol. 2, 345–346.]



comment 54: To that final question, one can simply read Matthew’s own words in 12:46-49, and 13:55.”
It isn’t that simple Ted. When you follow the parallel passages of the Gospels, you see that James and Joses (Joseph) are the children of the “other Mary” who is also called the sister of Jesus’ mother in John 19:25. Even if you dispute whether there were 3 or 4 women at the cross (since there were no original commas), the mother of James and Joses parallels with the wife of Clopas.
We then see that Judas (Jude) claims to be the brother of James. So this now shows three of the brothers of Christ listed in Matt. 13:55.
How likely is it that Jesus also had three brothers with these same names which are specifically called out in scripture?
Also in Galatians, we see that Paul saw Peter in Jerusalem and no other apostles except for James, the Lord’s brother. Of the two apostles James (Jacob) listed in scripture, neither are the sons of Joseph.
Then of course we see Jesus giving His mother to John and vice-versa (John 19:26-27) as his last action before drinking the sour wine and taking His last breath on the cross.
The care of Mary would have passed to her children, yet she went to live with John from that moment on. Would Jesus have violated the spirit of the Law by taking His mother away from her children? Even so with His “brother” James being the leader of the church in Jerusalem?
It might be of assistance if you read Papias from the late 1st or early 2nd century on the relations of the women at the cross. He also shows that those brethren of the Lord were not blood brothers.
It also would be of value to read the full text of St. Jerome’s response to the Arian Helvidius. (Against Helvidius – “The Perpetual Virginity of Mary”). John Calvin cited Jerome’s work in his agreement with the doctrine.
I think this also speaks to the original post about literal usage of terms like adelphos (from the same womb) which can lead to an etymological fallacy when insisting on a literal translation. The term is used for multiple types of relations in scripture.
from


from comment 19 here http://www.calledtocommunion.com/2014/10/objections-to-the-hail-mary-leo-xiii-the-rosary-and-christian-unity-part-5-of-10/ Christ allows us, as the Body of Christ, to share in His Intercessory ministry. The key here is participation. The Blessed Virgin Mary has a special place in the Body, and as such, a special way that she participates in His Intercessory ministry. So, yes, we only have one Mediator, but He like to share. It all started when he created us.

and comment 26 But to become Catholic, do I give up intimacy with Christ? Must I view Him as unapproachable except through the intercession of Mary?
I can relate to this sentiment. As a former Protestant, my relationship with Jesus was “just me and Jesus”. Perhaps it seems that the communion of saints implies having to “share” Jesus; maybe it seems that sharing Him means getting less of Him, or that by knowing Him through the saints, you will get someone different from the Person who has been leading you all along.
But there is another possibility – He calls us to communion for a reason; perhaps through the saints He is calling us to know Him in a fuller and deeper way.
Consider Mary’s intimacy with Christ. She knew Him in the womb from conception until birth. The Divine Person nursed from her own bosom. She watched with her own eyes as He allowed His blood and water to be poured out for the salvation of souls. And throughout her life, she knew Him and loved Him more deeply than any other.
The humbling moment is to realize I don’t know Him and love Him very well. If only I could see Him with her eyes and love Him with her heart! This is why I pray the Rosary – to contemplate Our Lord through the eyes and through the heart of His Mother, so that I can love Him even more. Thanks be to God that He gave us a Mother who always leads us to Him.

In this link the prayer to Mary called the Salve Regina is explained--not that I agree with all these explanations  http://www.catholictradition.org/Mary/glories.htm   here is a better explanation http://www.therealpresence.org/archives/Mariology/Mariology_021.htm