Posted on 12/14/2014 11:57:21 AM PST by ealgeone
The reason for this article is to determine if the worship/veneration given to Mary by the catholic church is justified from a Biblical perspective. This will be evaluated using the Biblical standard and not mans standard.
Annalex: >The belief in the immaculate conception is a longstanding belief of the Church that was elevated into dogma in 19 Century. It is based on that: the ancient belief.
It is just that....a belief. Without any scriptural support.
So if the pope says pigs can fly, we should just run with it???
However, the scripture suggest something like this: the angel called Mary "full of grace" (κεχαριτωμενη). Now that word is interesting. It is a past-perfect passive tense (who had been given grace).
Do you understand the significance of this perfect participle middle/passive in the Greek?
You do understand the catholic bible has this translated wrong? It should be translated as "favored one", or "you favored with grace."
So what other significant event in the life of Mary prior to the Annunciation was there?
She grew up in a household that believed the OT and understood it as evidenced by her praise to God in Luke 1.
She was married to a righteous man named Joseph. That's a pretty big event in anyone's life.
Do catholics also think Joseph was sinless also??
Nothing except her conception.
Proven incorrect as noted above.
So it is a reasonable conjecture that she had been filled with grace since conception.
So we get to the point...it's a feeling...a hope...a wish.
It is also just as reasonable, actually, even more reasonable to conclude she was not "filled with grace", even though that is the wrong translation of the verb.
Check out the significance of the perfect tense in Kione Greek and let me know what you find out.
I stand by my post and I commented many times on this thread why.
Matthew 25:31-46 enumerates many. Any work of love and self-denial is what makes the faith perfect (James 2:22)
Oh, is that the church which boasts it has 2 Billion members? Doesn't sound to me like the "few chosen" are found there. And what TRULY would be very sad is if someone STAYED in a church they were baptized into as a baby and NEVER accepted Jesus Christ as their Savior because they thought they only had to do what they were told and "be good" and they would make it to heaven.
The view you present is the opposite of the tradition of Fundamentalist and Evangelical born again experiences and much closer to the Catholic persuasion model, so to speak. You must have noticed that.
Thomas on the other hand admits up front he's not there yet. Like the Bereans, he sets a reasonable condition, corroborating evidence. Does Jesus reprimand him for desiring evidence? Or does Jesus offer him the evidence he seeks?
I think it erroneous to project that view to the Apostles as they were living in real time. They were already believers, already sheep, save Judas who was lost. The Resurrection had just happened. The Holy Spirit had not, for lack of a better phrase, traded places with Messiah yet. The Apostle Thomas is a wonderful lesson to those that believe, but not to an unbeliever looking for an excuse to insist on evidence rather than faith.
I am sorry. On a thread like this I get 20-30 posts daily. I am trying to respond to those that have substance. I also have a job and a family, and cannot go any faster. But eventually, I catch up.
Speaking of which, it is time for Annalex's late dinner.
Your post 3083.....how many good works must you do? How do you know you’ve done enough? Or even the right ones for that matter??
isn't it absolutely amazing that the Holy Spirit influenced and guided the Catholic church for one thousand six hundred years before even the first protestant was born....suddenly, you, a person of perhaps 50-60 years of age, decides that you can better interpret what Christ meant when He established His church, than could the original Apostles......Good luck with that theory.
You gonna answer post 3075?
obeys?, probably no longer necessary, but disrespects as you do...NEVER.
no He didn't
Catholic polemicists sloppily IGNORE the beliefs of early church "fathers" that show what was commonly held as orthodox faith when it doesn't serve their current dogmas and any appeal to the "unanimous consent of the fathers" is sheepishly brushed off as a nice-to-have but no longer a determining factor in newly developed doctrines. Like you do here in only addressing Chrysostom and his view about baptism but ignoring what he said about the Scriptures. Sidestepping and ignoring all the others. No, RCs HAVE TO dispute Scriptural authority because they KNOW their obligatory dogmas are not verifiable from the word of God. They appeal to "Tradition" as equal in authority, but cannot prove such beliefs were either taught by the Apostles or believed by the early Christians. Truth, to RCs, becomes whatever the Pope/Magesterium says is the truth. It's why Tradition and the Magesterium have to be viewed as all equal in authority. Sorry, but Divinely-inspired Scripture - as GOD'S word to us - is our TRUE authority and this basic truth was believed and defended by the Apostles as well as their disciples, whom they trained up in the truth so that they could faithfully teach others.
If Roman Catholicism was A true church, they wouldn't have to disparage the Holy Scriptures. They would eagerly appeal to the word of God to prove what they say is the truth - just like the early church fathers did. They would AGREE with saints like Irenaeus who stated in his book, Against Heresies:
Our faith is steadfast, unfeigned, and the only true one, having clear proof from these Scriptures.
In the first place, we prove from the authoritative Scriptures that all the things which have been mentioned, visible and invisible, have been made by one God. For these men are not more to be depended on than the Scriptures.
If, therefore, even with respect to creation, there are some things [the knowledge of] which belongs only to God, and others which come within the range of our own knowledge, what ground is there for complaint, if, in regard to those things which we investigate in the Scriptures (which are throughout spiritual), we are able by the grace of God to explain some of them, while we must leave others in the hands of God, and that not only in the present world, but also in that which is to come, so that God should for ever teach, and man should for ever learn the things taught him by God?...If, for instance, any one asks, What was God doing before He made the world? we reply that the answer to such a question lies with God Himself. For that this world was formed perfect by God, receiving a beginning in time, the Scriptures teach us; but no Scripture reveals to us what God was employed about before this event. The answer therefore to that question remains with God, and it is not proper for us to aim at bringing forward foolish, rash, and blasphemous suppositions [in reply to it]; so, as by ones imagining that he has discovered the origin of matter, he should in reality set aside God Himself who made all things. But we shall not be wrong if we affirm the same thing also concerning the substance of matter, that God produced it. For we have learned from the Scriptures that God holds the supremacy over all things. But whence or in what way He produced it, neither has Scripture anywhere declared; nor does it become us to conjecture, so as, in accordance with our own opinions, to form endless conjectures concerning God, but we should leave such knowledge in the hands of God Himself.
Since, therefore, the entire Scriptures, the prophets, and the Gospels, can be clearly, unambiguously, and harmoniously understood by all, although all do not believe them; and since they proclaim that one only God, to the exclusion of all others, formed all things by His word, whether visible or invisible, heavenly or earthly, in the water or under the earth, as I have shown from the very words of Scripture; and since the very system of creation to which we belong testifies, by what falls under our notice, that one Being made and governs itthose persons will seem truly foolish who blind their eyes to such a clear demonstration, and will not behold the light of the announcement [made to them]; but they put fetters upon themselves, and every one of them imagines, by means of their obscure interpretations of the parables, that he has found out a God of his own.
Additional views can be read HERE.
So, once again, you are proven wrong in your false declaration that the Reformers were the ones who invented the doctrines of sola Scriptura and sola fide. There is plentiful documentation that these are Biblical doctrines, proven over and over BY direct Scriptures, as well as the beliefs held by the Apostles and those they discipled to carry on the ministry of reconciliation. These WERE the teachings once delivered unto the saints and they will continue to be regardless of the accursed gospel false teachers use to try to deceive.
NOPE! Only Jesus is the same yesterday, today and forever. The church you place all your hope in, not at all - and it can be easily proved.
they are wrong, that's why they are PROTESTANTS...
Tell me, have YOU murdered anyone? Yet, wouldn't you admit that you HAVE sinned? The FACT is that we ALL have sinned and FALL SHORT OF THE GLORY OF GOD. That is the message of Romans 3. It isn't saying we are only sinners if we've killed someone. It is God telling us we can NEVER be as perfect and sinless as He is. That can only come from Christ's imputed righteousness given to us by the grace of God through faith. Mary admitted she needed a Savior, so should we.
Ahh, so you will be telling the pope and others to rescind all the reams of popery "fluff" theological additions, uhm err, developments, and have those whom are presently in oversight of RC "magesterium" tender apology to the Orthodox?
No?
Do the same work which is being required of others.
In this case, it wasn't! Since you have already admitted you are too lazy busy to read what others have to say to you in response to YOUR comments, you miss out on some good stuff. Stuff the rest of us can enjoy and learn by. Your loss!
Yeah. It's the Shazamm School Of Theology.
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