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Is Prayer/Veneration/Worship to Mary Biblical?
self | 12-14-14 | ealgeone

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 man’s standard.


TOPICS: Apologetics; Catholic; Charismatic Christian; Evangelical Christian; Theology
KEYWORDS: bible; blessedvirginmary; catholic; mary; mystery; mysterybabylon; prayer; rcinventions; vanities; vanity; worship
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To: aMorePerfectUnion; metmom; verga
Post away in this forum. The only good posts are measured in facts, insights and logic. Degrees never trump truth. Go for it and ignore criticism.

If I recall, Peter didn't have a degree and he was given the keys.....:)

4,141 posted on 12/30/2014 1:35:26 PM PST by ealgeone
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To: Springfield Reformer
Thank you for your explanation of the way you understand the prophecy of Malachi. I am note sure you have covered quite everything which this prophecy entails, though, because you seemingly overlook the sacrificial nature of Christ's command,which is usually translated as "Do this in remembrance of me."

"Touto poieite tan eman anamnasin" (Luke 22:19) (1 Cor. 11:24–25) is more exactly rendered, "Offer this as my memorial offering."

The Protestant Oxford historian J. N. D. Kelly (a scholarly expert on the development of the early Christian Creeds and doctrines, his Early Christian Creeds and Early Christian Doctrines are standard seminary textbooks) writes that in the early Church.

"the Eucharist was regarded as the distinctively Christian sacrifice. . . . Malachi’s prediction (1:10–11) that the Lord would reject Jewish sacrifices and instead would have "a pure offering" made to him by the Gentiles in every place was seized upon by Christians as a prophecy of the Eucharist. The Didache indeed actually applies the term thusia, or sacrifice, to the Eucharist...

"It was natural for early Christians to think of the Eucharist as a sacrifice. The fulfillment of prophecy demanded a solemn Christian offering, and the rite itself was wrapped in the sacrificial atmosphere with which our Lord invested the Last Supper. The words of institution, ‘Do this’ (touto poieite), must have been charged with sacrificial overtones for second-century ears; Justin at any rate understood them to mean, ‘Offer this.’ . . . The bread and wine, moreover, are offered ‘for a memorial (eis anamnasin) of the passion,’ a phrase which in view of his identification of them with the Lord’s body and blood implies much more than an act of purely spiritual recollection" (J. N. D. Kelly, Early Christian Doctrines 196–7).

This is, of course, Jesus' finished work on the Cross. Although it has its temporal limits (He died on a particular day) it is also an eternal and timeless sacrific, since He is the Lamb "Who was slain before the foundation of the world" --- a Biblical way to saytht this happens in eternity, -- outside of time and space. Thus it is something which can be eternally "present" -- as the Church is given the power to enter into His eternal (timeless) finished work.

This is what happens at the Mass. It is not so fanciful as some might think, since it is the understanding which the Church explicitly maintained from the first century (Didache) until now.

"Assemble on the Lord’s day, and break bread and offer the Eucharist; but first make confession of your faults, so that your sacrifice may be a pure one. Anyone who has a difference with his fellow is not to take part with you until he has been reconciled, so as to avoid any profanation of your sacrifice [Matt. 5:23–24]. For this is the offering of which the Lord has said, ‘Everywhere and always bring me a sacrifice that is undefiled, for I am a great king, says the Lord, and my name is the wonder of nations’ [Mal. 1:11, 14]" (Didache 14 [A.D. 70]).


4,142 posted on 12/30/2014 1:47:46 PM PST by Mrs. Don-o (Point of clarification.)
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To: Elsie
"Israel was NOT a ‘nation’ when the degree came from Heaven."

When what degree came from heaven?

4,143 posted on 12/30/2014 1:49:03 PM PST by Mrs. Don-o (Point of clarification.)
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To: annalex

Are you serious? Why are you so afraid to pray to Jesus? I do not understand that. Do you want people to hear what you say? Wow.


4,144 posted on 12/30/2014 2:20:32 PM PST by MamaB
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To: daniel1212
What is it with you? How is that relevant and where did i claim I was IFB?
  1. I look for truth and value before I make a purchase.
  2. In post 3246 you wrote "Rest assured i certainly affirm baptism, and I was baptized in the name of the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit in a fundamental Baptist church about 6 years after prayerfully leaving Rome, and have been part of about 1,000 services and meetings in Baptist (Ind. and SB) churches alone over the years, including so think i must believe in baptism - even somewhat stronger than most of them do."
  3. It is my understanding, although you may know better, that Independent Fundamental Baptist theology holds when you are baptized in one of their churches (after they affirm you are really a believer per their doctrine), as you were, you become a member of that local church. I also thought they did not regard one as being in the body of Christ unless one was baptized into a valid New Testament (almost always Baptist) church.
  4. I further thought that if one was a member of an IFB church, one can never leave without somehow shedding the IFB theology, by which one is viewed by the faithful as either never having really been saved, deceived, backslidden, or some combination thereof. It all is very interesting when I compare it with the Catholic Church and those Catholics who can hardly contain themselves from posting against the Catholic Church at every opportunity. It's not like they are trying to get Independent Fundamental Baptists to moderate, or get Pentecostals who don't believe water baptism is a required teaching from the LORD Jesus Christ to the Apostles to accept the truth, or get babblers to learn real languages if they want to say something that can be understood, or ... etc. I could go on for hours.

4,145 posted on 12/30/2014 2:22:32 PM PST by af_vet_1981 (The bus came by and I got on, That's when it all began.)
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To: CynicalBear

I honestly did not know they believe this junk. What is wrong with them? I do not think they are Christians if they believe this.


4,146 posted on 12/30/2014 2:22:59 PM PST by MamaB
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To: FourtySeven; verga

Did you?

Did you, and then allow yourself to be seduced by that man's own "seducing spirits"?

You want me to indulge myself in this other Gospel DeMontfort preaches, which makes Mary out to be a fourth member of the Trinity, in all but openly declared manner?

Montfort said this also;

I do that daily, and in my sleep too. (I'm not kidding, or exaggerating when I say, "in my sleep").

DeMontfort works (writes) diligently to elevate her above all creation, and all whom would be Christian; making Mary to be now presently (in, or from heavenly, or spirit realms) a singularly required intercessor -- as if -- one cannot ever know or receive full measure from God the Father Himself, without ourselves, and even Himself going through her own offices -- even her very soul (according to DeMontfort).

That kind of teaching is both extra-curricular and contrary to the preaching of Apostle Paul, and the words of Jesus Christ himself.

Meanwhile, being that the Father, Son, and the Holy Spirit are all of the same substance, all the same essence, to know one is to know them all ---- then it is that person, that Spirit of truth which Christ promised His disciples would be sent ---which is how we are not left as orphans.

Is it not true that the writer of "the Gospel of John" was the same disciple whom Christ from the cross, as He was dying, directed that disciple (John) to look upon Mary as his own mother?

Yet for that, I will say that that was for earthly realm's consideration. Not without love, nor without the Lord's own Spirit which would be sent to them all -- yet not for Mary to be then forever onwards as "heavenly" or spirit mother, although I do well enough understand that many have read that "mother of us all" concept into the texts, even straining to do so at every opportunity to make it out to be that "Mary" has some ongoing, now heavenly role as "dispenser of all graces", and yet further more in seemingly endless, breathless imaginings towards her.

Turning momentarily to another Gospel writer (whom I do think it is safe for us to assume knew both the Messiah, and the mother of His earthly incarnation, as did John the Apostle);

Matthew 12

Have you, FourtySeven, as for the above,

John 14

John 15;

Compare that with what DeMontfort says about "Mary" and her "secrets", from within #47;

DeMontfort goes on and on and on about how everything flows through "Mary" (and even by her own will and accord also, it must be added that he says) from both directions~! From ourselves to God;

She keeps the Son from striking us? Mary -- save us from the wrath of your son Jesus?

Compare that to the words of Christ spoken from even the cross as He suffered immense torment in his own flesh concerning those whom done that to him -- Father forgive them for they know not what they do.

And ...Mary (according to DeMontfort) -- the banker, the treasurer of all "merit", the remember-er of human details (provided they dedicate their all -- to her) as if He who is all-knowing would not know better than anyone, included Mary.

And in this, though many will be judged for their works, those hidden in Christ shall be passed over for judgement, having escaped that wrath of God for reason of having our garments washed in the blood -- of the very Lamb which shall do the judging.

Meanwhile Scripture indicates that only the Lamb is worthy to open the Scrolls, and further, to read what is written -- in His own book of life

We do not see "Mary" there (or anywhere else in Scripture!) "seated at the right hand of Jesus" as DeMontfort's gnosticism would have things to be, in heavenly realm.

THat so called "saint" and Bernard of Clairvaux also, if they not themselves have fallen prey to some of the most seducing spirits of them all, that spirit or spirits coming as Angels of Light fooling even the very elect, if possible, most assuredly had provided free reign for those deceiving imitators, who attempt to lure people into the kind of thinking that their own piety and dedication (in other words-- "works") will gain them favor, even grace from God (yet if it be by works, then grace is no longer grace, writes Paul)

What better way to accomplish that insidious subtlety & substitutionary leading from the Way, but to arrive cloaked within robes of Mary in order to fool, if possible, the very elect of God?

As you had said, quoting myself, then wanting me to reconsider things?

It still leaves Mary sharing "top billing", for DeMontfort does otherwise place Mary as seated at the right hand of Christ.

I had deliberately included the portion of this being [allegedly] concerning God's own grace towards us, to show how DeMontfort went about packaging these so-called "Secrets of Mary", knowing full well when I did so that someone around here would likely seize upon such as that, for such is the makings of the camouflage and multitudinous excuse-making for how hyper-dulia for Mary, too often slippery-slides right into being indistinguishable from full-on worship of Mary as undeclared fourth member of the Trinity --- with Bernard and DeMontfort writing from out of their own gnosticism (secret knowledge), and that of others also who had gone before them, paving the way yet further, making it all seem so pious and devout, so "spiritual", when the greater reality is that communion with Christ (and thus His Father also) by way of and through the Holy Spirit (not thru "Mary", or her "soul") is not only sufficient, but is the very Way, the Way of the Church from it's beginnings...

Again, from John 14;


4,147 posted on 12/30/2014 2:29:12 PM PST by BlueDragon (just the facts, ma'am)
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To: Elsie
"Yes; but of DOCUMENTED data; not speculation."

(Scratching head...), you want documented data from him so you can be a fan? (more head scratching...)??

4,148 posted on 12/30/2014 2:30:25 PM PST by Dutchboy88
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To: annalex; CynicalBear; xone; boatbums; redleghunter; EagleOne
It is a flippant negation of the Church teaching, no matter how recent, that is sinful and may preclude entry into Heaven.

There's been no flippant rejection of RCC teaching.

It's claims have been compared to Scripture and found wanting.

They are in error, simply not found in Scripture in the least, therefore rightly rejected.

4,149 posted on 12/30/2014 2:54:06 PM PST by metmom (...fixing our eyes on Jesus, the Author and Perfecter of our faith...)
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To: annalex; Alex Murphy; bkaycee; blue-duncan; boatbums; caww; CynicalBear; daniel1212; Gamecock; ...

And that verse is so taken out of context by the Catholics in a vain bid to claim ultimate authority over believers and compel submission to it.

The context is simply for settling disputes between believers, not giving the governing body of any church ultimate authority to tell God how it’s going to be.


4,150 posted on 12/30/2014 2:56:34 PM PST by metmom (...fixing our eyes on Jesus, the Author and Perfecter of our faith...)
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To: steve86
Good for you, steve! I'm moving to a new house and can't wait to get a Mary statue for my garden. I never had one but I'm married into an Italian-American family where it is de rigour. Prayers up to her every day.

How you can hate Jesus’s mother is beyond me.

4,151 posted on 12/30/2014 2:58:15 PM PST by miss marmelstein (Richard the Third: Loyalty Binds Me)
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To: miss marmelstein

Yep. Are you still going to be in Manhattan (if you don’t mind saying)?


4,152 posted on 12/30/2014 3:00:17 PM PST by steve86 (Prophecies of Maelmhaedhoc OÂ’Morgair (Latin form: Malachy))
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To: miss marmelstein

Instead of Mary who is dead, why not get one of Jesus? After all, he is the answer, not someone who is dead.


4,153 posted on 12/30/2014 3:00:50 PM PST by MamaB
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To: annalex; ealgeone
Yes. You have to practice self-denial every day so long as you live. The day you say "I did enough" is the day your soul perishes.

No. Nobody has to practice self-anything to get into heaven.

And your soul does not perish when you say *I did enough*. Your soul was already perished.

As long as *I* is in it at all, you will not be saved.

It's JESUS did it for me.

No, self-denial not is the way of salvation, death to self is. When we die in Christ, we are raised with Him, and it's nothing we do to earn it or deserve it as it's by grace, without effort on our part.

4,154 posted on 12/30/2014 3:04:32 PM PST by metmom (...fixing our eyes on Jesus, the Author and Perfecter of our faith...)
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To: annalex; ealgeone
Of course we do. "Lord Jesus Christ, son of God, have mercy on me a sinner". The topic is saints, so I show you how to pray to saints.

And Jesus showed us how to pray to GOD.

Why then, don't y'all follow Mary's instructions to do whatever He tells you?

4,155 posted on 12/30/2014 3:05:56 PM PST by metmom (...fixing our eyes on Jesus, the Author and Perfecter of our faith...)
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To: verga; CynicalBear

Maybe...I would care to?

I have done so on this forum previously, on multiple occasions...

Yet to cover that subject with something more than mere argument by assertion --- in other words to establish the position be accurate, sound, and reasonable, while also getting ahead of, countering and accounting for the usual apologetic towards indiscriminate full inclusion of OT Apocrypha into canon proper, would take something of a 4-part (count'em -4) answer.

Though I must say that CB summed things up rather succinctly.

4,156 posted on 12/30/2014 3:31:35 PM PST by BlueDragon (just the facts, ma'am)
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To: miss marmelstein
How you can hate Jesus’s mother is beyond me

Yes it is astounding the burden that has been placed on Mary, the handmaid of the Lord, by Catholicism.

Christians love Mary and treat her with the respect due her.

4,157 posted on 12/30/2014 3:58:01 PM PST by Syncro (Jesus Christ: The ONLY mediator between God and man)
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To: Mrs. Don-o
"Touto poieite tan eman anamnasin" (Luke 22:19) (1 Cor. 11:24–25) is more exactly rendered, "Offer this as my memorial offering."

From the  Louw-Nida semantic range lexicon:
90.45 ποιέωa: a marker of an agent relation with a numerable event—‘to do, to perform, to practice, to make.’ διδάσκων καὶ πορείαν ποιούμενος εἰς Ιεροσόλυμα ‘teaching as he made a journey to Jerusalem’ Lk 13:22; οἱ μαθηταὶ Ἰωάννου νηστεύουσιν πυκνὰ καὶ δεήσεις ποιοῦνται ‘John’s disciples often fast and pray’ Lk 5:33; τῷ σῷ ὀνόματι δυνάμεις πολλὰς ἐποιήσαμεν ‘in your name we did many miracles’ Mt 7:22; πίστει πεποίηκεν τὸ πάσχα ‘by faith he performed the Passover’ He 11:28.
So I have found no basis for the translation you have offered.  ποιεῖτε is just "do," not "offer." Your translation is even errant with respect to the double use of "offer."  Here's the Greek from Luke 22:19 (same phrase as used in 1 Corinthians 11:24-25):
τοῦτο ποιεῖτε εἰς τὴν ἐμὴν ἀνάμνησιν
Which renders out like this:
τοῦτο [this] ποιεῖτε [do] εἰς [for the purpose of] τὴν [the] ἐμὴν [of me] ἀνάμνησιν [a reminder]
There is no repeating word, even in root form, anywhere in that phrase. I strongly recommend you check out the source of your translation.  Without being able to see how they derived it, I am forced to conclude it was, shall we say, a highly eclectic approach to a rather ordinary directive (imperative) to do, make, or continue something, and the purpose for doing it is to have the meal serve as a reminder.  This is pretty open and shut.  But if you have a site, I would be fascinated how they came to this despite all the excellent lexicons and translations having an entirely different outcome.

As for the Didache, it certainly is an interesting document, but it's date and authorship are less certain than you may have been led to believe.  Certainly neither of us regards it as canonical. Nevertheless, even if we were to accept the most optimistic date and authorship theories, the early use of "Eucharist," even here in the Didache, revolved around its root sense, which is simply "thanksgiving," and we already know there can be a sacrifice of thanksgiving without implying any sort of propitiatory effect. In other words, the sort of sacrifice described in the Didache matches well with the category of thanksgiving as sacrifice.  This has no bearing on Aritotelian notions of substance versus accidence.  The early believers would be stunned to hear such things read into their expression of thankfulness, which thankfulness is a wholesome response to the memory of what Jesus has done for us.

As for the time travel theory of that hypothetically protects the "finished" nature of the event with it's perpetuity in practice, it is a completely specious invention that has no grounding in Scripture.  We do not know that God relates to time as some sort of Eternal Present.  That notion comes to us by suspect passage from eastern concepts of Nirvana et al.  It is not the Hebraic notion of God's relationship to time.  We say as a Hebraism that the Lamb was slain from the foundation of the world because Hebrew prophecy can state the present or the future as the "prophetic past tense," and that's because it represents an event so certain in the purposes of God it can be spoken of as having already happened, or happened long ago, because it was always in the plan.  It provides no evidence whatsoever that God is in some Nirvana-like timeless state.  Rather, in the passage in question, it asserts the certainty of God's purpose with respect to the elect:
And it was given unto him to make war with the saints, and to overcome them: and power was given him over all kindreds, and tongues, and nations. And all that dwell upon the earth shall worship him, whose names are not written in the book of life of the Lamb slain from the foundation of the world.
(Revelation 13:7-8)
So how are we supposed to think about the sacrifice of Christ and time? It's spelled out here:
Nor yet that he should offer himself often, as the high priest entereth into the holy place every year with blood of others; For then must he often have suffered since the foundation of the world: but now once in the end of the world hath he appeared to put away sin by the sacrifice of himself. (Hebrews 9:25-26)
Here we have the author of Hebrews speaking clearly within the temporal frame of reference.  This is how God, by divine inspiration, wants us to think about the time element of Jesus' sacrifice.  He does not offer himself often, in our time reference, as the priests did offer their sacrifices.  Yet that would be a necessary way of speaking if the priests too were time traveling forward to the cross. Because although it may have only one occurrence in "Nirvana time," we would observe it as multiple occurrences in human time. 

But the writer of Hebrews does not say that.  He says the opposite, as if to prevent the very idea you are espousing, that somehow in our frame of reference Christ has suffered from the foundation of the world.  This is flatly denied. And in it's place, what do we find?  From our perspective, we are to understand he appeared once as a sacrifice, and in one act put away sin. Past tense. If you were not there when it happened some 2000 years ago, the only means of access still available is faith, and that is enough to wash the sinner clean. This renders the time travel theory a novelty with, if you will pardon the expression, no future.

Peace,

SR
4,158 posted on 12/30/2014 4:04:41 PM PST by Springfield Reformer (Winston Churchill: No Peace Till Victory!)
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To: metmom
Then you are at odds with the teaching of the Catholic church over the centuries. That means you are either in schism, a heretic, or a protestor.

I posted a link from the Catechism of the Catholic Church. Your argument is, as always, with the Catholic Church into which you are baptized.

4,159 posted on 12/30/2014 4:07:31 PM PST by af_vet_1981 (The bus came by and I got on, That's when it all began.)
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To: boatbums
You've been around here long enough to have figured out "FRoman Catholics" are Roman Catholic FReepers. Did you seriously imagine I made that up?

You were complaining about me wanting to use labels and you were doing it yourself.

4,160 posted on 12/30/2014 4:21:40 PM PST by af_vet_1981 (The bus came by and I got on, That's when it all began.)
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