For all practical purposes, that's about what it amounts to, no matter how they redefine words and explain away actions.
For all practical purposes, that’s about what it amounts to, no matter how they redefine words and explain away actions.
metmom, do you agree with what Faith Presses On wrote in his post, as follows:
I was just thinking the other day in response to some articles on this subject that the Catholic charge against Bible-believing Protestants makes no sense. We DO believe Mary is the mother of God in the sense that we believe that Jesus was and is God. We arent Jehovahs Witnesses, for example. Jesus was and is God, and Mary is His mother. Through her, God entered the world in human form. We agree with all that, and thats one of the things we actually agree on in a formal sense.
And interestingly, too, Wikipedia says that Theotokos means something like the one who gives birth to God, rather than Mother of God. To that, Catholics would say, mother means one who gives birth to. Yet, the word mother isnt used. So why should they have trouble with Protestants saying to them that Mary is the mother of Jesus, or the Christ? After all, even if the word God isnt used, we believe Jesus Christ is God, so it is implicit in the belief that Mary is the mother of Jesus Christ, and hence, God - so long as someone believes that Jesus was and is God.
And then, furthermore, they say they believe just as we do - that Mary isnt the mother of the eternal God. That isnt what they mean by Mother of God. They mean that she is the mother of the Son of God in His Incarnation.