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Current status of Mary [Re: Cardinal Ratzinger Does Not Foresee Approval of “Co-redemptrix”]
Posted on 10/07/2002 1:03:41 PM PDT by Polycarp
This is a decent summary from a non-Catholic source:
Current status of Mary:
Although the virgin Mary is rarely mentioned in the Bible, and although Protestant churches consider her to be a relatively minor biblical character, the Roman Catholic Church has long assigned her an elevated status.
The Roman Catholic Church has historically taught two basic dogmas about Mary:
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1. Mary is the Mother of God. |
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2. Perpetual Virginity: Mary was a virgin when Yeshua (Jesus) was conceived; this state continued throughout her life. |
Two additional dogmas about Mary were infallibly proclaimed by two popes during the 19th and 20th centuries:
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3. Immaculate Conception: Pope Pius IX proclaimed the dogma of the Immaculate Conception of Mary on 1854-DEC-8. Many Roman Catholics believe that this refers to Jesus' conception circa 5 to 7 BCE. In fact, it means that Mary herself was conceived free of sin before her birth circa 20 BCE. |
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4. Assumption of Mary: Pope Pius XII, in his Munificentissimus Deus (1950-NOV-1), defined that Mary, "after the completion of her earthly life was assumed body and soul into the glory of Heaven." That is, she was "taken up body and soul into heaven," at the time of her death. She is there "exalted as Queen of the Universe." 1 |
In addition, various popes and church councils have referred to Mary as co-redemptrix, mediatrix, and advocate:
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In ancient times:
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St. Antonius (circa 250 - 350): "All graces that have ever been bestowed on men, all came through Mary." |
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St. Bernard (1090 - 1153): "[Mary is called] the gate of heaven, because no one can enter that blessed kingdom without passing through her." |
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St. Bonaventure (1221 - 1274): "As the moon, which stands between the sun and the earth, transmits to this latter whatever it receives from the former, so does Mary pour out upon us who are in this world the heavenly graces that she receives from the divine sun of justice." 1 |
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1750: Alphonsus Mary de Liguori, canonized as Saint Alphonsus in 1839, wrote a book "The Glories of Mary." It continues to be published today, under various church imprimaturs. Various chapters in the book are titled: "Mary our Help," "Mary our Mediatress," "Mary our Advocate," etc. 1 |
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1935: Pope Pius XI gave the title co-redemptrix to Mary during a radio broadcast. 1 |
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Circa 1965: The Chapter 8 of the Dogmatic Constitution of the Church, passed by the Vatican Council II states, in part:
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"Rightly, therefore, the Fathers see Mary not merely as passively engaged by God, but as freely cooperating in the work of mans salvation through faith and obedience. For as St. Irenaeus says, she being obedient, became the cause of salvation for herself and for the whole human race. Hence not a few of the early Fathers gladly assert with him in their preaching ...'death through Eve, life through Mary.' This union of the mother with the son in the work of salvation is made manifest from the time of Christs virginal conception up to his death" 2 |
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"Taken up to heaven she did not lay aside this saving office but by her manifold intercession continues to bring us the gifts of eternal salvation. By her maternal charity, she cares for the brethren of her Son, who still journey on earth surrounded by dangers and difficulties, until they are led into their blessed home. Therefore the Blessed Virgin is invoked in the church under the titles of Advocate, Helper, Benefactress and Mediatrix." 3 |
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1985: Pope John Paul II recognized Mary as co-redemptrix" during a speech in Guayaquil, Ecuador. He said, in part, "Having suffered for the Church, Mary deserved to become the Mother of all the disciples of her Son, the Mother of their unity...In fact Marys role as Co-redemptrix did not cease with the glorification of her Son." 4 |
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1987-MAR-25: In his encyclical Redemptoris Mater, Pope John Paul II "referred to Mary as 'Mediatrix' three times, and as 'Advocate' twice." 1 |
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1997-APR-9: During an audience Pope John-Paul II referred to the role of Mary during the crucifixion of Jesus: "Mary
co-operated during the event itself and in the role of mother; thus her co-operation embraces the whole of Christs saving work. She alone was associated in this way with the redemptive sacrifice that merited the salvation of all mankind. In union with Christ and in submission to him, she collaborated in obtaining the grace of salvation for all humanity...In Gods plan, Mary is the woman (cf. John 2:4; John 19:26), the New Eve, united to the New Adam in restoring humanity to its original dignity. Her cooperation with her Son continues for all time in the universal motherhood which she enjoys in the order of grace. Trusting in this maternal cooperation, let us turn to Mary, imploring her help in all our needs." 1 |
Although Mary has been referred to on numerous occasions as co-redemptrix, mediatrix, and advocate, none have the force of an infallible papal declaration.
Petition drive to promote an infallible statement:
Professor Mark Miravalle of Franciscan University in Steubenville, OH, initiated a formal petition drive in 1993 during a Marian conference at that university. It asks the Pope to make infallible statement that would officially elevate Mary, the mother of Jesus, to the status of co-redeemer. More than six million signatures from 148 countries have reached the Vatican as of the end of the year 2000, asking that Pope John Paul II infallibly declare a new dogma: "That the Virgin Mary is a co-redeemer with Jesus and co-operates fully with her son in the redemption of humanity." If this were done, "she would be a vastly more powerful figure, something close to the fourth member of the Holy Trinity and the primary female face through which Christians experience the divine." 3 Miravalle's petition has received support from Mother Theresa, 550 bishops, Cardinal John O'Connor and 41 other cardinals (including at least 12 cardinals in Rome). If the dogma is declared infallibly, it would pronounce Mary as "Co-Redemptrix [co-redeemer], Mediatrix [mediator] of All Graces, and Advocate for the People of God." It would require all Roman Catholics to believe that:
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Mary is co-redemptrix with Jesus. She participates in people's redemption. |
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Mary is mediatrix and has the power to grant all graces. |
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Mary is the advocate for the people of God and has the authority to influence God's judgments. |
If the dogma is infallibly declared, many feel that, in the words of Father Rene Laurentin, it would be the equivalent of launching "bombs" at Protestants. Father Laurentin is a French monk and the world's leading Mary scholar. He believes that: "Mary is the model of our faith but she is not divine. There is no mediation or co-redemption except in Christ. He alone is God." Raising the status of Mary would further acerbate the split between the Roman Catholic and Eastern Orthodox churches. Ecumenical activity would be negatively affected. There is speculation that a schism might develop over the issue within the Roman Catholic church. There may be a renewed debate over the role of the pope's power in the church. 5,6
TOPICS: Apologetics; Catholic; Theology
KEYWORDS: catholic; catholiclist; ratzinger
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To: Irisshlass
Irish IF you believe that Jesus is as He says the Word of God..then we would say that Jesus is the authority to whom we listen..
To: JesseShurun
That means don't you know, that I am now able to save myself if I can just find the RIGHT CHURCH! Jesus established a Church of which the gates of hell would not prevail. (Matthew 16:18)
Jesus called his Church "the pillar and foundation of truth." (1 Timothy 3:16)
Jesus is the Truth. (John 14:6)
Therefore, the Church is Jesus. (1 Corinthians 12:2)
When you find the Church of Jesus, you find Jesus and the most sure means of salvation. (1 Corinthians 10:16)
To: Aquinasfan; sandyeggo
Thank you thank you so much for helping me to see the light! And it gets even better!! Since I am the church I"M the ARK of the New Covenant!! Man I like your spin on things the best!! I can't wait to ordain myself, appoint myself to Holy Church offices, eetc etc. No wonder you guys like these ideas!!
To: Frumanchu
Good question
To: JesseShurun
Add John 6:54 to (1 Corinthians 10:16) above.
To: RnMomof7
I do..but I also believe in Tradition alongside of Scripture..
To: Irisshlass
God does not play games...The worldwide authority of the church was removed in the Reformation..nothing remains but the city on 7 hills and a symbolic authority
Isa 22:19And I will drive thee from thy station, and from thy state shall he pull thee down.
Luk 1:52 He hath put down the mighty from [their] seats, and exalted them of low degree.
To: Aquinasfan; sandyeggo; Matchett-PI
I'm the ARK!! I'm the WORD!! I AM GOD!!! This is the best religion ever!!!
To: RnMomof7
How do you know that the "keys of authority" remain is Rome? Historically and logically. History shows an unbroken line of papal successors. Logically, if the Petrine office was destroyed, then the gates of hell would have prevailed against Christ's Church. Christ established the premier ecclesiastical office of His Church the papacy or "vice-regency."
To: JesseShurun
Since I am the church I"M the ARK of the New Covenant!! Man I like your spin on things the best!! I can't wait to ordain myself, appoint myself to Holy Church offices, eetc etc. No wonder you guys like these ideas!! Do not get so excited that you sink
To: Irisshlass
How do you know the tradition is right or true?
To: RnMomof7
I'm going right out and buy myself a little pope dress.
To: RnMomof7
How do you know the tradition is right or true?
Because it says so in scripture..but I know you will want to refute this..I'm really tired and giggly right now to debate it..
To: JesseShurun
grrrrrr
To: Irisshlass
It's the logical conclusion of your theology, don't blame me, besides, Calvin answered my prayers.
To: RnMomof7
Then God's temple in heaven was opened, and within his temple was seen the ark of his covenant. And there came flashes of lightning, rumblings, peals of thunder, an earthquake and a great hailstorm. You forgot the next line:
Then God's temple in heaven was opened, and within his temple was seen the ark of his covenant. And there came flashes of lightning, rumblings, peals of thunder, an earthquake and a great hailstorm. A great and wondrous sign appeared in heaven: a woman clothed with the sun, with the moon under her feet and a crown of twelve stars on her head.
The chapters and verses in scripture were arbitrarily added to sacred Scripture centuries after the canon was determined. Read the passage in context and you will see that the Ark is Mary.
To: RnMomof7
What happened to post #71 too much light in here? :)
BigMack
To: RnMomof7; Catholicguy
Most of the time I just read what others are saying. In fact the only time I've posted is when I've found someone in some kind of leadership role being less than honest.
In posts 200,250,255,290, and 415 you both are discussing the character of Scott Hahn.
I was away from the Church for many years. When I told a friend I began attending Church again she was thrilled until she found out it was not a Catholic Church. This began a debate that lasted for some time, and included her giving me a tape named "Scott Hahn conversion tape".
The following is a portion of my response to my friend, pertaining to some of what Scott said on this tape:
One last point, but this is a very important point because it speaks of Scott Hahns character. I believe it is more important for Scott to have people convinced of his point of view than to tell the truth. I am very much interested in the truth and will go where it leads me. I have a big problem with people who try to manipulate or fool people into their point of view.
Let me explain. Here I am not arguing for or against the Catholic Churchs viewpoint of Mary. However, what Scott presents here I consider intellectual dishonesty because he is deliberately trying to trick people. He says on the tape:
Ill give you two points, and if you can answer them, Ill give it to you (referring to the Catholic viewpoint of Mary, talking to a Protestant friend).
Point 1. Christ obeyed the law perfectly right? Of course.
The Ten Commandments sum up that law, right? Of course.
The first command that deals with our fellow relations is Honor your Father and Mother. When Christ fulfilled the law, He fulfills that command Honor your Father and Mother. The Hebrew word for honor, Kabad, means glorify. So Christ honors, He bestows honor, He glorifies, He bestows glory upon His Mom, right?
Whats point 2?
We imitate Christ. The Catholic Church isnt exalting Mary, Jesus beat her to it. Were just echoing and imitating our Lord. All were doing is what Christ has been doing, as a perfectly faithful obedient loving Son.
Scott Hahn indicates he is a scholar and has taught in seminary. He talks about his study of Scripture. He knows about taking Scripture out of context because even in this tape he accuses others of doing just that (pertaining to the Body and Blood of Christ).
So lets look at the context of this Scripture. The law is being given to the Jewish people. Do not murder. So the Jewish people, in order to obey this commandment, must not murder.
Do not commit adultery. So the Jewish people, in order to obey this commandment, must not commit adultery.
Honor your Father and Mother. So the Jewish people, in order to obey this commandment, must honor, bestow glory, and exalt their Father and Mother?
Is that right? The average Jewish person is to bestow glory and show exaltation to his Father and Mother? I dont think so.
Here is the thing
..In Hebrew there is more than one meaning for the word Kabad. One is to honor, to bestow glory and reverence, and other is to respect. So lets fix this one.
Honor your Father and Mother. So the Jewish people, in order to obey this commandment, must honor, by showing respect for, their Father and Mother.
Now that this is in the proper context, Jesus fulfills this commandment by respecting his Father and Mother.
Catholic Church members receive most of their religious information from the Church leaders, Catholic Catechisms as children, and people like Scott Hahn, rather than going themselves to the Scriptures. I believe that its a fair statement to say that most Catholic Church members do not read the Bible, and of those that do a large percentage do little more than dabble at reading Scripture. The Catholic Church, in general, doesnt do much to encourage individuals to read the Bible (I freely admit that most of the time I didnt pay attention, that I was dead wood, in the Catholic Church. However, I believe Im correct about this. If you disagree then lets discuss it).
Scott used a trick to try to convince people who do not know much about Scripture into believing that this specific Scripture indicates Mary should be bestowed glory and that she should be exalted. This Scripture does not indicate that Mary should be glorified or exalted. If you look closely at what he said, The first command that deals with our fellow relations. Fellow relations means human relations. And besides, it makes absolutely no sense to tell the Jewish people to glorify, bestow glory, and exalt their Dad and Mom.
This is my opinion. I believe, because of his stated background and experience, that Scott didnt make a mistake. I believe he is purposely being deceptive in order to convince people of his point of view. Im on a quest for the truth, and tricks like this disturb me greatly. Please be very careful with what you believe from this man.
There is no way he would attempt this in a debate format with one of the reformed Church debaters. But then again, it is his speech and his audience.
438
posted on
10/09/2002 11:02:50 AM PDT
by
KennyV
To: Aquinasfan
***History shows an unbroken line of papal successors.**
There were times there were two popes correct..and even a tale of a woman pope correct?? It is like a kid who's mom slept around. The one he calls PaPa may not be.. (not meant with disrespect)
From a quick web search
While Catholics may object to the charge that recent Popes have failed to meet the requirements of 1 Timothy 3, they can't object to that charge being made against dozens of Roman bishops and Popes of previous centuries. Some excerpts from a recent book by the **Roman Catholic author Eamon Duffy ***illustrate this. As you read the following, ask yourself whether the Catholic Church can claim an unbroken succession of legitimate bishops by the standards of 1 Timothy 3. And ask yourself whether Jesus and the apostles ever taught this sort of "apostolic succession". When men become bishops by means of bribery or murder, or they're appointed by prostitutes or political leaders, do they have apostolic authority just because they claim a lineage from the apostles? What about when numerous people claim that lineage at once, and the people claiming the lineage teach error and contradict one another?** Duffy writes in Saints and Sinners: A History of the Popes (New Haven and London: Yale University Press, 1997):**
By contrast [to an earlier Roman bishop who had been martyred], in the later persecution under Diocletian in 303, Pope Marcellinus (296-304?) would cave in to pressure. He surrendered copies of the scriptures and offered sacrifice to the gods. He died a year later in disgrace, and the Roman church set about forgetting him....
In the misery of exile, surrounded by imperial clergy and far from home, Liberius [bishop of Rome] weakened. He agreed to the excommunication of Athanasius [a bishop who defended the deity of Christ], and signed a formula which, while it did not actually repudiate the Nicene Creed, weakened it with the meaningless claim that the Logos [Jesus Christ] was 'like the father in being' and in all things. In 358 he was finally allowed to return to Rome.
He found the city deeply divided. On Liberius' exile in 355, the Emperor had installed a new pope, Liberius' former archdeacon Felix. Consecrated by Arian bishops in the imperial palace in Milan, Felix was an obvious fellow traveller, but imperial patronage was a powerful persuader, and many of the Roman clergy had rallied to him. Constantius was now unwilling simply to repudiate Felix, and commanded that Liberius and he should function as joint bishops....
Liberius' successor Damasus (366-84), who had served as deacon under both Liberius and Felix, would inherit some of the consequences of his predecessor's exile. His election in 366 was contested, and he was confronted by a rival pope, Ursinus, whom he only got rid of with the help of the city police and a murderous rabble....
Deprived of the support of empire, the papacy became the possession of the great Roman families, a ticket to local dominance for which men were prepared to rape, murder and steal. A third of the popes elected between 872 and 1012 died in suspicious circumstances - John VIII (872-82) bludgeoned to death by his own entourage, Stephen VI (896-7) strangled, Leo V (903) murdered by his successor Sergius III (904-11), John X (914-28) suffocated, Stephen VIII (939-42) horribly mutilated, a fate shared by the Greek antipope John XVI (997-8) who, unfortunately for him, did not die from the removal of his eyes, nose, lips, tongue and hands. Most of these men were manoeuvred into power by a succession of powerful families - the Theophylacts, the Crescentii, the Tusculani. John X, one of the few popes of this period to make a stand against aristocratic domination, was deposed and then murdered in the Castel Sant' Angelo by the Theophylacts, who had appointed him in the first place.
The key figure in both John X's appointment and his deposition was the notorious Theophylact matron, Marozia.*** She ***also appointed Leo VI (928) and Stephen VII (928-31), and she had been the mistress of Pope Sergius III, by whom she bore an illegitimate son whom she eventually appointed as Pope John XI (931-6)....
Its [the declining papacy's] symbol is the macabre 'cadaver synod' staged by Stephen VI in January 897, when he put on trial the mummified corpse of his hated predecessor but one, Pope Formosus. The corpse, dressed in pontifical vestments and propped up on a throne, was found guilty of perjury and other crimes, was mutilated by having the fingers used in blessings hacked off, and was then tossed into the Tiber. Stephen himself was subsequently deposed by the disgusted Roman crowd, and strangled in prison....
Of the twenty-five popes between 955 and 1057, thirteen were appointed by the local aristocracy, while the other twelve were appointed (and no fewer than five dismissed) by the German emperors. The ancient axiom that no one may judge the Pope was still in the law-books, but in practice had long since been set aside.
The popes themselves were deeply embroiled in the internecine dynastic warfare of the Roman nobility, and election to the chair of Peter, as we have seen, was frequently a commodity for sale or barter. The Ottonian era had led to a temporary improvement in the characters of the popes, but by the second quarter of the eleventh century standards had crumbled once more. Benedict IX (1032-48), whose election was the result of a systematic campaign of bribery by his father, the Tusculan grandee Count Alberic III, was as bad as any of the popes of the preceding 'dark century'. Like his uncle and immediate predecessor John XIX, Benedict was a layman, and was still in his twenties at the time of his election. He was both violent and debauched, and even the Roman populace, hardened as they were to unedifying papal behaviour, could not stomach him. He was eventually deposed in favour of Silvester III (1045). With the help of his family's private army, he was briefly restored in 1045 amid bloody hand-to-hand fighting in the streets of Rome. Hewas evidently tired of the struggle, however, for he accepted a bribe to abdicate in favour of his godfather, the archpriest John Gratian....
The spread of nepotism and of venal appointments to the cardinalate, in return for money or favours, made the outcome of elections towards the end of the century even less likely to reflect a simple search for 'God's candidate'. In the 1484 conclave which elected Innocent VIII (1484-92) there were a record twenty-five cardinals present, many of them scandalously secular men. Proceedings were stage-managed by Giuliano della Rovere, nephew of the dead Pope. When it became clear that he himself was unelectable, he saw to it that a manageable nonentity was chosen. The successful candidate, Cardinal Cibo, bribed electors by countersigning petitions for promotion brought to him in his cell the night before the decisive vote.
Roderigo Borgia's election as Alexander VI in 1492 was accompanied by even more naked bribery....Yet, for all his ability, Roderigo was a worldly and ruthless man, and at the time of his election was already the father of eight children, by at least three women....
Before the Great Schism, the papacy had derived much of its funding from the vigorous exercise of its spiritual office - payments from suppliants at the papal court, revenues derived from papal provisions, annates on benefices, Peter's Pence. The erosion of papal prerogatives during the schism and Conciliar era, however, drastically reduced such payments, and the papacy was increasingly thrown back on the secular revenues derived from the Papal States - a fact which accounts for the papal wars in defence of those States....
Nevertheless, the mounting cost of papal wars, and the lavish building programmes of successive popes, made the search for new sources of revenue unending. The most notorious of these was the sale of indulgences, especially the indulgence for the rebuilding of St Peter's. More significant still, however, was the growing dependence of the popes on the sale of office....
In the same year in which Erasmus published Julius Exclusus, in which the Lateran Council ended, and in which Pope Leo packed the College of Cardinals with thirty-one new creations, an unknown theology professor in Wittenberg, an obscure new German university, proposed an academic debate on the subject of indulgences. His name was Martin Luther, and he was reacting against the indulgence which Pope Julius and after him Pope Leo had issued to help fund the rebuilding of St Peter's. Raising donations for Church projects by dispensing spiritual blessings was a long-established practice, and few people questioned it....
Devout minds everywhere were revolted by this sort of stuff [Johann Tetzel's means of selling indulgences], and there had been many protests before about such abuse of indulgences. But Luther was not protesting about the abuse of indulgences: he was protesting about indulgences themselves. Luther was a pious and scrupulous monk, who had recently passed through a profound spiritual crisis. Overwhelmed by a sense of his own sinfulness, he had found the idea of God's justice terrifying, and the Church's remedies through confession and acts of penance powerless to calm his fears. Release had come from a phrase in St Paul: 'The righteous shall live by faith.' For Luther, this one phrase turned the whole medieval system of salvation on its head. The saint was not, as the Church taught, a man or woman who no longer sinned: the saint was a sinner who put all his or her trust in God. Good works, penance, indulgences, contributed nothing to salvation. Faith, a childlike dependence on God, was everything. There was a place for good works in the Christian life, but as a thankful response for salvation achieved, not as a means of earning it. (pp. 14, 25, 82-83, 87, 149, 153-154)
This is a chain of mystery and mistakes ...no way a clear unbroken chain..
I have no problem with a chain of leadership. I happen to believe in the idea of accountability..but I do not believe the church can hold its claim to a clear succession nor to infalibility or holding any keys Aquinasfan...
To: RnMomof7
Ancient verse indications were merely spaces between words, [since] the words were run together continuously through a given book . . . After the Babylonian captivity, for the purpose of public reading and interpretation, space stops were employed, and still later additional markings were added. These "verse" markings were not regulated and differed from place to place. It was not until about A.D. 900 that the markings were standardized (Norman L. Geisler and William E. Nix. A General Introduction to the Bible., Moody Press., 1973).
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