...ALRIGHT, GLOVES OFF!!!
Yea, 5 or 6 misconceptions, conjuring scripture to attack the CC, (typical Protestant methodology) and one snarky remark. That's not 2 or three topics like I asked.
Through her cooperation in the incarnation of Christ, so that the Son of God (who, from the cross, directly crushed the head of the serpent) became her seed, Mary did crush the head of the serpent. In the same way, the serpent struck at Christ on the cross, and indirectly struck at Mary's heart as well, who had to witness the death of her own Son (cf. John 19:25-27).
Mary is not in any way a co-Redeemer or co-Savior with Jesus.
Off topic emotional derailer. "co" does not mean "equal to". Analogously, the
co-pilot of a commercial airplane is not of equal authority to the captain. "co-Redeemer" is a theological term related to
redemptive suffering whenever any Christian unites their suffering with the suffering of Christ. Generally, redemptive suffering is foreign to most, if not all, of Protestantism.
The Taliban have trouble with plain English too.
Are you trying to tell me "...a sword will pierce your soul" has nothing to do with the Crucifixion??? "that the thoughts of
many hearts will be laid bare..." Was Simeon a holy man or not? WHO ARE THE
MANY???
Matt. 10:38 – Jesus said, “he who does not take up his cross and follow me is not worthy of me.” Jesus defines discipleship as one’s willingness to suffer with Him. Being a disciple of Jesus not only means having faith in Him, but offering our sufferings to the Father as He did. Matt. 16:24; […]
www.scripturecatholic.com
Luke 14:27 – Jesus said,
“whoever does not bear his own cross and come after me, cannot be my disciple.” If we reject God because we suffer, we fail to apply the graces that Jesus won for us
by His suffering.
John 7:39 – Jesus was first glorified on the cross, not just the resurrection. This text refers to John 19:34, when Jesus was pierced on the cross by the soldier’s lance. THAT HIS MOTHER WATCHED!!!
Oh that has nothing to do with my salvation. WHAT POVERTY! You offer no plausible alternative to my post concerning Gen. 3:15
John 12:24 –
unless a grain of wheat falls into the earth and dies, it remains alone and bears no fruit. Jesus is teaching that suffering and death are part of every human life, and it is only through suffering and death that we obtain the glory of resurrection.
This has long been recognized by Catholics.
I'm well aware of that. <smile>
No, you don't get it. That's why you quote me with out-of-context snippets of my post. <smack>
I'm still waiting for a verse in the Bible that forbids Scripture in art form.
1 Cor. 3:11 – Jesus is called the only foundation of the Church, and yet in Eph. 2:20, the apostles are called the foundation of the Church.
Ah, well, in Ephesians 2:20, Christ is called the cornerstone, which is the foundation of the foundation, if you will. So yes, Jesus is the true foundation, the cornerstone, which is laid first. "In Him..." ~ as verse 21 and 22 go on to say, "...the whole structure, being joined together, grows into a holy temple in the Lord. In Him (we) also are being built together into a dwelling place for God by the Spirit."
Ah, well, the apostles and prophets are not the foundation but a collection of individual believers is??? A typical Calvinoid false dichotomy. But you are no Calvinist. A Bible Student or a Jehovah's Witless. I caught on after the third time I studied your post. JW's are trained not to let on they are JW's until after their victims eat the bait.
Ephesians 2:20 Built upon the foundation of the apostles and prophets, Jesus Christ himself being the chief corner stone:
What kind of Bible are you reading? A lie by omission is still a lie.
Similarly, in 1 Peter 2:25, Jesus is called the Shepherd of the flock, but in Acts 20:28, the apostles are called the shepherds of the flock.
Only Jesus... really YAHWEH, the triune Jehovah God... is the Good Shepherd ~ Psalm 23; John 10. We are all shepherds, in very important but far lesser ways, of course, in that we certainly encourage each other and build each other up in the Lord, thus fulfilling our calling, the great privilege He has given us to serve Him, to be used by Him in His work of preserving His people Israel to the end.
THIEF!!! You rob metaphors of their meaning. Shepherd of the flock (singular) refers to Jesus. Shepherds of the flock (plural) refers to the Apostles,
NOT a collection of individual believers. This 'reply' denies the fact that words in scripture can have more than one meaning, such as ROCK, what I originally said that you conveniently left out.
Catholics agree that God is the rock of the Church,
Yes, and that's... unfortunate...
Do you mean it's unfortunate that you disagree with what we agree on?
Or is it unfortunate you don't know what ROCK means?
That's a snarky asinine remark if I ever say one.
There is no "Catholic" God. Jesus builds His Church on PEOPLE, not confessions.
He builds His church on Himself. And His people ARE ~ Israel IS ~ His Church.
You are Cephas and upon myself I will build my church???. DUH!!! Maybe @Bread of Life can post dozens of PROTESTANT scholars and reference manuals that have backed away from what the so called reformers were forced to invent.
The Eucharistic Sacrifice in the Upper Room is ONE AND THE SAME SACRIFICE AS THE CRUCIFIXION. I've been in dozens of Protestant services and never seen the fulfilment of this truth in any meaningful sense. But now I know you are not a Protestant.
OK. If Mary didn't do the will of God perfectly, and acted on it, Jesus would not have been born, or God would have to find somebody else. No Mary, no Jesus.
Hmmm... well, in a way, we all do His will, even unbelievers. Among other passages, Paul tells us this in Romans 8:28, saying, "for those who love God all things work together for good, for those who are called according to his purpose." But certainly, there was no "plan B"... <smile>. Certainly no need for that. <smile>
Hmmm, everybody and their dog, but leave Mary out of the picture. <smack>
Know Mary, know Jesus. It's that simple.
Actually, knowing Mary should help us in knowing ourselves. Her faith was certainly great. She certainly delighted in the Lord, and He directed her paths (Psalm 37:4; 119:47). She certainly delighted to do His will (Psalm 40:8). Oh, to have a faith like hers...
That's the first sensible thing you have said in your entire post.
Thank you for the pleasure of answering you.
<
smile>
Yes, I would say the same to you. JT.
But please keep your posts down to 2 or three topics, not 15. You are going 100 miles and hour and I only have a 10 mile an hour brain.
On a message board like this, these discussions tend to be very wide-ranging. Or at least they get that way, the longer they go, because various... musings... tend put folks on unexpected tangents and then at odds with several different things in Scripture, and those things often have to be addressed, too. But "at odds" with other passages... not intentionally, of course, but that's very often what happens in these discussions. And because of that, these discussions, especially because of the venue, can become at least a bit unwieldy. But hey, the great thing about this venue is, if it feels like things are moving too fast, you can read things over and over again if necessary and in that way make things to "slow down" so that you can "catch up." <smile>
Butcher my posts the way you did once more, and this discussion is over. <smack>
I often wonder if Mary bashing prot cultists, left @Behind, '(not mentioning any names) have dysfunctional mothers, or no mother at all.