*cough*hail mary*cough*So it's a LIE going around that Catholics pray to Mary? Let's see what others have to say about this.
Welcome to Christian Forums, a Christian Forum that recognizes that all Christians are a work in progress.
You will need to register to be able to join in fellowship with Christians all over the world.
We hope to see you as a part of our community soon and God Bless!
*cough*hail mary*cough*So it's a LIE going around that Catholics pray to Mary? Let's see what others have to say about this.
There is absolutely nothing in scripture to support anything you said... but please do continue.If it doesn't make sense for the idea of Mary to be without sin and reside in someone stained with original sin, then how can it make sense for God Incarnate, the Most Holy and Perfect One, to reside in someone stained with original sin? Mary's parents inherited the stain of original sin, but they were Just. In the case of Mary, God, in advance, Thought of creating the soul that was to be the soul of the Mother of God Incarnate, and preserved it from inheriting the stain of original sin, and thus becoming an immaculate soul capable of possessing the fullness of His Grace, then infused it into the embryo at the moment of conception. These factors, coupled with being conceived by and born of two Just human parents and having a natural good will, resulted in Mary being without sin, and thus a worthy dwelling place for God Incarnate, the Son of God, the Messiah, the Savior, the most Holy and Perfect One, to be conceived and take form in, and live a divinely Holy life with in Spirit and Body on earth and in Heaven.
Amen!There is absolutely nothing in scripture to support anything you said... but please do continue.
And you've also completely missed the point of why Jesus came here in the first place.
*cough*hail mary*cough*
There is absolutely nothing in scripture to support anything you said...
And you've also completely missed the point of why Jesus came here in the first place.
Jesus Himself explicitely states the Mother of God Incarnate is without sin as well, and explains why,
That's sort of the way that I understand it also. But Mary was still born into sin and did have the Adamic nature so a purification process had to take place in order to prepare her. So maybe she had one or more divine encounters of sorts wherein she was purified, and that stuff didnt make it into scripture? Or perhaps it was even started in Mary's line before, with her Mother perhaps?
In conclusion, what do these findings mean? That Maria Valtorta is such a good writer to be able to modulate the linguistic parameters in so many different ways and as a function of character of the plot and type of literary text, so as to cover almost the entire range of the Italian literature? Or that visions and dictations really occurred and she was only a mystical, very intelligent and talented “writing tool”? Of course, no answer grounded in science can be given to the latter question.
It seems that she has written down observations and facts that really happened at the time of Jesus’ life, as a real witness of them would have done. The question arises, unsolved from a point of view exclusively rational, how all this is possible because what Maria Valtorta writes down cannot, in any way, be traced back to her fantasy or to her astronomical and meteorological knowledge. In conclusion, if from one hand the scientific inquire has evidenced all the surprising and unexpected results reported and discussed in this paper, on the other hand our actual scientific knowledge cannot readily explain how these results are possible.
An additional line of incontrovertible evidence (which Valtorta was encouraged by Jesus to include for the benefit of “the difficult doctors” of the Church) deals with the vast amount of geographical, climatic, agricultural, historical, astronomical, and cartographical information given in her work. Authorities in these fields have verified the accuracy of what she has reported with appropriate astonishment. Valtorta accurately identifies this agricultural and climatic information that is often unique to Palestine with the appropriate calendar period which she often specifically identifies. Without any evidence of planning and with hardly any corrections, Valtorta ends up with a perfectly flowing 3½ year story line with Jesus appropriately in Jerusalem and Judea for Passover and Pentecost in all four spring seasons, and at the Tabernacles in all three fall seasons of His ministry. Valtorta shows Jesus to have traversed the land of Palestine from one end to another in at least six cycles (some 4,000 miles), ministering in some 350 named locations, including places in Palestine known only to specialized archaeologists. Not once, however, does she have Jesus (or any one of the other 500 characters) in a place inconsistent with either the story line or distance or timing necessities.
The work [The Poem of the Man-God] overflows with exact data from the viewpoint of history, topography, architecture, geography, ethnology, chronology, etc. Furthermore, Maria Valtorta often provides precise details known only by some scholars, and in certain cases, she even records details totally unknown at the time she recorded them, and which archeology, history, or science have later confirmed.
It IS an argument for her sinlessness! But the Bible's silence on the issue is not. (Any "The Bible doesn't say No, therefore Yes" argument is invalid.)Because only Mary, not you, me, or anyone else, was chosen to conceive and be the Mother of God Incarnate. How is that not an argument for Her sinlessness?
And no one can deny that there is existing FALSE information about people/places/events that is lacking in the writings that make up the Bible.Furthermore, while people do invent false information, no one can deny that there is existing true information about people/places/events that is lacking in the writings that make up the Bible.
I see nothing in this passage suggesting that Mary remained a virgin for the rest of her life. Do you?Most of the ideas about Mary gave their genesis in the Protoevangelium of James. Which I would add, was condemned by a couple of Popes. But you know how that is,. Here is part of the text were Mary remains a virgin even after she gives birth. And by virgin I don't mean not merely abstaining from sexual intercourse. I mean anatomically intact, if you get my drift.
19. And I saw a woman coming down from the hill-country, and she said to me: O man, whither art thou going? And I said: I am seeking an Hebrew midwife. And she answered and said unto me: Art thou of Israel? And I said to her: Yes. And she said: And who is it that is bringing forth in the cave? And I said: A woman betrothed to me. And she said to me: Is she not thy wife? And I said to her: It is Mary that was reared in the temple of the Lord, and I obtained her by lot as my wife. And yet she is not my wife, but has conceived of the Holy Spirit.
And the widwife said to him: Is this true? And Joseph said to her: Come and see. And the midwife went away with him. And they stood in the place of the cave, and behold a luminous cloud overshadowed the cave. And the midwife said: My soul has been magnified this day, because mine eyes have seen strange things—because salvation has been brought forth to Israel. And immediately the cloud disappeared out of the cave, and a great light shone in the cave, so that the eyes could not bear it. And in a little that light gradually decreased, until the infant appeared, and went and took the breast from His mother Mary. And the midwife cried out, and said: This is a great day to me, because I have seen this strange sight. And the midwife went forth out of the cave, and Salome met her. And she said to her: Salome, Salome, I have a strange sight to relate to thee: a virgin has brought forth—a thing which her nature admits not of. Then said Salome: As the Lord my God liveth, unless I thrust in my finger, and search the parts, I will not believe that a virgin has brought forth.
20. And the midwife went in, and said to Mary: Show thyself; for no small controversy has arisen about thee. And Salome put in her finger, and cried out, and said: Woe is me for mine iniquity and mine unbelief, because I have tempted the living God; and, behold, my hand is dropping off as if burned with fire. And she bent her knees before the Lord, saying: O God of my fathers, remember that I am the seed of Abraham, and Isaac, and Jacob; do not make a show of me to the sons of Israel, but restore me to the poor; for Thou knowest, O Lord, that in Thy name I have performed my services, and that I have received my reward at Thy hand. And, behold, an angel of the Lord stood by her, saying to her: Salome, Salome, the Lord hath heard thee. Put thy hand to the infant, and carry it, and thou wilt have safety and joy. And Salome went and carried it, saying: I will worship Him, because a great King has been born to Israel. And, behold, Salome was immediately cured, and she went forth out of the cave justified. And behold a voice saying: Salome, Salome, tell not the strange things thou hast seen, until the child has come into Jerusalem.
Roberts, Alexander, et al., editors. “The Protevangelium of James.” Fathers of the Third and Fourth Centuries: The Twelve Patriarchs, Excerpts and Epistles, the Clementina, Apocrypha, Decretals, Memoirs of Edessa and Syriac Documents, Remains of the First Ages, translated by Alexander Walker, vol. 8, Christian Literature Company, 1886, pp. 365–66.
Reading your question, I thought, how does knowing whether Mary remained a virgin (or not) impact your salvation? I am not being mean-spirited. It is just a thought that I had when I read the question. It's like: "Did John the Baptist ever go fishing?" Who cares?I see nothing in this passage suggesting that Mary remained a virgin for the rest of her life. Do you?
It IS an argument for her sinlessness! But the Bible's silence on the issue is not. (Any "The Bible doesn't say No, therefore Yes" argument is invalid.)
I used to collect Madonnas just because I thought they were peaceful and lovely - a trait I inherited from my grandmother, who wasn't Catholic either. I had one on my desk at my office, along with a Buddha! When you entered my house, you were greeted by a four-foot, full-color Madonna I bought online at the Catholic Store. When my wife arrived from Belarus, she made me get rid of them, so now I have about 100 cat knick-knacks, including a three-foot Egyptian Bastet that greets you at the door. All the Catholic "Mary" stuff is fascinating to me - the apparitions at Fatima and Zeitoun were truly bizarre events by any standard. I don't think the Catholic Mary has anything to do with the historical Mary - she simply provides a Goddess figure that many find appealing to balance the patriarchal nature of the rest of Christianity. The Catholics and to some extent the Orthodox have dug themselves into a Mary hole so deep that they can no longer see over the edge.Reading your question, I thought, how does knowing whether Mary remained a virgin (or not) impact your salvation? I am not being mean-spirited. It is just a thought that I had when I read the question. It's like: "Did John the Baptist ever go fishing?" Who cares?
Jack, the writers of the Bible didn't write in English, nor did they write from a perspectve of someone in the 21st century. They wrote from the perspective of a 1st century person from the Middle East.So which English translation says 'Mary was without sin'? It clearly says that about Jesus.
Hebrews 4:15 (NKJV)
15 For we do not have a High Priest who cannot sympathize with our weaknesses, but was in all points tempted as we are, yet without sin.
1 Peter 2:21-22 (NKJV)
21 For to this you were called, because Christ also suffered for us, leaving us an example, that you should follow His steps:
22 "Who committed no sin, Nor was deceit found in His mouth";
God doesn't know English?Jack, the writers of the Bible didn't write in English, nor did they write from a perspectve of someone in the 21st century. They wrote from the perspective of a 1st century person from the Middle East.
That sounds like a JW argument.And, again, like the others, you are taking snippets of Scripture and making them say what you want it to say rather than what the original authors intended them to say. Sigh...
Asking Mary is in fact praying to Mary. Making petition of Mary.We are asking Her to pray to God for us. We're not praying to Her in the way we, including Her, prays to God. See, @Jack, this is an example that people believe the lie that we pray to Mary.
For me a key point comes in "how we read the Bible". When someone holds to a doctrine which is refuted in Scripture, they have to do something about that refutation. Typically this is address (in my experience) by "It says THIS, but it really means THAT." So that all no longer means all, or that "this is a symbol/metaphor for . . ."I do think it amounts to a big WHO CARES?
Good point!Asking Mary is in fact praying to Mary. Making petition of Mary.
Much love!