Philip wrote:Give me a break! EVERYONE here has the right to weigh in on the issue.
Of course you have the
right to weigh in, Phil. But how does it advance the conversation when your contribution is to reduce the discussion to an argument over semantics? Moreover, your assertion that "the semantics is mostly due to the CC nonsense that was added to Scripture" is bald. You offer no support for the statement whatsoever. Now, in the more nuanced discussion of the previously linked thread, I distinguished six Marian doctrines, four of which are primarily warranted by the authority of the CC, but the other two being necessarily entailed by Scripture itself. And since we have only talked about one of those two Scripturally entailed doctrines, then why bring up those issues that the CC holds on grounds other than Scripture? Unless, of course, you want to say that Mary being the Mother of God is "added" by the CC, in which case, let me be the first non-Catholic to tell you that you are mistaken on this point.
Now, Phil, I know you would agree that discussions related to the humanity and deity of Christ are very important. I hope you would never say that arguments over Arianism, for instance, are merely arguments about semantics but get at very core issues. And so it is with the
Madre Dei. Even though the title is attributed to Mary, it is directly related to, and in fact motivated by and born out of, a proper understanding of the dual natures of Christ.
As long as the discussion is civil, why would I do that?
Byblos, you know that I am far from the only non-Catholic that is understandably concerned with the CC teachings and its hyper focus concerning Mary! You also well know that THAT is why people like Rick are uncomfortable with the term in question, because of CC teachings and what some take the term to mean - BEYOND where it is accurate, and even though the term, technically, IS accurate.
Perhaps you would do better by recognizing your Catholophobia and instead asking whether or not the arguments they put forward are correct. Because their arguments about Mary as Co-Redemptrix and the Mother of God
are correct. The fact that you don't want to use those titles because Catholics use (and abuse) them is a problem with you, not with them. Your own theology necessitates that, if you want to be consistent with your beliefs about Scripture, you adopt either that terminology expressly or terminology that states the same things.
How about a better/more accurate terminology in which we should ALL be comfortable with: Mary, was the imperfect but exceptionally faithful human female who was chosen and greatly honored by God by being used as the human vessel by which the Son of God stepped into this world, and of whom we have no Scriptural reason to believe died any different type of death or removal from any other human being, excepting Jesus. And beyond giving birth to the Messiah, she had and has no other role in our salvation or ability to follow Christ. And her prayers for us are no more or less important than those of any other Christian mothers', be they in this world or the next one.
But this is not better or more accurate. In the first place, you are mistaken to say that there is "no Scriptural reason to believe [Mary] died any different type of death or removal from any other human being." As a point of fact, there are other human beings who did not die--Elijah and Enoch. And, depending on how you read the force of it, Moses could be added to that list as well. I don't know if you are aware of this or not, but the Assumption of Mary does not require the belief that she was taken
while alive. One could be a faithful Catholic and believe that her body was taken directly to heaven after death.
I also don't think it is fair to say that "[Mary] had and has no other role in our salvation or ability to follow Christ. And her prayers for us are no more or less important than those of any other Christian mothers'." If you grant the efficacy of intercessory prayer, then at a minumum your first sentence is false. The only way it is true is to take "role" to refer to the direct salvific act itself. But on that interpretation, you are attacking a strawman, because Catholics (and the Orthodox and others) do not think that Mary directly contributes to the salvation of anyone, but rather that she contributes in the same way you and I contribute to the salvation of others: through our intercessions. Moreover, you recognize that very truth in your second sentence, for I take "important" to mean that you believe God actually answers the prayers of His children. Therefore, you
do believe that mothers have a role in the salvation of their children and their ability to follow Christ--unless, again, you wish to claim that prayer is ineffective, which I know you do not. Then the only issue that remains is whether or not God pays any special attention to the prayers of Mary, His mother. And the obvious answer is, of course He does! First, Scripture clearly teaches that "the prayers of the righteous accomplishes much." Do you not think Mary is righteous? Of course she is. Therefore, just on the face of your statements, you are besmirching the righteousness of a woman by saying that her prayers are no more effective than any other mothers', for while a great many mothers are righteous, a great many are not. At a
bare minimum, you should say that her prayers are as effective as that of the righteous saints, which would make her prayers pretty darned effective! But still further, I would remind you of the commandment to honor your mother. Do you not honor yours? I'm sure you do. I hope you do. I would argue you do so not just because God says to do so, but because it is simply good to do so. Human beings, by nature, are supposed to honor their parents, and mothers rightly hold a special place to us--certainly more special than that of, say, a neighbor. This, too, is Scriptural: "if anyone does not provide for his relatives, and especially for members of his household, he has denied the faith and is worse than an unbeliever" (1 Tim 5:8). It is absurd to think that Jesus would simply ignore His own mother. Would you ignore yours? Or would you honor her precisely because she is your mother? I would hope you would honor her as I honor mine.
So the conclusion is necessary and inescapable. Jesus will honor His mother in a special way, and since she is righteous, her prayers will be effective, and particularly effective because of her relationship with her Son. Lastly, bear in mind that Jesus came to the world
through Mary. You take her out of the picture, you take Jesus out of the picture. It was through her that Jesus was fully man. You may say, "Fine, but if you take away any number of things then Jesus wouldn't have been here." All true, but of all those other things, none of them were His
mother.
And that is what strikes me as so viscious of the denial on this point. Some non-Catholics are so
anti-Catholic that they end up actually defaming Mary, and that is just sad. And in the process, they end up proclaiming heresy, entailing such notions as Jesus being two persons rather than one, that intercessory prayer is ineffective, etc.
To be clear, I do not hold to those four doctrines regarding Mary that are primarily warranted by the authority of the CC (the assumption, the perpetual virginity, the sinlessness, and immaculate conception). But I don't reject them because they are anti-biblical. All four are consistent with Scripture. I reject them simply because I don't see any positive reason to believe them, as I don't find the teaching authority of the magisterium to be persuasive, and I can't find any reference to it in oral tradition prior to the fourth century, which is too late to make a historical argument from. But to claim that they are
anti-biblical? No, that's not true. They aren't. This isn't an issue that should divide believers. On the issue Mary as the Mother of God, all should affirm it. On the issue of Mary as Co-Redemptrix, all should affirm it on the granted assumption that departed saints still can and do intercede for the living (which seems reasonable to me). On the other four, charity in difference of opinion should be granted, with neither side condemning the other.
My description makes clear what CC terminology may make murky - at least in the minds of many - AND it is Scripturally accurate!
No, your description strongly implies a Catholophobia is driving your argument rather than a sound understanding of the doctrines you are trying (poorly, in my assessment) to critique.