As this short series draws to an end, I hope it is clear that although Ephesus was technically about the use of the word ‘Theotokos’ it was about much more than that; it was about the whole question of the Incarnation and the nature of Jesus. The Docetists and Adoptionists had argued that Jesus was just a man upon whom the Spirit had descended and in whom the Spirit dwelt until the crucifixion; some of this eway of thinking can be traced in Islam’s ideas about Jesus.
Cyril, like his great predecessor, believed in theosis. Though now often misunderstood (there is information here on this blog) it was at the heart of Cyril’s theology, inherited from St. Athanasius. In principle, the Incarnation transformed human nature as a whole, the Word refashioning it in His own flesh. Cyril was following Athansius in holding that ‘The Word was made man so that we might be made God” (De Inc 54.3).
Participation in the Divine Life is the purpose of the sacraments; without the deifying power of the Word they are emptied of their power and we are lost in sin. ‘If you detach the life-giving Word of God from the mystical and true union with the body and separate them entirely, how can you prove that it is still life giving?‘ If the Word had not deified our flesh through the Incarnation by the Virgin Mary, then Christians could not become sons of God by adoption and thus participate in the Divine Life. In his Commentary on John [i:9] he wrote:
Those who have attained adoption as sons of God through faith in Christ are
baptized not into anything belonging to the created order but into the Holy Trinity
itself, through the mediation of the Word, who on the one hand joined what is
human to himself by means of the flesh that was united to him, and on the other
was joined by nature to him who had begotten him, since he was by nature God.
Thus what is servile [i.e. our humanity] rises up to the level of sonship through
participation in him who is Son in reality, called and, as it were, promoted to the
rank which the Son posses by nature. That is why we are called offspring of God
and are such, for we have experienced a rebirth by faith through the Spirit.
What was at stake in confessing Our Blessed Lady the Theotokos, was nothing less than the reality of our salvation:
Is it not wicked and shocking to try to take away from God the Word his birth
from a woman according to the flesh? For how could his body possibly give life to
us if it were not the very own body of him who is Life? And how could it be that
the “blood of Jesus cleanses us from all sin” (1 Jn 1:7) if it was in reality only that
of an ordinary man subject to sin? And how has “God the Father sent his Son born
of a woman, born subject to the law” (Gal 4:4)? Or how has “he condemned sin in
the flesh” (Rom 8:3)?
As always, devotion to Our Lady led towards her Son and our salvation. The sad thing about those Protestants who attack the Church for ‘bigging up’ Mary and think is somehow lessens the role of Christ, is that they get it precisely wrong. Our Lady may be the most blessed of human beings, but she simply facilitates the birth of the Saviour; her soul magnifies God. Of course, if you start with the odd idea that Catholics ‘worship’ Our Lady, you will end up in an odd place; and it is sad that some, however often they are shown it is not so, continue to repeat their own legend.
St. Cyril saw the truth with a clear eye; we have much to thank him for.
It is fitting to finish with this prayer of St. Cyril’s:
“O most holy Lady, Theotokos, light of my poor soul, my hope, my protection, my refuge, my comfort, and my joy! I thank you for having enabled me to be a partaker of the most pure Body and most precious Blood of your Son.
Enlighten the eyes of my heart, O Blessed One who carried the Source of Immortality.
O most tender and loving Mother of the merciful God; have mercy on me and grant me a repentant and contrite heart with humility of mind. Keep my thoughts from wandering into all kinds of distractions, and make me worthy always, even to my last breath, to receive the most pure Mysteries of Christ for the healing of my soul and body.
Give me tears of repentance and thanksgiving that I may sing of you and praise you all the days of my life, for you are ever-blessed and praised. Amen.”
It may well be that we have so far lost sight of the sense of the sacred that was with Cyril, that we can no longer enter into the world which he inhabited, but if we cannot, we shall not understand what motivated him, or why it mattered so much to him and his contemporaries. What was at stake was nothing less than the issue of our eternal salvation.
My gratitude to those of you who have expressed your appreciation of this series. There will be a hiatus as we approach the centenary of Fatima, and thereafter I shall return to this topic with an examination of the Christological controversy which led to the split at Chalcedon in 451.
How about my hard hitting post? I submitted it.
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Hard-hitting? It is full of schoolboy errors, but if you want to be given a good spanking in public, I am happy for it to go up on Saturday. Oh boy are you going to look a fool.
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Thanks, I think.
As always, I can back everything up with scripture. The best the religious can do is say scripture doesn’t mean what it says. Which is what they always do.
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No, you can’t back it up, all you can say is you think it must mean that, but every time you do you utter an ancient heresy. You are the living breathing example of why Jesus founded a Church. That, of course, is your place here, to witness to what happens when the uneducated claim personal; inspiration by a spirit. I do not doubt you have a spirit in you, but there is zero evidence it is a holy one.
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but every time you do you utter an ancient heresy
I guess that makes me a heretic. I have finally arrived. I wear that badge with honor. I might even have to change my name. (;-D
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If this blog lacks anything, it is comedy posts, so seeing Bosco making schoolboy errors in history, theology and philosophy will provide the spiritual nourishment we need.
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Who pulled your chain good brother Eccles?
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Without Christ, Mary is nothing. However, enlivened in the life of God she is a “preview” of the final resurrection to which all of us are called. I like her titles, “Refuge of sinners” and “Help of Christians.”
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Those titles are attributes of Christ. He doesn’t share His glory. But its a free country. You can believe as you please.
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Thank you for acknowledging my constitutional rights, Bosco 🙂
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Of course, if you start with the odd idea that Catholics ‘worship’ Our Lady, you will end up in an odd place
“O most holy Lady, Theotokos, light of my poor soul, my hope, my protection, my refuge, my comfort, and my joy!”
The Vaticanus on Haunted Hill, the highest object, the pinnacle of one of the buildings, is a image of a female, which is supposed to be Mary. The highest object on Vaticanus Hill.
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this is what you think is an argument?
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if one doesn’t mind assigning the attributes of Christ to a mere human, then one sees nothing wrong.
The CC gives this human all the powers of the Almighty god and then wonders why outsiders think they worship her.
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Which attributes of Christ?
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For one, a refuge for Christians.
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Can you give me chapter and verse in the Bible for the statement you make that only Jesus is the refuge of Christians – or is this another one of your personal opinions dressed up to look as though it had Biblical support. Thanking you in advance.
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I cant change your mind…its been made up for you on Vaticanus Hill. maybe others who see these words will understand.
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Thus far, in nearly 5 years, you have persuaded percisely no one. There is a reason why neither Nicholas nor Rob, neither of whom are Catholics, agree with you – that is because they read and try to understand. You half read and then only in order to support your prejudices.
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Don’t kid yourself…they agree with me. But for some reason they cant commit. My first guess is that they haven’t met the Lord.
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I think if you read what they write you’ll see how deluded you are.
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How come they don’t join the catholic church if they agree with you? I don’t have any sympathies for their sick sad religions either, but they don’t agree with Vaticanus Hill, that’s for sure.
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All I know, is that God provides us encouragement in many forms, on our pilgrimage toward that heavenly city. So far as I know, nothing says that encouragement can’t or doesn’t come in the form of other people. So I see no problem with saying that Mary is given to us to encourage us on our way. We’re surrounded by a great cloud of witnesses, to acknowledge them and ask for their help is no sin, especially since whatever help they give is really just God helping us through His servants.
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Exactly, I lived, and fairly satisfactorily as a Christian for 60 years, then her role was explained to me, by an Anglican. She has made my yoke much lighter since that day. There are many routes to Jesus, none are easy. Bosco’s is not one of them, since his only god is Bosco. But life is much easier when you make god in your image.
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Yes good brother Neo, Marys yoke is easy and her burden is light. Oh, thank you Mary. And Mary, save me at the hour of my demise, oh great female goddess.
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Give me tears of repentance and thanksgiving that I may sing of you and praise you all the days of my life, for you are ever-blessed and praised. Amen.”
No worship there.
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No, none. Personally I am glad she said ‘be it unto me’. I do wonder what you will do at the final Judgment when Jesus asks you to account for all the insults you have given his mother ‘so, Bosco, you think my mother is like Diana of the Ephesians’ – wouldn’t want to be in your shoes, Bozo.
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iM JUST GLAD jESUS DOESNT ASK US WHAT WE THINK OF mARY AT THE JUDGMENT. He says “I never knew you”. Nothing about this fictitious Mary the CC has invented.
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If you are wrong … ah well, it’s your butt in the lake of fire, and I warned you.
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Good heavens man….if this Mary was so all important, how come there isn’t enough about her to put in a fortune cookie?
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How much do you need. Name me another human who was the mother of Jesus.
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Big deal. So what? jesus didn’t care, so I don’t either.
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Best of luck with pretending you can do what Jesus does
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Actually, as a Protestant, I think we can make many arguments to support the high view of Mary preserved in the Orthodox and Catholic traditions. No one asserts that Mary rules in the place of Christ, so any argument addressing that at best addresses misconceptions amongst the laity (in which case it is ad hominem) and at worst misunderstands or misrepresents the official Catholic position (in which case it is ignoratio elenchi).
St Paul, the Apostle to the Gentiles, testifies that believers are seated on thrones in heaven (Ephesians), where they have joined the angelic sons of God (the ones who didn’t rebel) as members of God’s council; this is confirmed by the Apostle John in Revelation 2,3,4, and 21. It is appropriate, then, that Mary should act as a symbol of the God’s gracious exaltation of the elect, since she is the first to obey the Christ at His coming, when she submitted to the instruction through the mouth of Holy Gabriel the Messenger (Luke). The Fathers were right to draw a parallel between her and Eve (a reverse typology), drawing upon Paul’s parallel between Jesus Christ and Adam as elaborated in Romans. The Fathers may have made some mistakes, but this pesher methodology is authentically Jewish in origin and was surely familiar to the Eastern Fathers.
No one claims that Mary did not make mistakes – she was human. The doctrine of the immaculate conception is meant to address the issue of sin transmitted through humanity. Perhaps St Augustine misinterpreted Romans 10, but that route only deals with the transmission of the charge; it does not address concupiscence. I have yet to find a non-Augustinian theology that sufficiently tackles concupiscence. Granted as a community humans will influence each other to sin, but the inner voice is surely more than that and not so much as Satan. It is what we became and what must be purged by the work of God.
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Youre close good brother, but I don’t believe Mary has a higher throne than any one else. She is a fellow pilgrim.
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If you know another pilgrim who gave birth to Jesus, let us know. If you think a good Jewish boy would not value his mother, then think again.
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Mary didn’t die for my sins.
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No one says she did.
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Christ died for Bosco’s sins, so it’s sad that Bosco hates His mother so much.
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Oh Geeze, lookee at what the cat dragged in. Nobody hates Mary. Especially not me. I never met her. Don’t know her, except what little is in scripture. That’s it.
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I thoroughly enjoyed reading this series. Thank you!
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Thank you very much 😊
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