Transcript Slide 1

MARY
MOTHER OF JESUS,
MOTHER OF GOD
Part Ia: Who is Mary?
. . . the angel Gabriel was sent from God to a town of Galilee called
Nazareth, to a virgin betrothed to a man named Joseph, of the house
of David, and the virgin's name was Mary. (Luke 1:26-27)
Mary: How is She Called, How Shall We Call Her?
Mary
Judeo-Aramaic: ‫מרים‬, Maryām, from Hebrew Miriam,
Greek Μαριαμ or Μαρια,
in Arabic Maryam, and
called since medieval times Madonna (My Lady),
resident in Nazareth in Galilee,
known from the New Testament as the mother
of Jesus of Nazareth.
The New Testament describes her as a young virgin,
who conceived by the agency of the Holy Spirit while she was already
the betrothed wife of Joseph of the House of David and
awaiting their imminent formal home-taking ceremony (the
concluding Jewish wedding rite).
Mary: An Introduction
The teachings of Catholic Christianity about the role of Mary, the Mother of
Jesus, are some of the most misunderstood and exaggerated beliefs
dividing the Body of Christ. Before presenting the teaching of the Church
about Mary, there are some important givens or assumptions to be stated
about the Church, Mary and the Bible.
The official teaching of the Church has
never considered beliefs about Mary to
be in any way equal in importance to
truths about God the Father, Jesus
Christ the Son of God, and the Holy
Spirit.
Vatican Council II expressed it best
when the Council Fathers wrote:
On Ecumenism, No. 11
... in Catholic doctrine there exists an order or “hierarchy” of truths,
because they vary in their relation to the foundation of the Christian faith.
The truths about Mary are important because they are still truth, because
they are based in the Bible. But they are not central to the primary gospel
message of our salvation through Jesus Christ.
As an example of the basic gospel message without Mary, we have only
to look at the writings of Paul. In Pauline theology, Mary is mentioned only
once, and not even by name.
Galatians 4:4
But when the fullness of time had
come, God sent his Son, born of
a woman, born under the law, ...
Catholics believe that the understanding of the Church about Mary, as
about all Christian truth (e.g., the understanding of the Trinity) deepens
and becomes more accurate over the centuries under the guidance of
the Holy Spirit.
John 15:26
When the Advocate comes whom I will send you from the
Father, the Spirit of truth that proceeds from the Father, he will
testify to me.
John 16:12-13
I have much more to tell you, but you cannot bear it now. But
when he comes, the Spirit of truth, he will guide you to all truth.
When the Catholic Church appears to teach “new doctrines” about Mary,
it is often a statement of truth against some current errors or a
clarification of truths that have always been taught and believed by
Christians through the centuries.
The Church believes that handing on these truths participates in the
admonition of Paul.
2 Thessalonians 2:15
Therefore, brothers, stand firm and hold fast to the traditions that
you were taught, either by an oral statement (our word) or by a
letter (written tradition) of ours.
On the Church, No. 67, Vatican Council II
The sacred synod ... strongly urges theologians and preachers of the word
of God to be careful to refrain as much from all false exaggeration as
from too summary an attitude in considering the special dignity of the
Mother of God.
Following the study of Sacred Scripture,
the Fathers, the doctors and liturgy of
the Church, and under the guidance
of the Church's magisterium, let them
rightly illustrate the duties and
privileges of the Blessed Virgin which
always refer to Christ, the source of all
truth, sanctity, and devotion.
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Consequently, two fundamental criteria guide the teaching authority of the
Catholic Church as it seeks to discern what are the authentic beliefs about
Mary which Jesus through His Holy Spirit would have us know:
No belief can contradict anything faithfully handed down
from the Apostles either in the written tradition, the Bible,
or in the oral tradition of the Church;
Any truth which develops under the guidance of the Holy
Spirit and reflection upon the deposit of revelation
must be demonstrated to have been accepted over
a long period of time by the People of God.
Major Resources
Protoevangelium of James
http://www.newadvent.org/fathers/0847.htm
The Gospel of James, also sometimes known as the Infancy Gospel
of James or the Protoevangelium of James, is an apocryphal Gospel.
New Testament apocrypha are a number of writings of the early Christian
church that give accounts of the teachings of Jesus, aspects of the life
of Jesus, accounts of the nature of God, or the teachings of his apostles
and of their lives.
Probably written about AD 150.
The Gospel of James may be the earliest surviving document attesting
the veneration of Mary by stating her perpetual virginity.
The document presents itself as written by James: “I, James, wrote this
History in Jerusalem.”
Thus the purported author is James the Just also known as James of
Jerusalem, James Adelphotheos, James, the Brother of the Lord. He was
an important figure in Early Christianity, whom the text claims is a son
of Joseph from a prior marriage, and thus a stepbrother of Jesus or
a cousin of Jesus, or a kinsman.
Scholars have established that, based on the style of the language, and
the fact that the author is apparently not aware of contemporary Jewish
customs while James the Just certainly was, the work is apocryphal.
The Protoevangelium of James is almost certainly not by James nor is it
entirely factual. The early Church mostly didn’t think it was inspired, either,
i.e., non-canonical.
However, this second century work has survived in over 130 manuscripts.
That’s popularity. It’s an interesting blend of Bible and oral tradition.
The Church has traditionally accepted it as containing a few grains
of truth, such as the names of Mary’s parents, Anna and Joachim.
At times, the translation is jumbled because the manuscripts are pretty
jumbled, too. The author of this piece took the Eastern view that
James the Less was Joseph’s son by a previous marriage, not the Western
view that James was Jesus’ cousin.
However, since Joseph and Mary were apparently cousins, and Aramaic
uses the word “brother” for every sort of cousin there is, both interpretations
could in fact be true.
In Middle Eastern tribal life, marrying some cousin is almost unavoidable,
if you marry inside your tribe.
The Story (History) of Joseph the Carpenter or the Gospel of Joseph
the Carpenter.
http://www.newadvent.org/fathers/0805.htm
To the class of gospel compositions belongs the Gospel of Joseph the
Carpenter. Originally written in Coptic, it was translated into Arabic, in
which language, with a Latin version, it was published in 1722.
The composition is devoted to the glorification of Joseph, a devotion which
was specially favored by the monophysite Coptics.
It dates from the 4th Century (300s).
It contains in 22 chapters the whole history of Joseph and relates in the last
part the circumstances of his death at the age of 111 years. These are of
some importance for the history of dogma.
Guardian of the Redeemer (Redemptoris Custos)
Apostolic Exhortation of Pope John Paul II, on the Person and Mission of
Saint Joseph in the Life of Christ and the Church.
Promulgated on August 15, 1989.
Addressed to Bishops, to Priests and Deacons, to Men and Women
Religious, and to all the Lay Faithful.
http://www.crossroadsinitiative.com/library_article/500/St._Joseph_
Guardian_of_the_Redeemer_John_Paul_II_Redemptoris_Custos.html
After the Marian Year with its many Marian documents Pope John Paul II
presented a document on Saint Joseph. Jesus Christ was born into a family.
Mary was given the companionship of Joseph to provide that unit recognized
as the most fundamental cell of society, the family.
Redemptoris Custos defines the relationships among Jesus, Mary and
Joseph. For instance, the document states, “And while it is important for
the Church to profess the virginal conception of Jesus, it is no less important
to uphold Mary's marriage to Joseph, because juridically Joseph's
fatherhood depends on it.” (7)
Joseph has accepted the legal responsibilities of fatherhood. He does
everything that is required of that responsibility. This is what constituted
the family, and in the case of Jesus, Mary and Joseph, the holy family. A
quote inserted from Pope Leo XIII helps to define Joseph's role:
It is certain that the dignity of the Mother of God is so exalted that
nothing could be more sublime; yet because Mary was united to
Joseph by the bond of marriage, there can be no doubt but that
Joseph approached as no other person ever could that eminent
dignity whereby the Mother of God towers above all creatures.
Because marriage is the highest degree of association and friendship,
Involving by its very nature a communion of goods, it follows that God,
by giving Joseph to the Virgin, did not give him to her only as a
companion for life, a witness of her virginity and protector of her honor:
he also gave Joseph to Mary in order that he might share, through
the marriage pact, in her own sublime greatness. (20)
The greatness of Mary and Joseph consists in their holiness, in the pure
gift of grace they experience by dwelling with the Lord Jesus Christ. But
the gift does not immune them from the daily struggles that pertain to
every family.
Although the Gospel relates snippets of the struggles in the Infancy
Narratives, the greater part of the daily routine of marriage and family life
remain hidden. As the document states, “All of the so-called ‘private’ or
‘hidden’ life of Jesus is entrusted to Joseph's guardianship.” (8)
Revelation: Public and Private
Revelation is simply information revealed by God, especially if the mode of
its revelation is supernatural or if the knowledge could not have been had
apart from revelation.
Revelation from God needs, as the Church has always done, a distinction
between public revelation and private revelation, and private revelation
and private devotion.
June 26, 2000, Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, promulgated
The Message of Fatima under Joseph Cardinal Ratzinger.
Cardinal Ratzinger pointed out that “the teaching of the Church distinguishes
between ‘public Revelation’ and ‘private revelation.’ The two realities differ
not only in degree but also in essence.” The difference between public and
private revelation is not simply that public revelation is given to or binding
on all whereas private revelation is given to or binding on only some
restricted by time, place, or identity).
Public and private are two different kinds of revelation.
“The term ‘public Revelation’ refers to the revealing action of God directed
to humanity as a whole and which finds its literary expression in the two
parts of the Bible: the Old and New Testaments,” wrote Cardinal Ratzinger.
“It is called ‘Revelation’ because in it God gradually made himself known
to men, to the point of becoming man himself, in order to draw to himself
the whole world and unite it with himself through his Incarnate Son, Jesus
Christ. It is not a matter therefore of [merely] intellectual communication,
but of a life-giving process in which God comes to meet man.”
Public revelation, Cardinal Ratzinger stressed, came to an end with God’s
definitive Word to mankind--Jesus Christ--and with the New Testament.
It is contrasted with “the concept of ‘private revelation,’ which refers to all
the visions and revelations which have taken place since the completion
of the New Testament.”
Private revelation is different from public revelation in several important
respects:
“The authority of private revelations is essentially different from
that of the definitive public Revelation. The latter demands faith; in it in fact
God himself speaks to us through human words and the mediation of the
living community of the Church. Faith in God and in his word is different
from any other human faith, trust, or opinion. The certainty that it is God
who is speaking gives me the assurance that I am in touch with truth itself.
It gives me a certitude which is beyond verification by any human way
of knowing.”
Private revelation serves as a help to this divine and Catholic faith but does
not itself demand this faith: “ . . . the future Pope Benedict XVI, said in his
classic treatise, which later became normative for beatifications and
canonizations:
“An assent of Catholic faith is not due to revelations approved in this way;
it is not even possible. These revelations seek rather an assent of human
faith in keeping with the requirements of prudence, which puts them before
us as probable and credible to piety.”
Because they do not require divine and Catholic faith, private revelations
do not impose an obligation of belief of the sort that public revelation does.
To disbelieve knowingly and deliberately anything God has revealed in such
a way (public revelation) that it requires divine and Catholic faith is to
commit mortal sin.
However, since God has not issued private revelations with this degree
of certainty, the burden is not imposed. Thus, “such a message can be a
genuine help in understanding the Gospel and living it better at a particular
moment in time; therefore it should not be disregarded. It is a help which is
offered, but which one is not obliged to use.”
Private devotion is a prayer form which is not part of the official public
liturgy of the Church but are part of the popular spiritual practices of Catholics.
Private devotions are encompassed within that definition which are done
privately or with a small group.
An example of this would be a group devoted to the image of Our Lady of
Perpetual Help. Or a group which makes a consecration to the Sacred Heart.
Or Divine Mercy Sunday.
What is the difference between personal and private devotion?
Personal devotion would be this: You personally find solace in Divine
Mercy, while I may not. I personally find solace in Our Lady of Lourdes
while you may not. Or on a more controversial note, One may find complete
and full solace in Medjugorje, while another may be utterly and completely
opposed thinking that it is a hoax. Another form of personal devotion could
manifest itself in the fact that I pray the Divine Office everyday. There is
no mandate that I do so (only priests and deacons are canonically
required to do so), but I find comfort in that part of my prayer life, while
many may not find any use for it at all.
The End of
Mary the Series, Who Is Mary Part Ia
Go to
Mary the Series, Who Is Mary Part Ib