Defending Our Lady's Privileges
Part I of III: The Sinlessness of Mary

By Father Paul K. Raftery, O.P.
One of the stumbling blocks of many non-Catholics
have in embracing Catholicism is understanding why the Church attributes so many extraordinary
graces and unique privileges to our Blessed
Mother. For example: the belief that she
was conceived without original sin,
and remained sinless
throughout her life; that through
the power of God she gave birth to her divine Son
remaining a virgin;
that after death she was taken up into heaven
body and soul,
and was exalted
by God as
Queen of heaven
and earth. While full acceptance of the Catholic
faith is a grace
(gift) that only God
can give, it is our hope that an explanation of the Church's
teaching regarding Mary's
unique role in the divine
plan and her consequent special
privileges, will help to remove some of the obstacles
that non-Catholics encounter.
The next three web pages will be focusing
on our belief in the Blessed Virgin's
preeminence among creatures. From the beginning, the point should always be made that we
do not worship Mary,
who is a creature
of God infinitely below
His greatness and majesty.
Any perfection in her came from God, Who
alone is worthy of worship. We do believe,
however, that God Himself has chosen to place
her in a special
position of dignity and given
her privileges far
exceeding those given to all other members of
the human race. On this
page we will look at Our Lady's
complete sinlessness from the first moment
of her existence in this world and
throughout the rest of her life. The next web page
will deal with her perpetual
virginity, and the final web page with her exaltation after death.
Our Lady's Sinlessness
In clear terms, the Church teaches that Our
Lady had no sin
whatsoever in her life. She was not just remarkably saintly or upright.
Referring to someone who is upright and holy, Scripture says that the righteous man falls seven times (Proverbs
24:16). Even the saints, Saint
Thomas tells us, in momentary weakness
occasionally fall into
indeliberate venial
sins in situations that they would normally be able to handle (cf. II-II,
184, 2). The sole exception to this, other than our Blessed
Lord, was His Virgin Mother, who
like her Son, was totally free from
the slightest sin while here on earth.
The sinlessness
of Mary, the Church
holds, is total and without exception. Beginning with her conception
- by the foreseen merits
of Christ - she was preserved free from
the stain and effects of original sin,
so that never for a moment of her
earthly existence did she
come under the dominion of the devil.
All other humans inherit the consequences of the sin
of Adam and Eve, and come into
this world separated from God until restored
to His friendship through
the sacrament of baptism.
Whenever conception takes
place, a wondrous act of divine power
brings a human soul
into existence from nothingness, uniting it to the bodily
matter provided by the parents.
Each of our lives can be traced back to this one astounding moment when
our Creator willed
us into existence. Praised be to Him
for His great kindness!
But for our Blessed Lady, not only did the Creator at that first moment endow
her with natural life, but supernatural
life as well. He went beyond
the act of creation to
an act of sanctification, bestowing
on her soul
not only the divine life of grace
received at baptism, but a fullness of grace which Blessed
Pius IX (who defined the dogma of
the Immaculate Conception) declared was more
than that of all the angels and saints. This wonder
that God worked for
Mary, the Angel
Gabriel would acknowledge years later,
when he appeared to
her at Nazareth with the joyful greeting, Hail,
full of grace! The Lord is with you!
The Angelic Greeting
It will be helpful to compare the Angel's
greeting to Mary
with that extended to other humans in the Scriptures, to see how
uncharacteristic was his greeting to
Our Lady. In many cases there is no greeting
given, only a command. For example, when the Angel
appeared to Elijah, weary after traveling, he
immediately said to the prophet, Get up
and eat (1Kings 19:5). But in those cases when a
greeting was actually given, there is nothing approaching the respect and
honor given to our Blessed
Lady. In the Book of Judges, the angel of the Lord appeared to Gideon
and said, The Lord is with you, you mighty warrior
(Judges 6:12). To Saint Joseph
the angel appeared with the simple address, Joseph, son of David (Matthew
1:20). When Gabriel appeared to
Zechariah it was, Do not be afraid,
Zechariah, for your prayer has been heard (Luke 1:13).
And in Acts of the Apostles an angel
appeared to Cornelius the centurion, and said to him: Cornelius. He stared at him in terror
and said, What is it, Lord? He answered, Your
prayers and your alms have ascended as a memorial before God (Acts
10:3-4). In each case there is some reference to the virtues
or prayers or ancestry of the person
the angel is addressing. With Mary the reference is not to her
background or any action on her
part, but only to the action of God
upon her, filling
her with His divine presence through
grace: Hail,
full of grace.
Without getting too technical, a couple of points need to be made. Firstly, the rendering of the greeting found in
many translations of highly favored one,
or highly favored daughter (New
American Bible) chooses to emphasize not the presence of divine
grace within her but the privilege
of bearing the Messiah.
The presumption is that Saint Luke would not have used the Greek
term charis, and its various forms, in the
sense of grace, or supernatural gift, but rather in the more
common and honorific meaning of blessed, or favored.
The problem with this view is that Saint Luke is writing his Gospel
after a number of years of traveling with,
working for, and in the process, learning from the apostle
Paul. Saint Luke would have been thoroughly familiar with the apostle's
much developed meaning of charis as a gift of supernatural power and sanctification, a deepening of the notion of divine favor. It is hard to believe that the evangelist
would have chosen to sidestep this new and profoundly important development of the word.
Secondly, the Greek term
Saint Luke uses for full of grace
is in place of Mary's name. Whereas the angel referred to Zechariah by
name, when he appears to Mary he
chooses to address her with the term Grace-filled as if it were her proper name. There can be no
doubt that it is an exalted greeting. No wonder the next verse says the humble maiden was confused after hearing it! Only
for Mary is the word used in the Scriptures
as a proper name, clearly showing the singular way God
has blessed
her with His grace
and holiness. The fullness of
such grace and holiness
would not at all be consistent with any presence of
sin, giving us an indirect statement of Mary's complete freedom from
sin.
One point that can certainly be made to those Christians
who fail to appreciate our special devotion to
Blessed Mary is that we are doing no more
than joining the angel Gabriel in his honoring Mary
in a special way. Can there be anything wrong with his
greeting? Can there be anything suspect in the obviously great respect he gives to this woman?
Considering the superiority of his awareness of who
she is and her part in the divine plan, isn't his
high regard for Mary
in fact something to imitate? Shouldn't all Christians be Gabriel-like in their devotion to her? This imitation of the angel
Gabriel is in fact what we are doing when praying
the Hail Mary. Along with him we give praise to God for the fullness
of grace that is present in her
as we pray: Hail, Mary,
full of grace!
How the Teaching took Shape
Saint Gabriel's greeting to Mary gives only a brief glimpse of an underlying
current of belief held by the Church from its beginning. Contrary to Protestant
objections the apostolic origin of the teaching
needs to be kept firmly in mind. This does not mean, however, that the form the teaching
took in the early Church was the same as we
know it today. There are no second century Christian writers who will use the term Immaculate Conception. The expression of belief in
ideas and in language develops with time.
The use of the term trinity, for
example, did not begin until the latter part of the second
century, but no true Christian
would hold that our current belief in the Trinity
was not present among the first Christians
simply because they did not have the word.
Second century writers who witnessed to
the sinlessness of
Mary spoke of her
as the second Eve. Saint Justin
Martyr did this around 150 A.D.,
and Saint Irenaeus about forty year later.
Their implication is clear that just as the first Eve
was a virgin who was created without sin, so was the second.
For Irenaeus, God brings
back mankind from the state of corruption
that began with Adam and Eve by beginning over again. He
provides a new Adam, Our
Lord Jesus Christ, as Saint Paul points out in (1Corinthians
15:45) and a new Eve, the virgin Mary. Although Irenaeus
does not explicitly say that Mary was sinless from the first moment of her conception, there is no way the parallel
of Christ to Adam
and Mary to Eve could work without her
complete sinlessness. Indeed, one could
hardy imagine him making the comparison in the first
place unless there was a commonly held understanding, however incompletely
it may have been expressed, that Our Lady
had a life that was completely free from sin.
The theme of Our Lady's complete sinlessness continues appearing throughout the
period of the Church Fathers with increasing clarity, as one can see in Saint
Ephraem (d. 373): Only You [Jesus] and Your Mother are more beautiful than everything. For
on You, O Lord, there is no mark; neither is there any stain in Your Mother
(Mary and the Fathers of the Church by Luigi Gambero, 109). And
with Saint John Damascene (d. 750)
for the first time there was expressed the inspired conviction that was present all along
- that this sinlessness extended all the way
to the very origins of Mary's life in the
womb of her parents.
Praising the parents of the Blessed Virgin, he
exclaims, O blessed loins of Joachim, whence the all-pure
seed was poured out! O glorious womb of Anna, in which the most holy fetus grew and was
formed, silently increasing! (Ibid., 402).
With a view to explaining how our belief developed, three
brief points can summarize what has been said thus far:
a) Those who may conclude from the formal definition of the doctrine
of the Immaculate Conception
in 1854 by Blessed Pius IX
that this was a late addition to the Church's teaching,
should be encouraged to reconsider their position in the light of such writers as Saint
Irenaeus, Saint Ephraem, and Saint John Damascene.
b) Those who expect the doctrine of
the Mary's sinlessness
to be clearly labeled the Immaculate Conception
should be helped to understand that the absence of the term is not a gauge of the absence
of the teaching.
c) Although explicit scriptural references are lacking for the teaching, the
exceptional use of full of grace
needs to be noted as a unique term for a unique state of holiness and freedom from
sin in the Virgin
Mary.
Redemption only through Christ
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"Mary Help of
Christians"
Patroness of Australia |
Particularly useful for our own presentation of this wonderful privilege of Our Lady to Protestant Christians
is a look at the debate the conception of Mary
received following the period of the Church fathers. It was then that
questions were raised that are valuable for us today in answering objections that Our Lady's Immaculate
Conception has exempted her
from the need to be redeemed.
During the 900s a liturgical feast
honoring Mary's conception
in the womb of Saint Ann grew to become very popular in both the East
and the West. It was what one might call a grass-roots surge
of devotion to the complete sinlessness of
the Mother of God. As of yet
neither the doctrine of Mary's freedom from original sin nor the Feast of the
Conception, as it was called, had more than local, episcopal approval.
Not all were supportive of the feast or of the belief. Not being aware
of the history of the teaching on Mary's sinlessness from conception, many prominent
theologians of the day, including men we now honor as doctors of the Church, were concerned that no matter how devoutly it paid
tribute to the Mother of God, it
was a misguided innovation that put an important doctrine of
the faith into jeopardy. How could Mary
be free from original sin
when, as Saint Paul wrote, all have sinned
and fall short of the glory of God (Romans 3:23)? No one
is exempt from redemption in
Christ. The sanctification of
Mary in the womb was possible, but only
provided that it was after conception, after
original sin was present so that she could be delivered from
it. Arguing this point of view were such great men as Saint
Bernard of Claivaux, Saint Peter Damian, Saint
Bonaventure, Saint Albert the Great, and Saint Thomas
Aquinas.
The Franciscan Duns Scotus (d. 1308)
is recognized as being the first to address the problem
with sufficient clarity. Up to this time the mistaken
judgment seemed to prevail that if Mary
was to be freed from original sin,
God also must have been freeing her from the need to be redeemed.
Scotus responded that this was not at all the case:
. . . Mary more than anyone else would have needed Christ as her
Redeemer, since she would have contracted original sin . . . if the grace of the Mediator
had not prevented this. Thus, as others needed Christ so that the sin already contracted
should be remitted for them through His Merit, so Mary had even greater need of a
prevenient Mediator [a Mediator who intervenes before hand] lest
there be sin to be contracted and lest she contract it (New Catholic
Encyclopedia, 7, 381).
Mary's was not a liberating
redemption, cleansing
her from original sin as in the case of all
other descendants of Adam; but a preventative
redemption, preserving
her - by the foreseen
merits of Christ - from contracting
original sin. Our
Lady shared in the fruits
of her Son's passion
before He came into
the world. She was indeed speaking the truth when she
proclaimed in her Magnificat:
"My soul rejoices in God my Savior" (Luke
1:47). We are dealing here with the mystery
of the Mystical Body of Christ
which extends beyond space and time. At the
same moment of her Immaculate
Conception, the heavenly Father
endowed her soul with a fullness
of grace preparing her
for the extraordinary role of Mother of God,
and enabling her to remain free from the
slightest actual sin. It was thus that she exclaimed: "The
Almighty has done great things for me, and holy is His name" (Luke
1:49).
With this new way of elaborating the belief, the objections of theologians began to
subside. Both the teaching of Mary's sinlessness from the first moment of her existence and the celebration of the feast of the Conception (December 8 since the Middle Ages)
were never seriously challenged down to the formal definition of the doctrine
in 1854. Pius
IX, in his proclamation of the dogma,
states clearly and emphatically that this original sinlessness
of Mary was
accomplished by a singular grace and privilege of almighty
God, in consideration of the merits of Jesus Christ, Savior of the human race
(New Catholic Encyclopedia, 7, 381).
The resolution to this problem, as
explained above, needs to be made clear to those objecting that the Immaculate
Conception conflicts with the Church's
teaching that every human person needs redemption
through Christ. Mary, as all other descendants of Adam,
was in need of salvation through the redeeming merits of her
Son. Hers
was not an exemption from redemption,
but a different form of redemption, due to her
role as Mother of God. In her unique case, the heavenly
Father intervened, so that in the same act of
creating her human
soul, through the foreseen merits
of Christ's passion He prevented
the entry of original sin into
that soul,
and flooded it with a fullness
of grace beyond our power to conceive.


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