Tuesday, 10 April 2007
Mary Was a Perpetual Virgin Or My Name Isn't...
The Perpetual Virginity of Mary was always a hard sell for me. It wasn't until the last 6 months or so I started to get a handle on it. There are a few reasons why I feel that Mary needed to be a Perpetual Virgin and I will share them to the best of my knowledge and ability, however if I am off track or I contradict the Magisterium, please let me know and I will conform my opinions to those of the Church. Without further ado, the reasons are as follows.
1) Mary was the Ark of the New Covenant.
If you remember the Ark of the Old Covenant, it contained the 10 commandments (Word of God), the manna from the desert (Bread of Life) and Aaron's budding staff (Pastoral Symbolism). We also know that the foreshadowing of the Old Testament always takes a new form: the Word become flesh (John 1), the Passover Lamb becoming human, circumcision becoming baptism (Col 2:9-12). Following this vein, we can see that Mary was foreshadowed by the Ark of the Old Covenant having in her womb the Word of God, the Bread of Life and the Good Shepherd. What other reason for the Old Ark was there? It went before the Israelites through the wilderness and was the first into the waters of the Jordan, thereby allowing the Jews of the second generation to go through the waters as if in Baptism into the Promised Land. Please note the allegory of the Christian life found in the Exodus story. First in slavery to sin (Egypt), set free by the blood of the Lamb (passover), through the waters of Baptism (Red Sea) into the wilderness of the world where we are aliens on our pilgrimage to Heaven (wandering), fed with the Bread of Life and quenched with water from the Rock, given spiritual formation and training in holiness (Sinai and the 10 commandments), fighting against evil forces (defending against tribes in the area), and finally coming to the Promised Land, again through Baptism. The Ark led the way the whole time. So how does Perpetual Virginity work into this? Well, if you touched the Old Ark, you died. It was holy and set apart for God and God alone. It was a beacon, an object of adoration and a declaration of God's favour and provision. Mary likewise then was holy, set apart for God and God alone and is a beacon, object of adoration and a declaration of God's favour and provision. There is a strict "look but don't touch" rule in effect.
2)This was explained to me by my RCIA leader when I was but on my way to becoming a Catechumen because the Perpetual Virginity was high on my list of grievances with the Church.
The Jewish concept of marriage was a little different than what we have today. Anyone who has seen "The Nativity Story" has seen that when a couple became engaged, they were actually married at that point, but until the ceremony they were to refrain from what led to family so the marriage would be pure and there would be no doubt about the bride's virginity. We can see this in the Church today as the Church is the Bride of Christ, but the Marriage feast of the Lamb is spoken of as a future event. However, if the woman became pregnant, the Groom would marry her anyhow (if he knew the baby was his of course).
When it was announced to Mary that she was to conceive God's Son, she was under no illusions as to what that meant. To have someone's child was to be married to them. In her 'yes' Mary agreed to become God's 'spouse'. This makes sense also if Mary is to be the foreshadowing of the Church itself who is to be Christ's Spouse. Joseph therefore was told to take her into his house anyhow so that the baby would have a father and so God's Spouse would not be put to shame. Having said this, Joseph was a devout man the Gospels say and as a devout man, how could he in good consience have sexual relations with someone else's spouse? Mary had no other Children and remained a Virgin Perpetually because she became God's Spouse, prefiguring the marriage of Christ to the Church.
The question of Matt 1:25 came up to me also. It says:
"but had no marital relations with her until she had borne a son; and he named him Jesus."
What about the word "until"? I asked my Priest this question and he answered me thusly: In modern English the word until is used conditionally, that is to imply that whatever condition existed before no longer existed after. The original use of the word did not have this connotation of condition to it. Simply understood, when the author says 'until she bore a Son', he is trying to emphasize that she did not have relations with anyone, not even her own (earthly) husband so there would be no disputing that the child was of divine origin, not to imply this situation changed afterwards. I am quite satisfied with that explaination.
3) In the Garden of Eden, the Man was given the job of heading up the human family (which is more of a curse than a blessing if you are reading this as a feminist). If you will read Gen 3, you will find that Eve cursed herself and the relationships she will have as a result of being tricked, but since Adam chose sin over God, the whole of creation was damned. Sin entered into the world through the man only. This is one of the reasons that the Jewish faith is passed through the Mother only, because Original Sin is passed through the man. This is also the reason why Christ did not have an earthly father in a biological sense. He could not be scarred by sin in order to be our spotless sacrifice. Having said all this, Mary was the new Eve. In Gen 3 Adam named the woman Eve because she was the mother of all living. Likewise as the mother of all living in Christ, she is the new Eve. Therefore she is subject to Christ alone as he is the new Adam (1 Cor 15:35-50). To have sexual relations with anyone else would be to submit to or to put herself into subjection to the body of sin.
I was reading D.G.D. Davidson's conversion story at www.scificatholic.com yesterday, and I noted specifically his ponderings on birth control. My wife asked why we don't allow barrier methods as they do not abort or cause medical complications. I referred to Gen 38 and the story of Tamar, the wife of Judah's son. Judah's son Er was struck down by God for being evil, so his brother Onan was told to go and 'raise up offspring for his brother' by making Tamar his wife. It is said then that Onan practiced the 'withdrawal method' and spilled his seed on the ground (every time it says). God struck him dead for this also. Why? because he refused to give of himself to the woman, he only took. It was the ultimate way to use and mistreat the woman in his day and age. Likewise, barrier methods of birth control have in fact perfected this feat of using, abusing and demeaning by now allowing the man to 'complete the act' without in fact giving of himself at all. Barrier methods allow men to steal more effectively from women. What does this have to do with the Perpetual Virginity of Mary? Well, if denying the gift of himself is evil, then a man does good by giving of himself, by giving of his flesh to his wife if you will for the purpose of creating a new life within her. Since the sacrament of marriage is a foreshadowing of our marriage (in the Church) to Christ, and Christ always does what is good, he gives of his flesh to his bride, the Church, for the purpose of creating a new life within her, both collectively and individually speaking. Finally, as previously mentioned, as the foreshadow of the Church, Mary accepts "the Flesh of God" as the creation of a new life within her. To accept another flesh less than that of God after this is unthinkable and unnacceptable.
4)Like Divine Revelation, the doctrines about Mary are trinitarian to a certain degree. They are Immaculate Conception, Perpetual Virginity and Assumption into Heaven. Mary was Immaculately conceived as I understand as a singular grace given in advance for what Christ was about to do (and had in fact accomplished as he is Divine, outside of the bounds of time and therefore everything is now to Him) so redeeming her also. If she did not receive this grace, Perpetual Virginity and Assumption would be impossible. To be without stain of Original Sin meant that she committed no actual or personal sins. This meant that she was without concupicence or tendency towards sin, and therefore capable of remaining pure in every sense. This also means, since the wages of sin is death (Rom 3:23), then she was free to be assumed into Heaven because she had no sin to be paid for.
What this all means is that if you attack or deny Perpetual Virginity, you then also deny the Immaculate Conception and the Assumption. By saying she did not remain a Virgin is to say that she was capable of sinning, and that means she was not born free of concupicence, and therefore not born free of Original Sin. What this also implies is that she had sinned and therefore was capable of dying. Even farther, if Mary sinned, Christ was also marked by sin and could not be our sacrifice for sin, and this would make his death useless and deny also the resurrection due to the fact the resurrection relies on the assertion that Christ was in fact sinless.
There is a good reason that the Church declares these things Dogmas of the Church; because if you deny one of them the whole of the faith unravels and is left a sham.
1 Cor 15:17-19
17 If Christ has not been raised, your faith is futile and you are still in your sins. 18 Then those also who have died in Christ have perished. 19 If for this life only we have hoped in Christ, we are of all people most to be pitied.
I hope this has helped you out! I had a lot of fun writing it, and putting it all together on 'paper' helps me solidify my own view.
In Christ Jesus the Risen Lord
Joel
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6 comments:
If you wanted to post the whole thing here I was going to link to it. But I can also just repost it on th eCC blog. Thanks!
Great post, but I'm still struggling with perpetual virginity and immaculate conception. At the end of the third point you state that marital relations after giving birth to God are "unthinkable and unacceptable." You don't tell us why. It is neither unthinkable nor unacceptable unless there is something inherently "defiling" or "dirty" about marital relations.
My (hopefully temporary) inability to be convinced of the immaculate conception and the perpetual virginity does not stop me from accepting the assumption, oddly enough.
Based on the fact that Elijah, and possibly Enoch, were assumed, freedom from original sin is not prerequisite.
Rachel,
Thank you for your comment. It is good to see interest in our Church's teachings, and it's ok to struggle. Father John Corapi S.O.L.T once said that a thousand struggles still does not equal one doubt and I believe that.
I did not mention why marital relations for the BVM are "unthinkable and unacceptable" at the end of the 3rd point because I mentioned why this was in the 2nd point. Since having God's child made Mary his spouse, having marital relations with anyone a sin. Marital relations themselves are not dirty or indecent when in the confines to the marriage, however they are always scandalous when conducted outside it.
Mary is also the forerunner of the Church proper. Not only does the Church stem from her so that she is our mother, but she is the first redeemed by Christ and made perfect as he is perfect like the Church will be perfected in Heaven. It is this preemptive redemption that she experiences at her conception that we call Immaculate. Being perfected in advance, she is now worthy of being God's spouse so that she can bring God's son into the world.
You also mentioned about Enoch and Elijah being assumed into heaven. Sinlessness is not apparently a prerequisite to be assumed into heaven, but sinfulness is definitely a prerequisite needed in order to die. If no sin is present whether original or actual, there is no death (Rom 3:23), so if the BVM was Immaculately conceived and acquired no actual personal sins in her life due to the Immaculate conception, how then is it possible that she die? There is only one possiblility, and that is assumption into heaven.
I hope this clears some things up for you.
In Christ
Joel
Thanks for visiting my blog, Joel!
I appreciate you taking the time to answer me on your blog. I am reading Scott Hahn's "Hail, Holy Queen" and he is arguing along the same lines.
I'm finding myself in the position (again!---isn't this the most common convert experience?)of discovering that there is so much history of which I was unaware. I can't summarily dismiss the thoughts of the ECF's. I am still uncomfortable as these are thoughts/arguments I've never been exposed to, though.
I was sharing some things out of Scott's book with my husband and he said, "Then whey isn't Mary emphasized more in Holy Scripture?" I guess what I'm beginning to see is that Mariology is like the Trinity. It's there; you just have to deduce it. The difference is we've been indoctrinated to believe in the Trinity, but not Mary. We haven't been exposed the the arguments that she is the New Eve, the New Ark, the Queen Mother of God, etc.
The most important part of the Holy Scripture that says all about Mary is Magnificat in St Luke Gospel. The Angel greated her saying 'Hail, full of grace', we do not need more, it means being FULL OF GRACE she was totally sinless and immaculate. Do we need more? God bless and do not hesitate Rachel, come home! God grace is leading you.
I'm so glad to hear of your progress rachel. Mary is really a difficult one to get around. I didn't get Mary until 2 1/2 years after I was confirmed! You just don't think of these things as a non-Catholic exactly as you say for lack of teaching. I was thinking about it today and realized that if Mary was not God's spouse then Jesus was a Bastard child! Imagine the Son of God a Bastard. I don't think so. It just makes more sense the Church's way. Amen.
Grace to you and yours
Joel
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