He said to them all, 'If anyone desires to come after
Me, let him deny himself, and take up his cross daily, and follow Me."
- Jesus
Beginning
Apologetics
6:
How to
Explain and
Defend Mary
This booklet provides an excellent
reference for anyone who is trying
to understand the official Catholic teaching of Mary the Mother of God.
As with all of Father Chacon and Jim Burnham's books it gives a
historical and biblical basis for the views of the Catholic Church. It
shows the consistency of the teachings for over 2000 thousand years and
to the shock of many Protestants actually shows that the views, of
their founders, about Mary are actually the same as what Catholics
believe today. This book is easy to read and understand and is well
researched and presented.
Mother
Mary
In
Scripture & and the words
of the early Church Fathers
John
19:25-27
"Near
the cross of Jesus stood
his mother, his mother's sister, Mary the wife of Clopas, and Mary
Magdalene. When Jesus saw his mother there, and the disciple whom he
loved standing nearby, he said to his mother, "Woman, here is your
son," and to the disciple, "Here is your mother." From that time on,
this disciple took her into his home."
Mary is therefore the mother of our home as well, as she is the mother
of Jesus.
Luke 1:46-49
And Mary said: "My soul glorifies the Lord and my spirit rejoices
in God my Savior, for he has been mindful of the humble state of his
servant. From now on all generations will call me blessed, for
the Mighty One has done great things for me--holy is his
name. (Luke
1:28, Luke 1:38, Luke 1:42,
John 19:26-27)
CCC
2682 Because of Mary's singular cooperation with the
action of the Holy Spirit, the Church loves to pray in communion with
the Virgin Mary, to magnify with her the great things the Lord has done
for her, and to entrust supplications and praises to her.
Eve said "no" to Gods will and brought upon all mankind death.
Mary said "yes" to Gods will and brought life to all mankind through
Jesus.
The Fathers
The Protoevangelium
of James
"And behold, an angel of the Lord stood by [St. Anne], saying, ‘Anne!
Anne! The Lord has heard your prayer, and you shall conceive and shall
bring forth, and your seed shall be spoken of in all the world.’ And
Anne said, ‘As the Lord my God lives, if I beget either male or female,
I will bring it as a gift to the Lord my God, and it shall minister to
him in the holy things all the days of its life.’ . . . And [from the
time she was three] Mary was in the temple of the Lord as if she were a
dove that dwelt there" (Protoevangelium of James 4, 7 [A.D.
120]).
"And when she was twelve years old there was held a council of priests,
saying, ‘Behold, Mary has reached the age of twelve years in the temple
of the Lord. What then shall we do with her, lest perchance she defile
the sanctuary of the Lord?’ And they said to the high priest, ‘You
stand by the altar of the Lord; go in and pray concerning her, and
whatever the Lord shall manifest to you, that also will we do.’ . . .
[A]nd he prayed concerning her, and behold, an angel of the Lord stood
by him saying, ‘Zechariah! Zechariah! Go out and assemble the widowers
of the people and let them bring each his rod, and to whomsoever the
Lord shall show a sign, his wife shall she be. . . . And Joseph [was
chosen]. . . . And the priest said to Joseph, ‘You have been chosen by
lot to take into your keeping the Virgin of the Lord.’ But Joseph
refused, saying, ‘I have children, and I am an old man, and she is a
young girl’" (ibid., 8–9).
"And Annas the scribe came to him [Joseph] . . . and saw that Mary was
with child. And he ran away to the priest and said to him, ‘Joseph,
whom you did vouch for, has committed a grievous crime.’ And the priest
said, ‘How so?’ And he said, ‘He has defiled the virgin whom he
received out of the temple of the Lord and has married her by stealth’"
(ibid., 15).
"And the priest said, ‘Mary, why have you done this? And why have you
brought your soul low and forgotten the Lord your God?’ . . . And she
wept bitterly saying, ‘As the Lord my God lives, I am pure before him,
and know not man’" (ibid.).
Origen
"The Book [the Protoevangelium] of James [records] that the
brethren of Jesus were sons of Joseph by a former wife, whom he married
before Mary. Now those who say so wish to preserve the honor of Mary in
virginity to the end, so that body of hers which was appointed to
minister to the Word . . . might not know intercourse with a man after
the Holy Spirit came into her and the power from on high overshadowed
her. And I think it in harmony with reason that Jesus was the
first fruit among men of the purity which consists in [perpetual]
chastity, and Mary was among women. For it were not pious to ascribe to
any other than to her the firstfruit of virginity" (Commentary on
Matthew 2:17 [A.D. 248]).
Hilary of Poitiers
"If they [the brethren of the Lord] had been Mary’s sons and not those
taken from Joseph’s former marriage, she would never have been given
over in the moment of the passion [crucifixion] to the apostle John as
his mother, the Lord saying to each, ‘Woman, behold your son,’ and to
John, ‘Behold your mother’ [John 19:26–27), as he bequeathed filial
love to a disciple as a consolation to the one desolate" (Commentary
on Matthew 1:4 [A.D. 354]).
Athanasius
"Let those, therefore, who deny that the Son is by nature from the
Father and proper to his essence deny also that he took true human
flesh from the ever-virgin Mary" (Discourses Against the Arians 2:70
[A.D. 360]).
Epiphanius of Salamis
"We believe in one God, the Father almighty, maker of all things, both
visible and invisible; and in one Lord Jesus Christ, the Son of God . .
. who for us men and for our salvation came down and took flesh, that
is, was born perfectly of the holy ever-virgin Mary by the Holy Spirit"
(The Man Well-Anchored 120 [A.D. 374]).
"And to holy Mary, [the title] ‘Virgin’ is invariably added, for that
holy woman remains undefiled" (Medicine Chest Against All Heresies
78:6 [A.D. 375]).
Jerome
"[Helvidius] produces Tertullian as a witness [to his view] and quotes
Victorinus, bishop of Petavium. Of Tertullian, I say no more than that
he did not belong to the Church. But as regards Victorinus, I assert
what has already been proven from the gospel—that he [Victorinus] spoke
of the brethren of the Lord not as being sons of Mary but brethren in
the sense I have explained, that is to say, brethren in point of
kinship, not by nature. [By discussing such things we] are . . .
following the tiny streams of opinion. Might I not array against you
the whole series of ancient writers? Ignatius, Polycarp, Irenaeus,
Justin Martyr, and many other apostolic and eloquent men, who against
[the heretics] Ebion, Theodotus of Byzantium, and Valentinus, held
these same views and wrote volumes replete with wisdom. If you had ever
read what they wrote, you would be a wiser man" (Against Helvidius:
The Perpetual Virginity of Mary 19 [A.D. 383]).
"We believe that God was born of a virgin, because we read it. We do
not believe that Mary was married after she brought forth her Son,
because we do not read it. . . . You [Helvidius] say that Mary did not
remain a virgin. As for myself, I claim that Joseph himself was a
virgin, through Mary, so that a virgin Son might be born of a virginal
wedlock" (ibid., 21).
Didymus the Blind
"It helps us to understand the terms ‘first-born’ and ‘only-begotten’
when the Evangelist tells that Mary remained a virgin ‘until she
brought forth her first-born son’ [Matt. 1:25]; for neither did Mary,
who is to be honored and praised above all others, marry anyone else,
nor did she ever become the Mother of anyone else, but even after
childbirth she remained always and forever an immaculate virgin" (The
Trinity 3:4 [A.D. 386]).
Ambrose of Milan
"Imitate her [Mary], holy mothers, who in her only dearly beloved Son
set forth so great an example of material virtue; for neither have you
sweeter children [than Jesus], nor did the Virgin seek the consolation
of being able to bear another son" (Letters 63:111 [A.D. 388]).
Pope Siricius I
"You had good reason to be horrified at the thought that another birth
might issue from the same virginal womb from which Christ was born
according to the flesh. For the Lord Jesus would never have chosen to
be born of a virgin if he had ever judged that she would be so
incontinent as to contaminate with the seed of human intercourse the
birthplace of the Lord’s body, that court of the eternal king" (Letter
to Bishop Anysius [A.D. 392]).
Augustine
"In being born of a Virgin who chose to remain a Virgin even before she
knew who was to be born of her, Christ wanted to approve virginity
rather than to impose it. And he wanted virginity to be of free choice
even in that woman in whom he took upon himself the form of a slave" (Holy
Virginity 4:4 [A.D. 401]).
"It was not the visible sun, but its invisible Creator who consecrated
this day for us, when the Virgin Mother, fertile of womb and integral
in her virginity, brought him forth, made visible for us, by whom, when
he was invisible, she too was created. A Virgin conceiving, a Virgin
bearing, a Virgin pregnant, a Virgin bringing forth, a Virgin
perpetual. Why do you wonder at this, O man?" (Sermons 186:1
[A.D. 411]).
"Heretics called Antidicomarites are those who contradict the perpetual
virginity of Mary and affirm that after Christ was born she was joined
as one with her husband" (Heresies 56 [A.D. 428]).
Leporius
"We confess, therefore, that our Lord and God, Jesus Christ, the only
Son of God, born of the Father before the ages, and in times most
recent, made man of the Holy Spirit and the ever-virgin Mary" (Document
of Amendment 3 [A.D. 426]).
Cyril of Alexandria
"[T]he Word himself, coming into the Blessed Virgin herself, assumed
for himself his own temple from the substance of the Virgin and came
forth from her a man in all that could be externally discerned, while
interiorly he was true God. Therefore he kept his Mother a virgin even
after her childbearing" (Against Those Who Do Not Wish to Confess
That the Holy Virgin is the Mother of God 4 [A.D. 430]).
Pope Leo I
"His [Christ’s] origin is different, but his [human] nature is the
same. Human usage and custom were lacking, but by divine power a Virgin
conceived, a Virgin bore, and Virgin she remained" (Sermons 22:2
[A.D. 450]).
Council of Constantinople II
"If anyone will not confess that the Word of God ... came down from the
heavens and was made flesh of holy and glorious Mary, mother of God and
ever-virgin, and was born from her, let him be anathema" (Anathemas
Against the "Three Chapters" 2 [A.D. 553]).
Church
Fathers on Mary
The Ascension of Isaiah
"[T]he report concerning the child was noised abroad in Bethlehem. Some
said, ‘The Virgin Mary has given birth before she was married two
months.’ And many said, ‘She has not given birth; the midwife has not
gone up to her, and we heard no cries of pain’" (Ascension of Isaiah
11 [A.D. 70]).
The Odes of Solomon
"So the Virgin became a mother with great mercies. And she labored and
bore the Son, but without pain, because it did not occur without
purpose. And she did not seek a midwife, because he caused her to give
life. She bore as a strong man, with will . . . " (Odes of Solomon 19
[A.D. 80]).
Justin
Martyr
"[Jesus] became man by the Virgin so that the course which was taken by
disobedience in the beginning through the agency of the serpent might
be also the very course by which it would be put down. Eve, a virgin
and undefiled, conceived the word of the serpent and bore disobedience
and death. But the Virgin Mary received faith and joy when the angel
Gabriel announced to her the glad tidings that the Spirit of the Lord
would come upon her and the power of the Most High would overshadow
her, for which reason the Holy One being born of her is the Son of God.
And she replied ‘Be it done unto me according to your word’ [Luke
1:38]" (Dialogue with Trypho the Jew 100 [A.D. 155]).
Irenaeus
"Consequently, then, Mary the Virgin is found to be obedient, saying,
‘Behold, O Lord, your handmaid; be it done to me according to your
word.’ Eve, however, was disobedient, and, when yet a virgin, she did
not obey. Just as she, who was then still a virgin although she had
Adam for a husband—for in paradise they were both naked but were not
ashamed; for, having been created only a short time, they had no
understanding of the procreation of children, and it was necessary that
they first come to maturity before beginning to multiply—having become
disobedient, was made the cause of death for herself and for the whole
human race; so also Mary, betrothed to a man but nevertheless still a
virgin, being obedient, was made the cause of salvation for herself and
for the whole human race. . . . Thus, the knot of Eve’s disobedience
was loosed by the obedience of Mary. What the virgin Eve had bound in
unbelief, the Virgin Mary loosed through faith" (Against Heresies 3:22:24
[A.D. 189]).
"The Lord then was manifestly coming to his own things, and was
sustaining them by means of that creation that is supported by himself.
He was making a recapitulation of that disobedience that had occurred
in connection with a tree, through the obedience that was upon a tree
[i.e., the cross]. Furthermore, the original deception was to be done
away with—the deception by which that virgin Eve (who was already
espoused to a man) was unhappily misled. That this was to be overturned
was happily announced through means of the truth by the angel to the
Virgin Mary (who was also [espoused] to a man). . . . So if Eve
disobeyed God, yet Mary was persuaded to be obedient to God. In this
way, the Virgin Mary might become the advocate of the virgin Eve. And
thus, as the human race fell into bondage to death by means of a
virgin, so it is rescued by a virgin. Virginal disobedience has been
balanced in the opposite scale by virginal obedience. For in the same
way, the sin of the first created man received amendment by the
correction of the First-Begotten" (ibid., 5:19:1 [A.D. 189]).
Tertullian
"And again, lest I depart from my
argumentation on the name of Adam:
Why is Christ called Adam by the apostle [Paul], if as man he was not
of that earthly origin? But even reason defends this conclusion, that
God recovered his image and likeness by a procedure similar to that in
which he had been robbed of it by the devil. It was while Eve was still
a virgin that the word of the devil crept in to erect an edifice of
death. Likewise through a virgin the Word of God was introduced to set
up a structure of life. Thus what had been laid waste in ruin by this
sex was by the same sex reestablished in salvation. Eve had believed
the serpent; Mary believed Gabriel. That which the one destroyed by
believing, the other, by believing, set straight" (The Flesh of
Christ 17:4 [A.D. 210].
Pseudo-Melito
"If therefore it might come to
pass by the power of your grace, it has
appeared right to us your servants that, as you, having overcome death,
do reign in glory, so you should raise up the body of your Mother and
take her with you, rejoicing, into heaven. Then said the Savior
[Jesus]: ‘Be it done according to your will’" (The Passing of the
Virgin 16:2–17 [A.D. 300]).
Ephraim
the Syrian
"You alone and your Mother are
more beautiful than any others, for
there is no blemish in you nor any stains upon your Mother. Who of my
children can compare in beauty to these?" (Nisibene Hymns 27:8
[A.D. 361]).
Ambrose
of Milan
"Mary’s life should be for you a pictorial image of virginity. Her life
is like a mirror reflecting the face of chastity and the form of
virtue. Therein you may find a model for your own life . . . showing
what to improve, what to imitate, what to hold fast to" (The Virgins
2:2:6 [A.D. 377]).
"The first thing which kindles ardor in learning is the greatness of
the teacher. What is greater [to teach by example] than the Mother of
God? What more glorious than she whom Glory Itself chose? What more
chaste than she who bore a body without contact with another body? For
why should I speak of her other virtues? She was a virgin not only in
body but also in mind, who stained the sincerity of its disposition by
no guile, who was humble in heart, grave in speech, prudent in mind,
sparing of words, studious in reading, resting her hope not on
uncertain riches, but on the prayer of the poor, intent on work, modest
in discourse; wont to seek not man but God as the judge of her
thoughts, to injure no one, to have goodwill towards all, to rise up
before her elders, not to envy her equals, to avoid boastfulness, to
follow reason, to love virtue. When did she pain her parents even by a
look? When did she disagree with her neighbors? When did she despise
the lowly? When did she avoid the needy?" (ibid., 2:2:7).
"Come, then, and search out your sheep, not through your servants or
hired men, but do it yourself. Lift me up bodily and in the flesh,
which is fallen in Adam. Lift me up not from Sarah but from Mary, a
virgin not only undefiled, but a virgin whom grace had made inviolate,
free of every stain of sin" (Commentary on Psalm 118:22–30 [A.D.
387]).
Augustine
"Our Lord . . . was not averse to
males, for he took the form of a
male, nor to females, for of a female he was born. Besides, there is a
great mystery here: that just as death comes to us through a woman,
life is born to us through a woman; that the devil, defeated, would be
tormented by each nature, feminine and masculine, as he had taken
delight in the defection of both" (Christian Combat 22:24 [A.D.
396]).
"That one woman is both mother and virgin, not in spirit only but even
in body. In spirit she is mother, not of our head, who is our
Savior himself—of whom all, even she herself, are rightly called
children of the bridegroom—but plainly she is the mother of us
who are his members, because by love she has cooperated so that the
faithful, who are the members of that head, might be born in the
Church. In body, indeed, she is the Mother of that very head" (Holy
Virginity 6:6 [A.D. 401]).
"Having excepted the holy Virgin Mary, concerning whom, on account of
the honor of the Lord, I wish to have absolutely no question when
treating of sins—for how do we know what abundance of grace for the
total overcoming of sin was conferred upon her, who merited to conceive
and bear him in whom there was no sin?—so, I say, with the exception of
the Virgin, if we could have gathered together all those holy men and
women, when they were living here, and had asked them whether they were
without sin, what do we suppose would have been their answer?" (Nature
and Grace 36:42 [A.D. 415]).
Timothy
of Jerusalem
"Therefore the Virgin is immortal
to this day, seeing that he who had
dwelt in her transported her to the regions of her assumption" (Homily
on Simeon and Anna [A.D. 400]).
John
the Theologian
"[T]he Lord said to his Mother,
‘Let your heart rejoice and be glad,
for every favor and every gift has been given to you from my Father in
heaven and from me and from the Holy Spirit. Every soul that calls upon
your name shall not be ashamed, but shall find mercy and comfort and
support and confidence, both in the world that now is and in that which
is to come, in the presence of my Father in the heavens’" (The
Falling Asleep of Mary [A.D. 400]).
"And from that time forth all knew that the spotless and precious body
had been transferred to paradise" (ibid.).
Gregory
of Tours
"The course of this life having been completed by blessed Mary, when
now she would be called from the world, all the apostles came together
from their various regions to her house. And when they had heard that
she was about to be taken from the world, they kept watch together with
her. And behold, the Lord Jesus came with his angels, and, taking her
soul, he gave it over to the angel Michael and withdrew. At daybreak,
however, the apostles took up her body on a bier and placed it in a
tomb, and they guarded it, expecting the Lord to come. And behold,
again the Lord stood by them; the holy body having been received, he
commanded that it be taken in a cloud into paradise, where now,
rejoined to the soul, [Mary’s body] rejoices with the Lord’s chosen
ones and is in the enjoyment of the good of an eternity that will never
end" (Eight Books of Miracles 1:4 [A.D. 584]).
"But Mary, the glorious Mother of Christ, who is believed to be a
virgin both before and after she bore him, has, as we said above, been
translated into paradise, amid the singing of the angelic choirs,
whither the Lord preceded her" (ibid., 1:8).
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