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"Ever sinless" Theotokos

Monica child of God 1

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Orthocat,

Well, those are your opinions. Everything I have learned on the topic said that she kept herself from sin from the beginning of her life. There is a portion of the Protoevangelium of James that says Anna took care not to allow the feet of the Mother of God to touch the ground when she was an infant and a toddler. This is an allusion to her being kept from any sort of soil. At three, she entered the temple and began to struggle with prayer and fasting and reached perfection by cooperating with God's grace.

No offense, but I think you are approaching this like a protestant, not like an Orthodox Christian. Instead of steeping yourself in the prayers and traditions, you are looking for and bending quotes to back up your interpretations.

M.
 
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Ortho_Cat

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I don't see how I could be accused of "bending quotes" from the saints. I believe the teaching outlined By St. John M. in his article is very clear and straightforward; again, for posterity:

"The teaching of the complete sinlessness of the Mother of God (1) does not correspond to Sacred Scripture, where there is repeatedly mentioned the sinlessness of the One Mediator between God and man, the man Jesus Christ...(2) This teaching contradicts also Sacred Tradition, which is contained in numerous Patristic writings, where there is mentioned the exalted sanctity of the Virgin Mary from Her very birth, as well as Her cleansing by the Holy Spirit at Her conception of Christ, but not at Her own conception by Anna."

In addition, I would like to refer to the Divine Liturgy from St. John C. :

"Having beheld the resurrection of Christ, let us worship the holy Lord Jesus, the only Sinless One."

This reading is completely unambiguous. Christ was the only sinless one. The Divine Liturgy is one of the most sacred parts of Holy Tradition that we have. How could this be merely an "opinion"? I'm sorry, but I can't take the views expressed in the spurious apocryphal work "protoevangelion of James" over those expressed by one of the most important saints of the Church, who's views are recited by the Orthodox faithful on a weekly basis without fail.


I neglected to mention that I have indeed spoken with my priest regarding this very issue. He without hesitation told me that my belief in her sinlessness is not required for my faith, and he also mentioned that my "opinion" was also held by several very important Church fathers, and he also mentioned the reference in the DL. If he's not going to split hairs over it, then neither am I.

I have no more to add on this issue. My advice for those inquiring into the faith is to talk about it with their priest, as I have.
 
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Mikeb85

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You believe what you choose to believe. Ignore the teaching of the Church if you wish. Ignore our hymnography. But as a catechumen, you really need to be learning, not arguing. I have tried to help, but I am not interested in your personal interpretations, your twisting of the Saints words, your SLANDERING the Holy Theotokos. Maybe later you will show a teachable spirit. Until then, go with God. I will only leave you with:

Pay attention and learn.

It is not the teaching of the Church that the Theotokos is completely sinless. As was pointed out, the Divine Liturgy plainly says Christ is the ONLY sinless one. There is no hymnography which states the Theotokos is completely sinless. It is not defined doctrine.

Many Saints of our Church and early fathers (including St. John Chrysostom) have mused that the Theotokos may have committed minor sins. Regardless, it doesn't matter whether she did or didn't. She still is the new Eve, and the Theotokos...
 
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MariaRegina

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St. Silouan of Mt. Athos said that when he was doubting the Virgin Mary's ever sinlessness, the Virgin Theotokos herself appeared to him and said that she remained without sin. From that moment on, all doubts ceased in his soul.

His Eminence Metropolitan KALLISTOS (Ware) said that an Orthodox Christian can believe that the Virgin remained sinless -- even from her conception in the womb of St. Anna -- this belief that Mary was ever-sinless is possible because this teaching has never been defined either way, unlike in the Catholic Church. Therefore, we are free to believe either way.

However, we must accept that either she was free from sin from her birth or from her conception of Christ. Which one is easier? Both are impossible without the grace of God.
 
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Protoevangel

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Mikeb85 said:
It is not the teaching of the Church that the Theotokos is completely sinless. As was pointed out, the Divine Liturgy plainly says Christ is the ONLY sinless one. There is no hymnography which states the Theotokos is completely sinless. It is not defined doctrine.

Many Saints of our Church and early fathers (including St. John Chrysostom) have mused that the Theotokos may have committed minor sins. Regardless, it doesn't matter whether she did or didn't. She still is the new Eve, and the Theotokos...
"Only-Sinless one" in Scripture and the liturgy refers to "untouched by ancestral sin", not as "having never committed sin." The Theotokos, even if she never actually committed sin, still was subject to ancestral sin. This is made clear in the treatise of Saint John Maximovitch.

Let's look at our services:
Thy wonders, O pure Theotokos, surpass the power of words. For in thee I see something beyond speech; a body that was never subject to the taint of sin. Therefore in thanksgiving I cry to thee: O pure virgin, thou art truly high above all. (Menaion 190)

Verily, the blameless saint entereth by the Holy Spirit to dwell in the Holy of Holies and to be nourished by the angel, who in truth shall be a most holy temple for our holy God. He it is who by dwelling in her hath sanctified all creation and deified the perishing nature of man. (Nassar 339)
She is blameless, spotless, all-pure. All that speaks to more than just virginity... Ever-virgin is the crown of her pure life, but not the limit of it. In every way she lived her life in a manner to be pleasing to God, and if in some small ways she was not 100% successful at every moment... I will never note that or make a point of it, but will instead chant joyfully with the Church, "It is truly right to call the blessed, O Theotokos, ever-blessed and all-pure Theotokos. More honourable than the Cherubim, and beyond compare more glorious than the Seraphim, thee who without corruption gavest birth to God the Word, very Theotokos, thee do we magnify." I will magnify her in my heart and in my words... Never anything less.


That said, I have been a butthead in this thread, and perhaps even in this post. I have, in my zeal, overstepped brotherly correction, and been insulting. I added the quote from Father Seraphim Rose to my signature so I would remember it... I had forgotten it. ortho_cat, Mikeb85, howdydave, and anyone else who I have offended, please forgive me.
 
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MariaRegina

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"It is truly right to call the blessed, O Theotokos, ever-blessed and all-pure Theotokos. More honourable than the Cherubim, and beyond compare more glorious than the Seraphim, thee who without corruption gavest birth to God the Word, very Theotokos, thee do we magnify." I will magnify her in my heart and in my words... Never anything less.

Amen.

Look at the words of St. Nectarios in his hymn to the Theotokos: O Pure Virgin.

Such joy comes from being spotless and pure and without sin.
 
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Ortho_Cat

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I forgive you Proto. I again apologize for offending anyone or acting un-Christian, and likewise I also ask for forgiveness.

However, I must make one final point regarding the meaning of the word sinless in the Liturgy.

"Only-Sinless one" in Scripture and the liturgy refers to "untouched by ancestral sin", not as "having never committed sin." The Theotokos, even if she never actually committed sin, still was subject to ancestral sin. art truly high above all.

In the liturgy there are several places where St. John uses the word sinless. I've compared two such occurences, including the one in question.


"Having beheld the resurrection of Christ, let us worship the holy Lord Jesus, the only Sinless One."

"For a perfect, holy, peaceful, and sinless day, let us ask the Lord."

The greek word used for sinless is the same in both cases (ἀναμάρτητον); i.e. there is no distinction between the meaning of sin in either case. It is obvious from the latter quote that he is referring to actual sin (missing the mark), therefore by equivalence he must be referring to the same type of sin in the former.

In addition, the Greeks do have two different words that they use when distinguishing between ancestral sin and actual sin.
 
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Mikeb85

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Let's look at our services:
Thy wonders, O pure Theotokos, surpass the power of words. For in thee I see something beyond speech; a body that was never subject to the taint of sin. Therefore in thanksgiving I cry to thee: O pure virgin, thou art truly high above all. (Menaion 190)

Interesting translation. Here's what I came up with when searching for the same: General Menaion or the Book of Services Common to the Festivals of our Lord Jesus of the Holy Virgin and of Different Orders of Saints | Christian Classics Ethereal Library

Quite different, though it doesn't diminish her honour in any way.
 
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Blackknight

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I love how it's pretty much recent converts who have issue with this. Rather than arguing, give it some time.

Not all of us. :D It is difficult to humble yourself and submit to the teachings of the church however.
 
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Protoevangel

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My Soiritual Father has asked that I bow out of the conversation, only referring those with questions to the following link: http://www.oca.org/QA.asp?ID=116&SID=3

my spiritual father said:
The Church believes that the Theotokos is the all-pure Holy Virgin. She committed no personal sin.

The rest is speculation and the Lord frowns upon speculation.
 
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choirfiend

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Not all of us. :D It is difficult to humble yourself and submit to the teachings of the church however.


Hey, I didnt say ALL recent converts have issue with it. Just that the only people who do ARE recent converts. ;)
 
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MariaRegina

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Maybe the link to the OCA is bad.

Active Server Pages error 'ASP 0113'
Script timed out
/QA.asp

When I accessed the OCA directly at www.oca.org
I could not access the Q and A area. When I clicked it,
nothing happened.
 
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Ortho_Cat

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Thanks for the link Proto. I have encountered that sometime ago. It is a great mystery to me that the Church recites and embraces the views of St. John C. in the DL every Sunday with respect to this matter, yet "officially" teaches a contrary view. The lack of consistency in this area is greatly frustrating to me. If there was one unifying view that was expressed throughout, I would be much more likely to be embrace it. It leads me down a slippery slope of questioning about the Church that I really wish I wouldn't have gone down. Please pray for me :(
 
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Blonde

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This thread is an example of one of the things I find most beautiful about Orthodoxy. While individuals can be passionate about certain topics, the Church allows people to think and develop as God wills without demanding. The Orthodox Church understands that people have to "get it" by God's grace, not forced (kind of like Rome does - no offense intended).
They are patient with their lambs and that is an amazing thing.
 
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Dn Patrick

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I’ve been Orthodox for nearly 19 years and have been a deacon for the past two and half years. One thing I’ve learned in that time is that there are many things commonly taught and popularly accepted as “the Orthodox way” that have originated outside the Church and cannot be squared with the Apostles, the Fathers, or the worship of the Church.

The supposed sinlessness of the Theotokos is one example. Scriptural and patristic support for this tradition is very slim, and every attempt to explain it I’ve seen results in a confused approximation of the Roman Catholic doctrines of original sin and immaculate conception. The fact is that the sinlessness of the Theotokos is not necessary for our salvation. It adds nothing to our understanding of Christ and His saving work. Instead, it frustrates that understanding with needless difficulty.

Persevere, Ortho Cat. Seek the truth and you shall find it.

In Christ,

Dn Patrick
 
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buzuxi02

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Dn Patrick are you an eastern Orthodox deacon? The sinlessness of Mary cannot be squared with Orthodox worship??? Have you ever attended a divine liturgy? What seminary did you attend?

In the early church the sinlessness of Mary may have not been a tradition of the Antiochan school which emphasized the humanity of Christ and a more literal interpretation of scripture. On the other hand the sinlessness of Mary was indeed a tradition of the Alexandrian school and their higher theology which emphasized the divinity of Christ. Terms such as "pure" & "spotless" were adjectives to describe her ever-virginity. Her sinlessness and the fact that she is more honorable than the cherubim greater than the seraphim teaches us the potential that theosis has. The very hymns about the sinlessness of Mary and her now heavenly status above the bodiless powers describes this infintismal process open to humanity which she has entered into.
It doesnt matter when she became sinless, Orthodoxy doesnt define this aspect. What matters is she progressed to a transfigured state and continues to do so unlike any other. Just like in iconography where the dark lines are written first and then the lighter lines, she went from one glory to another, from a woman born under the Law to Panagia. Her origins was one of her own race, a fallen human, born with ancestral sin but her realized goal is one of divinization. And it is our goal as christians as well. In the Annunciation she was overshadowed by the Holy Spirit opening up the path of theosis. Her obedience teaches us how to approach Godliness. In the case of the Theotokos it was her humility and obedience to God, her free will accepted the angel's proclamation, accepted the Will of God, and not her own will, and as a result was the first to experience the divinization of man. It was She who opened up divinization to the whole of humanity. What was lost with Eve was regained with New Eve.

The gospel of Luke has the Theotokos prophecy, "Henceforth every generation shall bless me.." The word makaria does not mean simply to "speak well of, or wish one well ". If that was the case the word 'eulogy' would have been used. Instead the word makariousi in the future verb form is used. Makaria is a state of being, a state of blessedness and bliss. Makariouzi means we will praise and give joy to the Theotokos for that blessed state she has reached. We praise her not as a (eulogy) but to share in the happiness of reality; the blissful state she has already entered into hence makaria. Adam and Eve was in that blessed state of Eden but expelled and hence all other men after her, The new Eve was the first to be reinstated and allows all other after her that oppurtunity for she brought the Logos incarnate into the world, the savior. Do you see how the sinlessness of Mary is the example par excellence of the reality of theosis.
 
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Ortho_Cat

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Dn Patrick are you an eastern Orthodox deacon? The sinlessness of Mary cannot be squared with Orthodox worship??? Have you ever attended a divine liturgy? What seminary did you attend?
Is this really necessary? You are simultaneously insulting this individual’s integrity, sincerity, education and intelligence by asking such questions.

I’d imagine that Dn Patrick could be referring to a particular phrase in the Divine Liturgy:

“let us worship the holy Lord Jesus, the only Sinless One”

Which is a direct contradiction to the sinless claim. I would encourage you to find me an example where any of the worship lexicon directly attributes to Mary sinlessness that is as blatant as this. (Mind you, the DL is the most important worship service we have!) If you say that by “only Sinless One”, St. John meant that Jesus is the only one without “ancestral sin”, then you are simply putting words in the golden-mouth’s mouth. Besides, ancestral sin is a misnomer anyways, it describes a lack of communion with God rather than actual sin.

In the early church the sinlessness of Mary may have not been a tradition of the Antiochan school which emphasized the humanity of Christ and a more literal interpretation of scripture. On the other hand the sinlessness of Mary was indeed a tradition of the Alexandrian school and their higher theology which emphasized the divinity of Christ.

References please. I want to see where this teaching was embraced by the Church as a whole before the 5th century AD.

Terms such as "pure" & "spotless" were adjectives to describe her ever-virginity. Her sinlessness and the fact that she is more honorable than the cherubim greater than the seraphim teaches us the potential that theosis has. The very hymns about the sinlessness of Mary and her now heavenly status above the bodiless powers describes this infintismal process open to humanity which she has entered into.

I’m glad to see that you recognize the terms "pure" and "spotless" as being references to her ever-virginity. However, this narrows down the terms considerably that you can use to imply her sinlessness. Please show me these hymns which you speak of.

It doesnt matter when she became sinless, Orthodoxy doesnt define this aspect.

Yes, it does matter; in fact this is the topic of the thread! (“Ever-sinless Theotokos” )And yes, The Church does by and large teach that she lived her entire life without commiting a personal sin. “She could have sinned, but she chose not to.” (Hopko’s “Orthodox Church” series)

What matters is she progressed to a transfigured state and continues to do so unlike any other. Just like in iconography where the dark lines are written first and then the lighter lines, she went from one glory to another, from a woman born under the Law to Panagia. Her origins was one of her own race, a fallen human, born with ancestral sin but her realized goal is one of divinization. And it is our goal as christians as well. In the Annunciation she was overshadowed by the Holy Spirit opening up the path of theosis. Her obedience teaches us how to approach Godliness. In the case of the Theotokos it was her humility and obedience to God, her free will accepted the angel's proclamation, accepted the Will of God, and not her own will, and as a result was the first to experience the divinization of man. It was She who opened up divinization to the whole of humanity. What was lost with Eve was regained with New Eve.

I agree with most of this. You rightly state that her theosis could not begin before the annunciation, as theosis is impossible without the incarnation. But theosis by definition is a gradual process of sanctification and conforming one’s life to Christ. If her theosis began at the incarnation, then it would make logical sense that she gradually became more and more Christ-like. However, in a sinless state, there is no such progression. You are perfectly in the will of God from the start and remain in such until death. You reach the zenith at once and remain there. Absolute sinlessness does not mean just resisting evil temptations; it means remaining perfectly within God’s will at all times. If this were the case, then She wouldn’t go through such a process of theosis as we are required to do; she would have beeen “instantaneously deified” (immaculate conception?) In this way, she would no longer serve as the great example, but the great exception! (This “great exception” status is what we accuse the Roman’s of having granted to Mary)
 
The gospel of Luke has the Theotokos prophecy, "Henceforth every generation shall bless me.." The word makaria does not mean simply to "speak well of, or wish one well ". If that was the case the word 'eulogy' would have been used. Instead the word makariousi in the future verb form is used. Makaria is a state of being, a state of blessedness and bliss. Makariouzi means we will praise and give joy to the Theotokos for that blessed state she has reached. We praise her not as a (eulogy) but to share in the happiness of reality; the blissful state she has already entered into hence makaria. Adam and Eve was in that blessed state of Eden but expelled and hence all other men after her, The new Eve was the first to be reinstated and allows all other after her that oppurtunity for she brought the Logos incarnate into the world, the savior. Do you see how the sinlessness of Mary is the example par excellence of the reality of theosis.
It’s best not to refer to the scriptures for support to this doctrine. (Unless you consider Proto. of James to be such) To say that her being referred to as “blessed” being the same as “sinless” is a stretch beyond imagination.

On the other hand, there are painfully clear verses within Scripture which teach the exact opposite.
Romans 3:23 is such a verse. Until you are able to show me a convincing argument that shows how Mary is exempt from this verse, (that doesn’t twist the verse like a pretzel to avoids it’s obvious meaning) I will default to scripture.

The canon of scripture is the measuring stick of truth by which all novel and innovative doctrine is to be compared. (And this “doctrine” is quite new relative to the others) If it get’s to the point where we have to bend the scripture to accommodate our new doctrines, perhaps we should re-examine such doctrine.

Bishop Kallistos says himself that it is due time for the Church to re-examine what Her Tradition is, and what are her traditions. Until such a doctrine becomes dogma, I will consider it to be of the latter; by the very reason that it blatantly contradicts scripture. (and not just in one place!)

I would like to make a quick comment on Dn Patrick's post. I agree that this doctrine does more to obscure than illuminate what Christ did for us, as well as attempt to belittle his unique personhood of being “the only sinless One“.
Please, anyone show me how by believing that the Theotokos remained without sin her entire life gives glory to God and Jesus. Is it really necessary for us to say this? What we can say without a doubt is that the Holy Spirit purified her womb upon Her receiving the Word. What happened before that, or after that, with regards to her purity, (I’m not referring to virginity) is mere speculation. The purification of the womb does beg the question however; if she was perfect beforehand, why would such a thing be necessary?

Honestly, I believe Christ could have chosen any vessel that he so desired from which to become incarnate. It wouldn’t take anything away from His nature, because He is God. We don’t have to say that someone has to be “such and such” to be worthy of God. Jesus spent time with the dregs of society that no one else wanted to associate with, and used some of the most unlikely characters to accomplish His will. In fact, if he was born of an ordinary person like you or me, I think that would do more to glorify Him than anything. Perhaps this may be closer to the truth after all.
 
 
 
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