historian said:
It does seem that some Catholics place great emphasis on Mary when the reality is that she is one of many Biblical heroes but no greater than Abraham, Noah, Moses, David, Ruth, Esther, Elizabeth, Peter, Paul, or any of the many others.
We'll have to disagree about Mary being "no greater than" other Biblical heroes. She, a virgin, conceived thru Holy Spirit and gave birth to the Second part of the Trinity. I see NO other example of this of anything close to this. Luke tells us that "ALL generations will call her blessed."
She is God's greatest creature.
historian said:
I do not understand the Catholic practice of praying to her or any other saints. We should only pray to God (Father, Son, or Holy Ghost). No one else in heaven can answer our prayers.
What do you mean by "pray"? If you mean worship, then, YES, we 100% agree with you. We only should worship God.
If you mean to "ask for their intercession", then we'll disagree.
The Bible encourages us to pray for one another in many verses, James 5:16, 1 Tim 2:1, Matt 5:44, Phil 4:6, Gal 6:2, etc.
We believe those in heaven are more alive than we are on earth because they are living with God and experiencing beatific vision. They are still part of the Body of Christ.
The saints aren't answering our prayers. They are bringing them to God.
Why should we ask them to do this, because James 5:16 says that the "prayers of a righteous man is powerful and effective." Who is more "righteous" than those in heaven?
It is a false premise to exclude something because is it not mentioned in the Bible. If that were the case, we shouldn't celebrate Christmas or Easter. We shouldn't use wedding bands or Christmas trees (came from pagan origins). We shouldn't use pianos, organs, guitars, etc., in worship. We shouldn't use pews. I could go on.
The Bible NEVER makes the claim that we should ONLY follow the what's printed in the Bible. If that was the case, we didn't have the canon of the NT for 300 years. How did the early Christians know what to do and not do?
Please note that the Bible NEVER says that we should pray to the Holy Spirit. We do and we should.
historian said:
I have seen Catholic references to Mary as the "Mother of God" which is misleading. She was the human mother of the Christ child but what made Christ divine was His Father, God, not His mother, the woman God chose for that special purpose. In that sense, she was no greater or important than any of the many others God has chosen for His purposes throughout history. Do these examples mean that Catholics think of her as divine? I don't know. I have never talked to Catholics about such things. When I'm with Catholic friends we don't spend much time discussing theology.
We had a whole discussion on why "Mary is the Mother of God" on anther post, but here's a quick snippet:
Mary is the Mother of Jesus, who is God. Therefore, she is the Mother of God. Catholics do NOT believe that she gave birth to God, the Father.
Jesus has two natures, human and divine the Hypostatic Union. Women don't give birth to natures. They give birth to persons. The person of Jesus had both natures at conception, death, resurrection, ascension, and BIRTH. Much ink was spilled on this topic on one of the other threads. Please PM me if you'd like to discuss further.
Finally, NO, Catholics do not think of Mary is divine. She is a creature,
infinitely below God. But is she God's greatest creature.
As I offered earlier, please PM directly if you have other issues that you like to discuss. Or if you're ever in Waco and would like to discuss some of your other objections, I'd be happy to meet you for a beverage or two at a local watering hole.