CHAPTERS
- Preliminaries
- Eternal Plans
- Prophetic Plan
- Sinai Covenant
- Immaculate Conception
- Realisation of the Eternal Plan
- Perpetual virginity
- Divine Motherhood
- The Temple Presentation
- The Finding in the Temple
- Difficulties for Mary's faith
- Start of His Public Life
- Cooperation in Redemption
- Mediatrix of All Graces
- At the First Pentecost
- Mother of the Church
- Assumption
- Queenship
- Consortium
- Mary and Vatican II
- Revelation 12
- Some Marian Devotions
- To Imitate Her Virtues
- Marian Consecration
- Infused Contemplation
- Our Lady in Heaven
- Private Revelations
- Appendix: Discernment of Spirits
- Supplement: Appearances and revelation
- Study Questions
- Answers To Study Questions
Books/Resources by Fr. Most
- EWTN Scripture Q & A
- Basic Scripture
- Bible Commentaries
- Our Lady in Doctrine And Devotion
- Outline of Christology
- An Introduction to Christian Philosophy
- The Living God
- The Holy Spirit and The Church
- Catholic Apologetics Notes
Apologetic Resources
- Ask Father
- Biblical Catholicism
- Theology/Philosophy
- Scripture Resources
- Scott Hahns Lectures
- Apologetics Links
Other Services
- Catholic Chaplaincy
- St. Anthony Communications
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CHAPTER VII. Divine Motherhood
History of the Title Theotokos
The title Theotokos, Mother of God, is
first known to have appeared in an Egyptian papyrus containing parts of the
prayer Sub tuum praesidium, from the third century. It was found in 1938 in
Alexandria, Egypt, by a Protestant named Roberts. The title also appears in
the Greek text of a work by St. Hippolytus, (died 235) De Benedictionibus
Jacob (cf. Marian Studies VI, p. 49). However, since it does not appear in
the Georgian translation of the text, the authenticity of the occurrence of
the word Theotokos is debated. The church historian Socrates reports that
the title Theotokos was used by Origen (died c 235) in his commentary on
Romans - mostly now lost. The first incontrovertible use of Theotokos is in
a letter of Alexander, Bishop of Alexandria ( RJ 680. died 328).
Nestorius, Patriarch of Constantinople (c. 381 -451) rejected the title
Theotokos, wanted to use instead Christotokos or Anthropotokos. He defended
the sermons of Anastasius, one of his priests, who rejected the Theotokos.
Nestorius asked for a council. He was deposed by the Council of Ephesus in
431 and his writings were burned by order of the Emperor Theodosius II.
However, in 1895 a complete treatise of his was found in a Syriac version.
It is called the Bazaar of Heraclides of Damascus - a name Nestorius used
to hide his identity. It attacks the decisions of the Council of Ephesus
and of St. Cyril of Alexandria. Cyril drew up 12 Anathemas against
Nestorius , which were approved by the Council. They are found in his
Letter 17. (There are 12 counter anathemas supposedly by Nestorius, which
are spurious). Some scholars today insist Nestorius was not a Nestorian,
that he even condemned Nestorianism. But it is hard for us to say such a
thing when we have so little of his work, whereas the Council and St. Cyril
had his works, and could talk to Nestorius in person. However, we must
admit that Cyril was a harsh person. Had he shown more tact a serious
heresy might have been avoided.
To put two persons in Christ would make the redemption finite, and would
leave opening for teaching ignorance in Jesus. The Agnoites, an offshoot of
Nestorianism, did that. Their ideas were condemned by Pope Vigilius in 553
AD: DS 419. If there were two persons in Christ, Mary would be the Mother
of only the human person, and hence could not be called Mother of God. But
if there is only one person, a divine person, then she would be the Mother
not of the divine nature, but of the person who is divine. This is in a way
parallel to the normal human case in which Mrs. Jones is the mother of John
Jones - we do not say she is the mother only of the body of John Jones, but
of the person John Jones.
St. Gregory of Nazianzus in his Epistle 101. 4-6 RJ 1017) made the title
Theotokos the touchstone of orthodoxy. We could summarize, and clarify, his
argument thus: If there were two persons in Christ, she would be the Mother
of only the human person. If there were only one nature in Christ, and that
human, she would not be the Mother of God. If there were only one nature in
Christ, divine nature, she would not be the Mother of Christ. Hence the
Theotokos implies one person, a divine person, and two natures, divine and
human. Similarly, St. Cyril of Alexandria, in his Homily 15 on the
Incarnation, also makes Theotokos the test of orthodoxy.
Dignity of Divine Motherhood
Plato, in his Symposium 203 said: "No god associates with man." He did know
of a great supreme God, with a concept much like ours, except his God was
not the Creator. He also believed in secondary gods, which had a body finer
than clouds, and a soul. Yet none of these would stoop to associate with
us. In fact, to obtain favors from them we should employ the help of a
class of beings Plato called daimones, who were also beings with body and
soul - with a body like ours, of very high quality. (He seems to have
thought the Olympian gods, such as the adulterous Zeus, were of this type).
Aristotle similarly in his Nichomachean Ethics 8. 7 said that for
friendship, there should not be too great a gap between the friends. If it
were very great, no friendship would be possible. So, no friendship of a
god with a man would be possible. What would these philosophers think if
they learned that the great, supreme, transcendent God actually became man.
That He took on a human nature which would be joined to Him in one person,
a divine Person.
We have grown up with these thoughts, and so they never did have the impact
on us they had with the world of that time. And further, we have become so
used to the formula: two natures, one Divine Person, that we do not really
grasp the import. If we follow the philosophical framework of Aristotle, we
would have to say that the sacred humanity received a relation to the
second Person of the Holy Trinity, but that that Person took on no
relation: would have been a change in Him! We sense there is something
amiss here. Best we should simply say we have another example of
transcendence.
What then of her in whose womb He took flesh, where He remained, physically
developing for 9 months!. No wonder Pius XI following St. Thomas said, as
we saw above, that the dignity of the Mother of God is a quasi-infinite
dignity from the infinite good that God is. Philo, whose thought was taken
up by the Rabbis as we saw above was very right in saying that Moses
thought it unthinkable to have legitimate sex with his wife after just one
brief encounter with God - what of her who carried Him 9 months! To think
that some people with little or no perception of divine matters could
suppose she had four more sons and at least two daughters.
And what should we think of Wilfrid Harrington (commentary on Mark,
Glazier, 1979, p. 47), and others like him who erred so outrageously in
commenting on Mark 3:20-35 as to suggest that she in Mk 3:20 did not
believe in Him, and went along with others to seize Him? And Harrington
added, incredibly, that the passage "may be seen to distinguish those who
stood outside the sphere of salvation and those who are within it." Which
implies that Mary was outside the sphere of salvation! This also supposes
that Mark clashes with Luke, for Luke pictures her as blessed because of
her faith. And Vatican II said in LG 56 that at the annunciation Mary
"embracing the salvific will of God with full heart... totally dedicated
herself... to the person and work of her Son."
Harrington got into this mistake by a poor analysis of the passage of Mk
3:20-25. There are three segments in that passage: (1) Those about Him (in
Greek it is hoi par' autou -an ambiguous expression that could mean His
relatives or friends or those about Him) see that He is so busy preaching
to the crowds that He does not take time to eat. They say that He is beside
Himself, and go out to get Him forcefully. (2)The scribes from Jerusalem
say He casts out devils by Beelzebul. He told them that was the
unforgivable sin. He did not mean God would simply refuse to forgive. He
meant that their hardness was such that it was hardly likely they could
ever repent. (3) His Mother and relatives come to the edge of the crowd,
and He comments that those who hear and keep the word of God are His
mother, brother, and sister.
Harrington is certain that the groups in segments 1 and 3 are the same.
This is not at all certain, for Form Criticism shows us that many Gospel
passages are pieced together out of units that once were separate. Here in
particular, the interjection of the charge of the scribes could at least
suggest that units 1 and 3 are not connected. But Harrington is certain:
"For Mark [3. 31-35] is a continuation of vv. 20-21... his own did not
receive him." And he adds, incredibly, that the passage "may be seen to
distinguish those who stood outside the sphere of salvation and those who
are within it." Which implies that Mary was outside the sphere of
salvation!
Still further, even if we would think she was in the group in segment one
of Mk 3:20-35, it would not follow that she too did not believe in Him. She
may well have gone along to try to restrain those who did not believe. Even
very ordinary Mothers are apt to believe in their sons even when the
evidence is against them.
Vatican II warns us in Dei verbum §12: "Since Sacred Scripture must be read
and interpreted with the same Spirit by whom it was written, to rightly get
the sense of the sacred texts we must look not less diligently to the
content and unity of the whole of Scripture, taking into account the living
Tradition of the Church, and the analogy of faith." So one Evangelist
definitely cannot contradict another.
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