Mariology 1914

Page 1

—The

—For a deeper

a) Nestorms’ chief objection grew out of a

a) As mother of the Divine Logos, Mary
-
—Both Holy “plenitude* gra-

b) TheFathers delightedinunfoldingthelog­

a) The stateof grace, generally speaking, cul­

!
—The

friend and ally, and the Protogospel would con- i

* In regard to the first of these principles, the dogmatic

» \

meansofexpressdoctrinaljudgments, andpartly .1 practical, through the introductionof the festival 1 of theImmaculate Conception. | (

servile tent, but in His holy ark . . . and He preserved 11 His mother as one who was blessed from head to foot, 1

b) As regards Tradition, the dogma of the

a) That Mary was a virgin up to the time

thy father25 and I have sought thee sorrowing.” St. ; Augustine lays special emphasis on this point. “ Jo- ; seph,” he says, “ is said to be the father of Christ in the ■ same way in which he is understood to be the husband of .

c) These more or less aprioristic reasons find a

d) The most reliable source of Catholic belief

y) Is the bodily Assumption of the Blessed Virgin a 1

a) By voluntarily assuming the office of Dei­

b) We can quote no explicit confirmation of

c) The prohibition of the Seventh Ecumencial

b) The SecondEcumenical Council (Nicsea,A.

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