St. Edmund Campion Catechism Group - Series 4 Lesson 15
Preparation |
---|
Theology for Beginners: Chp 15. The Mother of God |
Theology for Beginners: All chapters |
Scripture: Lk 1-2 |
Magisterium: Pius XI Ineffabilis Deus; Pius XII Mystici Corporis, Munificentissimus Deus |
Penny Catechism: Q47-51, 160-168 |
Catechism of the Council of Trent (The Roman Catechism): The Creed Art. 3 |
Slides: Theological Notes; Co-Redemptorix & Mediatrix |
Catholic Encyclopedia: Immaculate Conception; Tomb of the BVM; |
Aquinas 101: The Blessed Virgin Mary |
Summa Theologica: 3aQ27-34 |
Companion to the Summa: Vol IV Chp 7 |
Ite Missa Est article: Co-Redemptorix |
The Blessed Virgin Mary
-
Recap:
Chapter 1: Why study theology?
- Theology is wisdom which is the knowledge of all things in relation to their highest cause.
- Theology is the greatest of all sciences by the sublimity of its object: God; and by the certitude of its conclusions: the certitude of faith.
- Theology teaches us our finality: the finality of man is the supernatural perfection of all his faculties - the greatest among these are his intellect and will.
- Theology helps us attain our finality in respect of ourselves by the perfect love of God.
- Theology helps us attain our finality in respect of our neighbour: if we love God, then we love everything He loves.
Chapter 2: Spirit
- A spirit is an immaterial intelligent living being (types: God, the angels and the souls of men)
- A soul is defined as the first principle of life of those material things which live (plants, animals and men). Plants, animals and men have souls, but only the souls of men are spirits.
- Properties: a spirit does not change in its being, does not corrupt, does not die (and is therefore eternal), has no mass, no shape, and no place e say that spirits are subsistent, which means that they have all they need to exist - they do not need a body to exist (like a plant or animal soul).
- Acts: to know and love. No material organ is required for these activities.
Chapter 3: The Infinite Spirit
God is the Infinite Spirit.
- God is all knowing, all loving, all powerful
- God is His own existence
- God was not created, He does not change, He has no past and future, God perpeturally in the present.
- God is naturally everywhere: by His essence (per essentiam), by His power (per potentiam), by His knowing (per scientiam)
- God is Actus Purus, He cannot ever be in potency to doing anything; He is His action. St. Thomas says that He is Actus Purus – one , simple, infinite and perfect action which is always in the present.
Chapter 4: The Blessed Trinity
The Blessed Trinity is the term used to express the central doctrine on the Christian religion: the truth that in the unity of the Godhead there are Three Persons, the Father, the Son and the Holy Ghost, these Three Persons being truly distinct from one another. There is one being, with one nature and there are Three Persons. The Blessed Trinity is known only by revelation, but can subsequently be explored by reason.Chapter 5: The Three Persons
In an attempt to understand as much as possible about the Blessed Trinity using revelation and our knowledge of the intellect and being (by the science of metaphysics), St. Thomas, building on theologians before him, makes a best attempt to reconcile the unity of God and the distinction of the Three Persons in God. God has one nature by which the Three Persons operate. The distinction of the Three Persons is discerned in the mutually opposed relations resulting from the act of God knowing Himself and loving Himself. The Persons, are distinguished as the subsistant relations or Paternity, Filiation and Passive Spiration.
Most of us, however, do not have a sufficient grasp of metaphysics to understand this complex theory and so a simpler one is proposed: In the act of knowing Himself, God generates a mental Word which is identical to the Generator. In the generator we discern the Father, in the generated, we discern the Son. These are Persons Who will naturally love each other, this love being personified in the Holy Ghost
Chapter 6: Making the doctrine of the Trinity a living and loved reality
For most people something like that happens when they embrace a mystery of the faith revealed to them by the Church:
- first there is an intellectual response as they grasp the theological exposition of the mystery
- then a vital response as the wonder and beauty of the mystery draws the observer in
- then a loving response as the mystery becomes a light and a power in our lives.
Chapter 7: Creation
God created all things from nothing and sustains all things in existence from moment to moment - all for His glory.
Chapter 8: The nature of man
Man is made in the image and likeness of God, possessing an intellect and a will. He is different from the animals because he loves the things he knows whereas animals are attracted to the thing they sense; and he can choose what to love whereas animals are attracted to things by nature. Man is capable of moral good or evil, whereas animals always act according to their nature. The ultimate purpose of man is to know and love God. The ultimate purpose of non-intelligent creatures is to adorn creation for the glory of God.
Chapter 9: The Supernatural Life
Man is made for the Beatific Vision (that perfect possesion of God in heaven) but with his fallen nature he is radically incapable both of attaining this end and remaining in this state of perfect happiness. By sanctifying grace, man begins a supernatural life here below. He is transformed by grace and receives supernatural virtues and the Gift of the Holy Ghost with grace. He begins to live and act with the life and actions of God. He enters on to the path to heaven and progresses towards it. If he die in a state of grace, then the supernatural life within him is perfected to the point of perfect bliss in union with God.
Chapter 10: The Fall
Despite sanctifying grace, supernatural virtues, Gifts of the Holy Ghost, and the praternatural gifts, Adam fell for the temptation to become like God. This was the sin of pride. He was left bereft of everything supernatural and praeternatural, and therefore incapble of attaining that for which he was made: the Beatific Vision. The act against the injunction of God is called Original Sin, the consequence of this act (the deprivation of grace and gifts) is also called Original Sin. The Divine Will ordained that the Original Sin (consequence) be suffered by all the offspring of Adam.
Chapter 11: The Redeemer
Jesus Christ is the Second Person of the Blessed Trinity Who operates through a divine nature as God, and through a human nature as man. The two natures are hypostatically united in the Person which allow him to act as a man but with acts of infinite value because His Person is divine. By taking to himself his human nature at the Incarnation, Jesus Christ was able to redeem mankind.
Chapter 12: The Redemption
The Redemption is the (a) freeing of man from the debt (in justice to God) of sin, and (b) the restoration of man's supernatural union with God. Our Lord Jesus Christ objectively redeemed all mankind by His Incarnation, Life, Passion & Death, Resurrection and Ascension into heaven. It is for man to participate in this act of redemption by living a life of faith, hope and charity through the means that the Church provides (teaching, laws and liturgy). Such a life constitutes mans subjective redemption.
Chapter 13: The Visible Church
The visible Church is a hierarchy of baptised souls united under one head (Jesus Christ) who adhere to the teaching of the Church, submit to the authority of the Church, and worship God with the liturgy of the Church. Members of the visible Church may be living members (when they are in a state of sanctifying grace) or dead members (when they are in mortal sin).
Chapter 14: The Mystical Body of Christ
The Church binds chosen men and angels together into one body, but unlike any other union in the universe, the reason of unity is above the order of nature, and immeasurably more intimate - it is the unity of living the same Life. Every living member of the Church lives by participating in the Divine Life (by sanctifying grace). Inevitable with this unity of Life, there is a unity of love and obedience and intention, but these are consequences rather than causes of unity. The unity by grace is called the Mystical Body of Christ. -
Mother of God
The Blessed Virgin Mary is always regrded in relation to her Son in the Mystery of the Blessed Trinity and the Mystery of the Incarnation:
- She is the only mother whose Son existed before she was conceived.
- She is the only mother chosen by her Son.
- She is the only mother prepared by her Son by her Immaculate Conception
- She is the only mother granted gifts by her Son
- by her preservation from concupiscence
- by her plenitude of grace
- by her Assumption into heaven -
Immaculate Conception of the Blessed Virgin Mary
Over the centuries there was a debate about whether she was conceived with original sin:
- As a daughter of Adam, surely she should suffer the consequences of Adam's sin.
- If Christ is her Saviour (cf. the Magnificat: "My spirit rejoiceth in God my Saviour"), then she must have been saved from sin.
- But then how could Satan be allowed to mark the perfect creature by which God be brought into the world?
The response enshrined as dogma by Pope Pius IX in 1854 by Ineffabilis Deus was that Mary was preserved from original sin at the moment of her conception. The redemption was applied to her as she came into existence so that she was never a moment under the dominion of Satan. -
Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary
From apostolic times it was held that the Blessed Virgin Mary was assumed into heaven. This was ensshrined in dogma by Pope Pius XII in Munificentissimus Deus in 1950.
The dogma was never really disputed except in the question: Did the Blessed Virgin Mary die before she was assumed into heaven?
- The majority of theologians thought 'yes' because it was most appropriate that (a) she offered her life in imitation of her Son and as a consummation of her love (to the point of death); and (b) that she had to die to participate in the Resurrection.
- Others believed that (a) her role as Co-Redemptorix finished with the death of her Son; (b) death, being the seperation of soul from the body, then (i) the body of the Blessed Virgin Mary would require a miracle to stop it falling into decay (solutions which require a multiplication of miracles are less weighty), (ii) the whereabouts of the soul is unexplained. In the declaration of the dogma, Munificentissimus Deus by Pope Pius XII, this question was left open: "At the end of her earthly life..." -
Our Mother
The Blessed Virgin Mary is our mother, not in the order of nature, but in the orer of grace. As mother of Jesus, she is mother of those who participate in the life of Jesus. -
Co-Redemptorix
The Blessed Virgin Mary is given the title of Co-Redemptorix because of the degree of her participation in the redemption wrought by her son:
- She brought forth the Redeemer into the world.
- She participated most closely in the suffering of her Son.
- She apples the fruits of the Redemption to souls by her intercession and universal mediation. -
Mediatrix of all graces
The Blessed Virgin Mary is given the title of Mediatrix of All Graces (merit de congruo) because:
- She brought forth the source of all grace into the world;
- To her was conferred the motherhood in grace of all the members of the mystical Body of Christ - "Woman, behold thy son."
- She is Mother of the Church
- She apples the fruits of the Redemption to souls by her intercession and universal mediation.