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Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: I27-INV |
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IMMACULATE CONCEPTION, THE . This dogma of the Roman Catholic Church was defined as " of faith " by Pope Pius IX. on the 8th of December 1854 in the following terms: " The doctrine which holds that the Blessed Virgin Mary, from the first instant of her conception, was, by a most singular grace and privilege of Almighty God, in view of the merits of Jesus Christ, the Redeemer of the human race, preserved from all stain of Original
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i From the Bull Ineffabilis Deus.2 See Passaglia's work
It is true that he is here speaking directly of actual or -personal sin. But his argument is that all men are sinners; that they are so through original depravity; that this original depravity may be overcome by the grace of God, and he adds that he does not know but that Mary may have had sufficient grace to over-come sin " of every sort " (omni ex paste). It seems to have been St Bernard
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St Thomas Aquinas, the greatest of the medieval scholastics, refused to admit the Immaculate Conception, on the ground that, unless the Blessed Virgin had at one time or other been one of the sinful, she could not justly be said to have been redeemed by Christ.5 St Bonaventura (d. 1274), second only to St Thomas in his influence on the Christian schools of his age, hesitated to accept it for a similar reason.6 The celebrated John Duns Scotus (d. 1308), a Franciscan like St Bonaventura, argued, on the contrary, that from a rational point of view it was certainly as little derogatory to the merits of Christ to assert that Mary was by him preserved from all taint of sin, as to say that she first contracted it and then was delivered? His arguments, combined with a better acquaintance with the language of the early Fathers, gradually prevailed in the schools of the Western Church. In 1387 the university of Paris strongly condemned the opposite view. In 1483 Pope Sixtus IV., who had already (1476) emphatically approved of the feast of the Conception, condemned those who ventured to assert that the doctrine of the Immaculate Conception was heretical, and forbade either side to claim a decisive victory until further action on the part of the Holy See. The council of Trent, after declaring that in its decrees on the subject of original sin it did not include " the blessed and immaculate Virgin Mary, Mother of God," renewed this prohibition:$ Pope Paul V. (d. 1651) ordered that no one, under severe penalties, should dare to assent in public acts " or disputations that the Blessed Virgin was conceived in original sin. Pope Gregory XV., shortly afterwards, extended this prohibition to private discussions, , allowing, however, the Dominicans to argue on the subjects among themselves. Clement XI., in 1708, extended the feast of the Conception to the whole Church as a holy day of obligation. Long before the middle of the 19th century the doctrine was universally. taught in the Roman Catholic Church. During the reign of Gregory XVI. the bishops in various countries began to press for a definition. Pius IX., at the beginning of his pontificate, and again after 1851, appointed commissions to investigate the whole subject, and he was advised that the doctrine was one .4 S. Bernardi Epist. clxxiv. 7. Summa theologia, part iii., quaest. 27, art. 3. e In librum III. sententiarum distinct. 3 quaest. i. art. 2. In librum III. sententiarum dist. 3 quaest. i. n. 4; Cfr. Distinct. 18 n. 15. Also the Summa theologia of Scotus (compiled by a disciple), part iii., quaest. 27, art. 2. 8 Seas. v. De peccato originale. which could be defined and that the time for a definition was opportune. On the 8th of December 1854 in a great
Bull Incffabilis Deus, in which the history of the doctrine is summarily traced, and which contains the definition as given above.The festival of the Conception of the Blessed Virgin, as distinct from her Nativity, was certainly celebrated in the Greek Church in the 7th century, as we learn from one of the canons of St Andrew of Crete (or of Jerusalem) who died about A.D. 900.1 There is some evidence that it was kept in Spain in the time of St Ildefonsus of Toledo (d. 667) and in southern Italy before A.D. 1000. In England it was known in the 12th century; a council of the province of Canterbury, in 1328, ascribes its introduction to St Anselm. It spread to France and Germany in the same century. It was extended to the whole church, as stated above, in 1708. It is kept, in the Western Church, on the 8th of December; the Greeks have always kept it one day later. The chief
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A useful statement of the doctrine with numerous references to the Fathers and scholastics is found in Hurter's Theologia Dogmatica (5th ed.), torn. i. tract
The state of Catholic belief in the middle of the 19th century is well brought out in La Croyance generale et constante de l'Eglise touchant l'immaculee conception de he bienheureuse Vierge Marie, published in 18J5 by Thomas M. J. Gousset (1992-1866), professor of moral theology at the grand seminary of Besancon, and successively archbishop of Besancon and cardinal archbishop of Reims. For English readers the doctrine, and the history of its definition, is clearly stated by Archbishop Ullathorne in The Immaculate Conception of the Mother of God (2nd ed., London, 1904). Dr F. G. Lee, in The Sinless Conception of the Mother of God; a Theological Essay (London, 1891) argued that the doctrine of the Immaculate Conception is a legitimate development of early church teaching. (^IJ. C. H.) End of Article: IMMACULATE CONCEPTION, THE If you wish, you can link directly to this article.
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