Friday, April 25, 2025

Conversion or Heritage?


Guess Who Converted to Christianity for Easter!
Apologetics Roadshow | 25 April 2025
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LYgHIOu1bA8


1:23 Could the tweet be by a Christian representative of the state of Palestine?

Meaning someone who was a Christian since he grew up?

I mean, Christian Palestinians are a thing. I even would say they are a prophecied thing, foreseen in Isaiah 11 and coming to pass from Acts 2 and Acts 8.

Jen Thomson
@jenthomson1046
I think so. I watched "The Stones Cry Out" a documentary (on You Tube) on the generations of Christians in that area. They seem to have been forgotten about and they truly suffered a massive amount... Or they have been 'airbrushed' out of the narrative. I don't know?

Hans-Georg Lundahl
@hglundahl
@jenthomson1046 Yes, can you link to the youtube?


[I left another comment, which disappeared ... or two. Like, Christian Palestinians are a thing and even a prophetic thing, prophecied in Isaiah 11 and fulfilled from Acts 2 and Acts 8. Or like, if David Wood didn't want to believe me, how about believing the Jew Corey Gil-Shuster who actually pretended to ask Christian Palestinians in a video of his ... Palestinian Christians: Are you willing to forgive Israelis?.]

The Religious Hippie Has a Plea


Pope Francis is Gone and So Many Catholics are Getting Him Wrong.
The Religious Hippie | 25 April 2025
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5QOhrFyLG74


Responding to successive parts of her plea:

To some, dying is a grace which could even harbour salvation.

Outwardly, he did not confess the faith and was not pope. But his death exonerated him from the suspicion of being one of the two guys mentioned in Apocalypse 19:20, and perhaps God saw a faith that didn't manifest outwardly.

I don't think it's hateful to feel like this. And I hope, even if I might not have the courage to accept it, for death rather than to come into a place of irredeemable evil.




Some people, and I think among them "Catholics" have scrutinised me under a microscope.

They have decided "he's not fit for prime time on the internet", I have a large number of views, but most are from people who deliberately want to make it difficult for me to get more of them, to continue, let alone to get a publisher.

I think a man who recently died may have been one of them. A man you called a saint was another of them, I had more charity left for his soul 20 years ago.




St. Alphonsus Liguori also held, with Sts Robert Bellarmine and Francis of Sales and against Cajetan, whom the SSPX is favouring, that outward heresy on part of even a real Pope results in automatic loss of office. Automatic. Contrary to Cajetan, it doesn't take a decision of the Church.

St. Robert also held a real Pope probably couldn't become a heretic after validly assuming papacy, but also that heresy already there in the moment of the apparent election would render the election automatically null, and that was explicit Church law in his time, since Paul IV, I think. The bull was formulated so that even prior heresy already repented of would make the election null, that much was part of human Church law, but the part about heresy still not retracted when accepting apparently papacy, it would rather be a question of divine law.

And whether he's heretical in the interior forum before God is beside the point. Since automatic loss of office has to be knowable at least to some part of the Church, it is the exterior confession which counts.




If I get you right, your now husband was a homeless fellow, who did nothing except praying and you fell for him?

No. Exactly. He earned a living.

I TRY TO earn a living, and this as a writer on internet. If anyone describes my writing as "petty internet" drama, that's one way of stopping me to get a publisher.

I am not sure that YOU deserve what I wrote here. But someone who prayed for me to see your video certainly does. Namely that someone who is judging me, who is maligning everything I wrote and write as "petty internet drama" ... and who is spreading that lie to "responsible people" all around me, you know what category I mean, the kind who can say "that guy is irresponsible, we need to help him come around" ... someone is saying this about me. When I say I am a Catholic and DON'T say I think Evolutionists are non-Catholics, they pretend I'm perhaps unconsciously inconsistent, I would be so ashamed when I found out such and such a person thinks Catholics are really Evolutionists. When I say I am a Catholic and DO say I think Evolutionists are non-Catholics, I'm being hateful, and need to be marginalised for that reason.

The man you consider as the late Pope was pretty certainly involved. People obeying him or reputed to do so, like archbishop and parish priests in Paris were without even the shadow of a doubt.

Thursday, April 24, 2025

Catholics Don't Believe in Parallel Humanities


Aliens, Catechism called "CCC" · Catholics Don't Believe in Parallel Humanities

Who scare Matt Fradd? (Wolves in today's "Professional Catholicism")
Daniel O'Connor | 23 April 2025
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eEPu4tN9g1U


1:59 Can I guess that Creationism is off limits with some?

Can I guess Geocentrism is even more off limits, as I think Levi J. Pingleton found out?

32:22 Could it be that he was after all told not to take you by his spiritual director after "Pope Francis" or someone close to him had got wind of the affair?

Bergoglio has pretty much avoided being the False Prophet by dying before the time when that man will be cast alive into the lake of fire.

34:59 From my experience with Rev. Anders Piltz OP Tert. it very much need not be "things could happen" (which is a threat), that was never how he tried to get me to cancel anyone, no, it was more like a) explaining the Trad movement (in an unflattering way, partly psychologising) or, when that didn't work, b) explaining my attraction to it in a psychologising way.

Can you imagine there are some people who would not like to encourage someone in an "ultimately unhealthy" neurosis? I think there are too many people who cave in to that kind of pressure, which isn't so much a threat as it is shaming.

36:49 On your channel, the oldest youtube is from 2010, your pilgrimage to Medjugorje, 10 Aug 2010.

39:04 the one truth

I think there is more than one truth he'll attack or try to do the opposite of, and so, there are more than one truth that could sabotage his rule.

I'm getting cancelled too.

Doctrinal: geocentrism, young earth creationism, not buying into mind being a byproduct of matter
Historic: I'm thoroughly pro-Middle Ages and pro-Historic Christendom, I also believe the "heroic legend" parts of mythologies are mostly true (in other words, your ancestor Conor Mac Nessa existed, as did his Druid Cathbhadh, as did Cúchulainn), canonic age 14 / 12 wasn't just a legal abstraction
Moral: against abortion, contraception, forced sterilisation, lobotomy, psychiatry, against school compulsion and for teens having the right to marry, legally
Procedural: I believe academic consensus sometimes is wrong and can be braved in polemics that don't follow academic protocol.

And obviously, one "human number" is 2666 which is the number of Apollo, if you add up the Greek letters of his name [all five cases], the one context when "Apollo" refers to a human rather than demonic idol being the father of Asclepius. One of his names (from a different context) is Apollyon, Homer called him so in Iliad song one.

"whenever you see something promoted 42:15 under the heading of oh aliens wouldn't refute Catholicism that is always just a 42:22 slippery and underhanded way of promoting the fundamental tenants of the 42:28 ET deception because the statement itself is a complete non sequator to truism cath Catholicism is absolutely 42:35 and certainly true so therefore nothing can disprove it you could put anything 42:42 in the blank and say it wouldn't disprove Catholicism and that's true statement and any tautology is trivial 42:49 in this case it's pointless so when people put these things up saying aliens wouldn't disprove the faith it is a 42:55 backdoor Trojan horse it's a way of defending the very deception that we're 43:00 discussing here"


Brilliant observation.

Note very well that some were interpreting Providentissimus Deus as "saying" that Heliocentrism wouldn't refute Catholicism. More recently some have taken that approach to Evolution as well.

As you may know, one common meaning of "Fundamentalist" is "I believe in the Bible and therefore Evolution and Millions of Years are wrong" or "I believe in the Bible and therefore Heliocentrism is wrong" ...

44:47 One item from the Middle Ages is when St. Virgil of Salzburg was under suspicion of heresy.

It's sometimes towted as evidence for "flat earth Christianity" which it isn't but here is the story.

It seems St. Virgil had used the word "antipodes" in the modern sense, a piece of land opposite to the piece of land you are standing your feet on.

However, in a previous discussion, St. Augustine had denied the existence of "antipodes" in a very different sense.

a) No one could have another origin than Adam and more recently Noah;
b) If it were possible to sail across the great seas East or West, we would have done so;
c) therefore whatever possible land could lie on the opposite part of the Earth would certainly be inaccessible from where we are, and therefore uninhabited.

St. Virgil got cleared of heresy when he clarified that no, he didn't refer to a parallel humanity. In other words, the affirmation of parallel humanities is sinful and heretical.

56:04 Please note, I once started writing a fan fiction on the Narniad.

You may know the premiss of CSL was a parallel incarnation. My fan fic specifically denied it. If Narnia was real, that would be Jesus, in His human body, present in Narnia under the species of a talking lion and NOT a parallel incarnation into a talking lion. Hence the chapter about Bethlehem is called "where Aslan was a lion cub" ...

Then I came to note, well, this doesn't only jar with CSL's premiss, but even with important parts of the story. I have not gotten any well formulated solutions, so the project is lying fallow for that reason, mostly since 2014 ...

Tuesday, April 22, 2025

Giving the Word to Father Jason Charron (Byzantine Catholic Ukrainian)


Differring from Mr. Taunton on Ukrano-Russian Relations (he could be giving a pov he didn't share) and on Progress and St. Thomas · Giving the Word to Father Jason Charron (Byzantine Catholic Ukrainian)

Steel Manning the Pro Russia Position (Fr. Jason Charron)
Matt Fradd | 22 April 2025
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hWdYsvcQ6Vg


"we don't want secular relativism"

0:54 ... that argument is for very selective use, on the Russian homefront ....

2:50 sth "which dictators don't do" ...

Fr. Jason Charron just said that the Austrofascist "dictators" weren't such, since the changes to the constitution in a time of chaos were drawing on a paragraph of the constitution of the First Republic.

Das war sehr schön, es hat mich sehr gefreut!

3:30 If you want criticism of Russia from the right ...
a) I've mentioned that Ukraine is more Christian, over 80 % versus over 60 %
b) I've mentioned that Ukraine, not just in raw numbers, but in proportion, has fewer abortions.

While I'm no fan of Zelensky, personally (he has a weird sense of humour), I don't think Ukraine should pay for having elected him!

Differring from Mr. Taunton on Ukrano-Russian Relations (he could be giving a pov he didn't share) and on Progress and St. Thomas


Differring from Mr. Taunton on Ukrano-Russian Relations (he could be giving a pov he didn't share) and on Progress and St. Thomas · Giving the Word to Father Jason Charron (Byzantine Catholic Ukrainian)

Assorted retorts from yahoo boards and elsewhere: Differring from Mr. Taunton on Ukrano-Russian Relations (he could be giving a pov he didn't share) and on Progress and St. Thomas · New blog on the kid: A Video by "Capturing Christianity" on Rhett McLaughlin, My Comments, Last One First, Then Timestamp by Timestamp

Why does the West keep getting Russia wrong?
Larry Alex Taunton | 22.IV.2025, Easter Tuesday
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QyOjaXUy_IM


47:34 Russia as we think of it didn't exist.

I think, in God's and the Blessed Virgin Mary's eyes, Ukraine is heir to Kievan Rus.

Muscovy starts later. And there have only been two supreme rulers Vladimir in Muscovy. Lenin and Putin. Putin is Vladimir II of Muscovy. Zelensky is Vladimir at least V of Kievan Rus ...

Now, admittedly it also stretched into Belarus and modern Russia. AND the part in modern Russia that preceded Kiev was Novgorod ... a stronghold of Paganism well after 988.

Julia Panteleeva
@juliapanteleeva500
To write so is to absolutely not know how Rus lived in that before-Mongol period. The name Kievan Rus was not the name of the land (as we don’t say “Parisian France” or “London England”), it was given by historians as the name of the period of Rus when Kiev was its capital (compare to Vladimir Rus). At that time no countries no nations (as we think of them) now existed. There was a great territory where Eastern Slavs (future Russians, Belorussians and Ukrainians) lived all together plus some smaller ethnicities. The territory and the people got the name Rus. Most possible the name Rus was brought by Normans who started the dynasty of the Rurikovichi, were shortly Slavicized and reigned all over the territory of Rus with the capital in Kiev. The territory was one because of the common language (later, after the Mongol invasion it split into 3), common church hierarchy, common law, one multiple dynasty in all the principalities (those war-like siblings were from time to time fighting with each other because of their ambitions) but all of them most of the time recognised the supremacy of the Prince of Kiev. For example Vladimir the St. whom the author mentioned in the video had 12 sons and 7 of them went to reign in northern principalities like Nowgorod, Smolensk, Polotsk etc. Jaroslav Mudry/the Wise spent half of his life in northern principalities then moved to Kiev. It was characteristic for all of them. Before the Mongols’ invasion Kiev got weakened by multiple invasions of the nomads and the capital was moved to Vladimir (Vladimir-Suzdal which are lying very close). During the Mongols Rus went to parts: southern (Ukranians) went soon to Poland, western (Belorussian) was protected by Lithuanian Princes and formed first the Lithuanian and Russian Principality but then made a union with Poles (when Jagailo married Jadviga, was baptised Catholic together with his people and became the King of the new common state). Nothern-Eastern Rus stayed under Mongols for almost 300 years and when liberated, became an independent state with the uniting centre in Moscow. All 3 branches of Eastern Slavs were isolated because of the invasion but they are of the same origin, same age and same rights.

Hans-Georg Lundahl
@hglundahl
@juliapanteleeva500 "The name Kievan Rus was not the name of the land"

The Weimar Republic was not the name of the land. The actual name of the land was not changed from 1870 to 1943, "Deutsches Reich".

Kievan Rus is a convenient label for historiography, like "Heptarchy" in England.

"Before the Mongols’ invasion Kiev got weakened by multiple invasions of the nomads and the capital was moved to Vladimir (Vladimir-Suzdal which are lying very close)."

Is this in the Primary Chronicle?

I know there was a move by one Kievan Metropolitan to Suzdal. He's "ancestral" to the Patriarchs of Moscow.

But a brief move of the Capital from Kiev to Vladimir is hardly proof that Vladimir-Suzdal-Tver rather than less Tatarised Kiev and (I think) Polotsk are the closest heirs to Rus (from the Kievan era).

Also, the old Rus Novgorod, if I recall correctly, was a Hanseatic city, and when it was conquered by Muscovites, it was demolished. I think that was under Ivan the terrible.

I agree about same rights in human dignity, but when it comes to spiritual heirs of St. Volodimir, and of the dedication to the Blessed Virgin, I would say that Ukraine is closer than Russia. That's why (my guess) Our Lady in Fatima asked for Russia to be consecrated. Ukraine and Belarus were under Christian rule, in Muscovy the feet were kissed of Pagan warlords who wanted to be treated as "here it is I who am god" ...

@juliapanteleeva500 My bad, the Hanseatic city was during the Tatar overlordship.


47:55 It's like saying the US were founded in London.

The first capital of the Thirteen Colonies wasn't Washington DC, it was .... London. You know, prior to a tax dispute and all that back in 1776.

So, the action of Putin is a bit like if Trump tried to make UK 51st State.

47:59 As a Swede and back in 1988 a friend of an Ukrainian Uniate Catholic who duly celebrated the Baptism of St. Volodimir in 988, I obviously add myself to the Ukrainian choir disputing that. JUST to be clear.

Also, Ukraine was part time under Poland Lithuania (which certainly beats being under the Tatars), and that means Ukrainians were among the guys who saved Vienna from Islamisation in 1683.

54:55 When Russia had a go at an Industrial Revolution, fortunately Ukraine missed out on it, and it led to a starvation such that Lenin rubbed his hands and said "this is Revolutionary potential" ...

That's why the next failure of crops in Russia proper, in the Volga valley was offset by plundering Ukraine and making a starvation there.

"We can't give the guys the impression that Makhnow and the Peasant Army (black and green armies) had it right, we must boost the image of Industrialism" ...

Said and done, the manmade starvation of ill managed industrialism was displaced to Ukraine ... it did for Ukrainian loyalty to Russia (if any was left) what an earlier manmade starvation of Capitalism had done on Ireland when it came to loyalty to England. "We can't give Irish Catholic farm hands the impression they can just get wheat for free" ... (which wheat they had grown and when the contractual potatoes were failing), and well, one or two generations later, there is a certain Easter Uprising of 1916.

55:36 Evolution claims man came from creatures about the intelligence of chimps or gorillas.

Progressivism claims modern man came from the Palaeolithic.

Note, I would agree we came THROUGH the Palaeolithic, but I would say, compared to most pre-Flood areas (Neanderthals excepted) and compared to post-Flood times from Neolithic on, Palaeolithic is as marginal in human conditions as Industrial Revolution. About 350 years in each case.

58:15 I would actually say it has more to do with being heirs to the Ingalls family than with being heirs to the Vanderbilts.

In other words, you can thank God that the Industrial Revolution came later to you than to England. And has impacted less.

Equally, Ruralism rather than Industrialism tends to make Germans, Italians and Irish optimistic and resiliant.

58:33 What I distinctly love less about that comment is the idea of displacing Muslims and Christians (order of quantity) or Christians and Muslims (order of importance) for not being Jews.

59:42 I would say, from the Tucker Carlson interview, Putin is an Atheist. Or possibly Pantheist and if so probably Stoic or Kantian or Spinozan school.

There are far more real Christians and far more Christians at least professing to be such overall in Ukraine. I know your daughter had a different experience of it, but still.

64.4% Christianity = Russia.
87.3% Christianity = Ukraine.

1:01:15 Correction.

He's not summarising the MIND of God. He's summarising the REVELATION of God, or in other words "essential doctrines" ... 4000 pages essential doctrines? With some indepth explanation, yes.

He didn't much bother about doctrines which he didn't consider essential. The exciting thing is, when St. Thomas is lengthy, he's excited. He's pretty convinced that the opposing position to his own is likely either to damn you or at least to seriously impair your capacity for theological reflection.

1:02:16 Riccioli who didn't believe the Prime Mover argument was factually correct summarised it as God turning the visible Heavens as a whole around Earth, and dragging Sun, Moon and Stars, along with Heaven around Earth.

Instead Riccioli believed Heaven was empty and immobile [a void cannot move] on the levels we see and only indivual bodies move. The coordination of them still would require a God able to give orders to all of them, but OK.

The problem with trying to combine Heliocentrism with Prime Mover is, without all of the universe participating in one movement and that helping the one ecosystem we live in the middle of, there goes a chance to refute the idea that there are many prime moverS instead. See Prima Pars, Q 11, A 3, which speaks of God being one (as distinct from existing in the first place) where the third way is precisely this.

First from His simplicity. For it is manifest that the reason why any singular thing is "this particular thing" is because it cannot be communicated to many: since that whereby Socrates is a man, can be communicated to many; whereas, what makes him this particular man, is only communicable to one. Therefore, if Socrates were a man by what makes him to be this particular man, as there cannot be many Socrates, so there could not in that way be many men. Now this belongs to God alone; for God Himself is His own nature, as was shown above (I:3:3). Therefore, in the very same way God is God, and He is this God. Impossible is it therefore that many Gods should exist.


This doesn't directly go back to I:2:3 or Five Ways, you have to pass by Q3.

Secondly, this is proved from the infinity of His perfection. For it was shown above (I:4:2) that God comprehends in Himself the whole perfection of being. If then many gods existed, they would necessarily differ from each other. Something therefore would belong to one which did not belong to another. And if this were a privation, one of them would not be absolutely perfect; but if a perfection, one of them would be without it. So it is impossible for many gods to exist. Hence also the ancient philosophers, constrained as it were by truth, when they asserted an infinite principle, asserted likewise that there was only one such principle.


Dito, but Q4.

Thirdly, this is shown from the unity of the world. For all things that exist are seen to be ordered to each other since some serve others. But things that are diverse do not harmonize in the same order, unless they are ordered thereto by one. For many are reduced into one order by one better than by many: because one is the per se cause of one, and many are only the accidental cause of one, inasmuch as they are in some way one. Since therefore what is first is most perfect, and is so per se and not accidentally, it must be that the first which reduces all into one order should be only one. And this one is God.


Here we are dealing with Prime Mover as per Q2, AND St. Thomas is saying Sirius and Vega are parts of the ecosystem we live in, they are not some kind of other world with Tatooine attached ... much as I loved Star Wars back in 1977.

1:02:59 Sorry, Larry.

P as in Phail for Thomism. He specifically denied the infinite regress.

It is certain, and evident to our senses, that in the world some things are in motion.


So far we agree on what he said.

Now whatever is in motion is put in motion by another, for nothing can be in motion except it is in potentiality to that towards which it is in motion; whereas a thing moves inasmuch as it is in act.


Note, you are giving a Kalam or Earliest mover argument, by substituting "was" for "is" ... St. Thomas does not recognise inertia as an infinite potentiality to remain moving in the same direction, but on top of that, circular astromovements aren't staying in the same direction, so, they would even on Newton's view need to be "set in motion" while it happens, they are a motion that cannot sustain itself.

I skip a lot, since it's examples from other motion types than locomotion, as these better illustrate act and potency.

Now it is not possible that the same thing should be at once in actuality and potentiality in the same respect, but only in different respects. For what is actually hot cannot simultaneously be potentially hot; but it is simultaneously potentially cold. It is therefore impossible that in the same respect and in the same way a thing should be both mover and moved, i.e. that it should move itself.


This underlines how Newton's inertia is definitely not the explanation model for St. Thomas. To Newton, inertia means a thing moving itself because it is already moving. This St. Thomas argues cannot happen.

Therefore, whatever is in motion must be put in motion by another. If that by which it is put in motion be itself put in motion, then this also must needs be put in motion by another, and that by another again.


Here he is speaking of a regress. To him, and I would respectfully disagree, God is only moving the sphere of the fix stars, then that is moving the sphere of Saturnus, that the one of Jupiter, that the one of Mars, that the one of the Sun, that the one of Mercury, of Venus, of the Moon (I may have misplaced Mercury and Venus in relation to each other) and then the sphere of the Moon, by friction, moves the atmosphere West (hence winds of passage) which move the oceans West (hence the Oceanic currents). Now, he does not say that the regress is infinite. Once you track a windgust to a cyclone, a cyclone to a wind of passage at the equator, that to the sphere of the Moon and so on up to the sphere of the Fix stars you are not required to look further for this kind of moved movers.

But this cannot go on to infinity, because then there would be no first mover, and, consequently, no other mover; seeing that subsequent movers move only inasmuch as they are put in motion by the first mover; as the staff moves only because it is put in motion by the hand. Therefore it is necessary to arrive at a first mover, put in motion by no other; and this everyone understands to be God.


1:04:16 More like one Protestant perversion of the Summa.

If you want an indepth argument why Thomists shouldn't be Calvinists, I'd refer to Scholastic Answers, an Amazing channel. (Just a bit Novus Ordo on the edges and so ...).

1:04:35 Education of St. Thomas: Plato, Aristotle, and a few more.
Education of Calvin: Cicero.

As a Latinist and non-huge fan of Cicero and Seneca, I don't play connoisseur of education, but enjoy the one whose education chimes with me and mine ... (CSL loved Plato and respected Aristotle, and found Cicero "a great bore" but he was certainly neither a great scientist nor a great philosopher, his glory is the pater patriae and the appeals to Caesar to be clement after the condemnations of Verres being the opposite ...).

1:04:46 His footnoting may be superb to his own writings, but he's not providing the best footnotes to the endings of Mark and Matthew. I have read his wheedling* around the proof texts for Apostolic Succession and for non-Cessationism.

Speaking of which, a much better exegete, St. Thomas, had sth to say about "mythoi" or rather Latin "fables" in Thessalonians, I believe, I am behind on translating that passage, unlike the Summa, the Bible commentaries of St. Thomas are only available in Latin.

* I meant weaselling. My bad.

Monday, April 21, 2025

If the Garden Tomb is NOT the Correct Tomb of Jesus, It May Have Some Other Significance


Miraculous Healings in Israel
CBN News | 19 April 2025
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PvshkQcIhqI


Rogelio Sanchez
@rogeliosanchez4221
It's not the place but the power of GOD that heals.

...

Hans-Georg Lundahl
@hglundahl
God however has a habit of using the power to endorse persons and places and objects.

God endorsed the Ark of the Covenant, by having it topple and destroy an idol.

God endorsed the preaching of Paul and Barnabas (I think the other one was) by the healings from handkerchiefs that had touched their clothes.

God has also endorsed Calvary, the Cross, the Holy Sepulchre.


Tomb of Lazarus? There is already one.

Tomb of one prophet raised on Good Friday?

Dialogue on the Immaculate Conception


What's the "Church Magisterium" in Catholicism? (From a former Protestant)
LizziesAnswers | 17 April 2025
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aGuEsnv3_SU


1:29 You have just said that CCC §283 is not an act of the Magisterium.

With Pope Michael II, you would have the Tridentine Catechism, which undoubtedly is.

Dialogue:

Prime Time
@prime_time_youtube
a) 1:15 – “The Magisterium does not create new theology; it guards the apostolic tradition.”
Let’s break this down simply:
1. Did any Church Father before the 8th century teach that Mary was conceived without original sin? No.
2. Did Fathers explicitly reject this idea? Many: St. Augustine, St. Fulgentius of Ruspe, St. Basil, St. Hilary, St. John Chrysostom, etc.
3. Was the idea popular in the 13th century? No. Even St. Thomas Aquinas rejected it, teaching that only Christ had a sinless conception.

To be clear: I’m not denying that Mary was sinless or pure, what I’m rejecting is the claim that she was conceived without original sin.

Conclusion: If no Church Father ever taught it, many actively rejected it, and it remained unpopular well into the 13th century... then there is no epistemological JUSTIFICATION to claim this was part of the apostolic deposit.

Hans-Georg Lundahl
@hglundahl
"No."

Su mone hagne, su mone eulogemene ... Greek (and parallelled by Coptic) ending of the prayer called in Latin Sub tuum praesidium, which is a Coptic Christmas song from 2nd C.

"St. Augustine, St. Fulgentius of Ruspe, St. Basil, St. Hilary, St. John Chrysostom"

St. Augustine, I knew, and Sts Hilary and Fulgentius as well as St. Thomas are influenced by him.

For Sts. Basil and Chrysostom, I'd like details.

It would seem that Palamas taught the Immaculate Conception, the Old Believers defended it against the Skirzhal, and I think this comes from an East Church tradition that then came back to the West and ousted the position of St. Augustine.

The historic question is, did this happen through Anne of Kiev, a French Queen, who came to Paris pre-schism, or did it happen only later through Crusaders familiarising themselves with the Eastern Tradition?

Hans-Georg Lundahl
I checked for Sts. Basil and Chrysostom.

In the same manner St. Basil writes in the fourth century: he sees in the sword, of which Simeon speaks, the doubt which pierced Mary's soul (Epistle 260). St. Chrysostom accuses her of ambition, and of putting herself forward unduly when she sought to speak to Jesus at Capharnaum (Matthew 12:46; Chrysostom, Homily 44 on Matthew).

I would answer these two things do not necessarily describe sins. They are movements of the soul which could lead to sins, but never led to sins in Her. As you said you believed in Her sinlessness, you'd agree.

Now, I got this from Catholic Encyclopedia, and here are a few other patristic quotes they give:

The Fathers call Mary the tabernacle exempt from defilement and corruption (Hippolytus, "Ontt. in illud, Dominus pascit me");
Origen calls her worthy of God, immaculate of the immaculate, most complete sanctity, perfect justice, neither deceived by the persuasion of the serpent, nor infected with his poisonous breathings ("Hom. i in diversa");
Ambrose says she is incorrupt, a virgin immune through grace from every stain of sin ("Sermo xxii in Ps. cxviii);
Maximus of Turin calls her a dwelling fit for Christ, not because of her habit of body, but because of original grace ("Nom. viii de Natali Domini");
Theodotus of Ancyra terms her a virgin innocent, without spot, void of culpability, holy in body and in soul, a lily springing among thorns, untaught the ills of Eve, nor was there any communion in her of light with darkness, and, when not yet born, she was consecrated to God ("Orat. in S. Dei Genitr.").
In refuting Pelagius St. Augustine declares that all the just have truly known of sin "except the Holy Virgin Mary, of whom, for the honour of the Lord, I will have no question whatever where sin is concerned" (On Nature and Grace 36).
Mary was pledged to Christ (Peter Chrysologus, "Sermo cxl de Annunt. B.M.V.");
it is evident and notorious that she was pure from eternity, exempt from every defect (Typicon S. Sabae);
she was formed without any stain (St. Proclus, "Laudatio in S. Dei Gen. ort.", I, 3);
she was created in a condition more sublime and glorious than all other natures (Theodorus of Jerusalem in Mansi, XII, 1140);
when the Virgin Mother of God was to be born of Anne, nature did not dare to anticipate the germ of grace, but remained devoid of fruit (John Damascene, "Hom. i in B. V. Nativ.", ii).
The Syrian Fathers never tire of extolling the sinlessness of Mary. St. Ephraem considers no terms of eulogy too high to describe the excellence of Mary's grace and sanctity: "Most holy Lady, Mother of God, alone most pure in soul and body, alone exceeding all perfection of purity ...., alone made in thy entirety the home of all the graces of the Most Holy Spirit, and hence exceeding beyond all compare even the angelic virtues in purity and sanctity of soul and body . . . . my Lady most holy, all-pure, all-immaculate, all-stainless, all-undefiled, all-incorrupt, all-inviolate spotless robe of Him Who clothes Himself with light as with a garment . . . flower unfading, purple woven by God, alone most immaculate" ("Precationes ad Deiparam" in Opp. Graec. Lat., III, 524-37).
To St. Ephraem she was as innocent as Eve before her fall, a virgin most estranged from every stain of sin, more holy than the Seraphim, the sealed fountain of the Holy Ghost, the pure seed of God, ever in body and in mind intact and immaculate ("Carmina Nisibena").
Jacob of Sarug says that "the very fact that God has elected her proves that none was ever holier than Mary; if any stain had disfigured her soul, if any other virgin had been purer and holier, God would have selected her and rejected Mary". It seems, however, that Jacob of Sarug, if he had any clear idea of the doctrine of sin, held that Mary was perfectly pure from original sin ("the sentence against Adam and Eve") at the Annunciation.


Prime Time
@ None of the quotes you provided support the idea that Mary’s conception was without sin. At most, they defend her sinlessness... which I already affirmed I believe in.

Augustine (like I do) believed that Mary was sinless, but in his commentary on Psalm 34 he explicitly states that Jesus was born of sinful flesh and that Mary died because of sin, like Adam. Saint Fulgentius of Ruspe, a follower of Augustine, even wrote: "[Mary] was conceived in iniquity" (Epistula 17.13).

Regarding metaphors and typology like the Tabernacle, none of them state that Mary’s conception was without sin. In fact, typological parallels never claim more than what they intend to teach, and freedom from original sin was NEVER their focus. For instance, Saint Proclus called the Virgin Mary the Ark of Noah and the fleece of Gideon, Jacob's Ladder, and so on... while Cyril said Jesus was the Ark of the Covenant, not Mary... cause she was the Temple.

So once again, no Church Father taught that Mary was conceived without original sin. Many affirmed her purity and sinlessness (as I do), but several also taught that only Christ’s conception was immaculate.

You must be aware that the Orthodox, the Coptic do not affirm the Immaculate Conception as a dogma, but as an optional tradition.

Hans-Georg Lundahl
@prime_time_youtube It so happens optional traditions end up as dogmas.

"Mary the tabernacle exempt from defilement and corruption"

Not just "the tabernacle" but also "exempt from defilement and corruption. St. Hippolytus was anterior to Sts Augustine and Fulgentius. If Mary had had original sin or concupiscence, at conception, She would have been freed and not totally exempt from defilement and corruption.

"Regarding metaphors and typology like the Tabernacle, none of them state that Mary’s conception was without sin."

A metaphor or typology doesn't directly state a thing, it shows its fittingness.

But if above quotes weren't sufficiently explicit for you, how about St. John of Damascus?

St. John Damascene (Or. i Nativ. Deip., n. 2) esteems the supernatural influence of God at the generation of Mary to be so comprehensive that he extends it also to her parents. He says of them that, during the generation, they were filled and purified by the Holy Ghost, and freed from sexual concupiscence. Consequently according to the Damascene, even the human element of her origin, the material of which she was formed, was pure and holy. This opinion of an immaculate active generation and the sanctity of the "conceptio carnis" was taken up by some Western authors; it was put forward by Petrus Comestor in his treatise against St. Bernard and by others.


Note, while Peter the Eater may not ring a bell, he is not a nobody, he is the author of Historia Scholastica, a standard work on Biblical history for the rest of the Middle Ages.

Prime Time
@hglundahl “Optional traditions end up as dogmas”
False. They have explicitly stated that there is no basis for considering this a dogma.

“Mary the tabernacle exempt from defilement and corruption”
This is the third time I’ve said that I already believe in the Virgin’s sinlessness. Hippolytus never said anything about her conception. Augustine and Fulgentius explicitly talked about her conception. Your dishonesty is offensive.

“It shows its fittingness”
Exactly, and yet they never said her conception was without sin.

John of Damascus
He wrote that in the 8th century, which is exactly when I said this idea began to emerge... and it wasn't even popular in the 13th Century.

Hans-Georg Lundahl
@prime_time_youtube " Hippolytus never said anything about her conception."

You still miss the distinction between "exempt" (i e from the very first) and "cleansed" (i e from later on).

"Augustine and Fulgentius explicitly talked about her conception."

As did Hippolytus by the use of the word "exempt" ...

Fulgentius isn't independent of Augustine, and Augustine did an over-reading in "in Deo salvatore meo" ... he is the originator of rejection of the Immaculate Conception. He spread it over the West, but not far East, and your example about Sts. Basil and Chrysostom are not proof of any kind of sin during Her life, and therefore also not of original sin.

"They have explicitly stated that there is no basis for considering this a dogma."

Who they? I don't think any Church Father ever said sth like "I think this is true, but this can never become a dogma" and nor are the dogmas fixed over time, since prior to Nicaea, full divinity of Christ was not declared dogma binding on all of the Church. Yet it was certainly, if not optional, at least Tradition.

"He wrote that in the 8th century, which is exactly when I said this idea began to emerge"

I can reply, it was there from the beginning and St. Augustine, in the 5th C. was the one personally emerging the opposite idea.

Prime Time
@ You’re still missing the distinction between exemp
The dishonesty is... No, Hippolytus wasn’t speaking about her conception in that passage. You're so lacking in evidence that you're resorting to subterfuge, implying things that simply aren't in the context. By your own generic, decontextualized reading, Romans 3:23 would apply to the Virgin Mary, which is... LOL.

Regarding Augustine, you didn’t grasp what I said. In De Natura et Gratia, he clearly affirms that the Virgin was completely sinless. If you apply your Hippolytus-style lens to that, you'd conclude that Augustine taught the Immaculate Conception. But as I’ve already warned you multiple times, being sinless is not the same as being immaculately conceived. In another work (Commentary on Psalm 34), Augustine explicitly states that she had original sin.

"Who are they?"
That’s just shifting the burden of proof. You’re the one who suggested that this optional tradition could become a dogma with no PARTICULAR evidence for this PARTICULAR case. BTW, that evidence does not exist. None of the Eastern Orthodox, Oriental Orthodox, Coptic Church, Old Calendarists, Protestants, etc., consider it a dogma, only the Papists do.

As for the claim that “in the 5th century the opposite idea was personally emerging,” that’s also false. No Church Father taught that Mary’s conception was without sin. You’ve presented zero sources to support that claim. In fact, as I mentioned earlier, the idea doesn't even appear until the 8th century, and it remained marginal well into the 13th century

Hans-Georg Lundahl
@prime_time_youtube "only the Papists do."

Which is enough.

It's the Church that Jesus founded.

"As for the claim that “in the 5th century the opposite idea was personally emerging,” that’s also false."

You have no proof against it prior to St. Augustine.