
Question: "What is the immaculate conception?"
Answer:  Many people mistakenly believe that the immaculate conception refers to  the conception of Jesus Christ. Jesus’ conception was most assuredly  immaculate…but the immaculate conception does not refer to Jesus at all. The  immaculate conception is a doctrine of the Romans Catholic Church in regards to  Mary, Jesus’ mother. An official statement of the doctrine reads, “…the blessed  Virgin Mary to have been, from the first instant of her conception, by a  singular grace and privilege of Almighty God, in view of the merits of Christ  Jesus the Savior of Mankind, preserved free from all stain of original sin.”  Essentially the immaculate conception is the belief that Mary was protected from  original sin, that Mary did not have a sin nature, and was, in fact,  sinless.
The problem with the doctrine of the immaculate conception is  that it is not taught in the Bible. The Bible nowhere describes Mary as anything  but an ordinary human female whom God chose to be the mother of the Lord Jesus  Christ. Mary was undoubtedly a godly woman (Luke 1:28). Mary was surely a  wonderful wife and mother. Jesus definitely loved and cherished His mother (John  19:27). The Bible gives us no reason to believe that Mary was sinless. In fact,  the Bible gives us every reason to believe that Jesus Christ is the only Person  who was not “infected” by sin and never committed a sin (Ecclesiastes 7:20;  Romans 3:23; 2 Corinthians 5:21; 1 Peter 2:22; 1 John 3:5).
The doctrine  of the immaculate conception originated out of confusion over how Jesus Christ  could be born sinless if He was conceived inside of a sinful human female. The  thought was that Jesus would have inherited a sinful nature from Mary had she  been a sinner. In contrast to the immaculate conception, the Biblical solution  to this problem is understanding that Jesus Himself was miraculously protected  from being polluted by sin while He was inside Mary's womb. If God was capable  of protecting Mary from sin, would He not be able to protect Jesus from sin?  Therefore, Mary being sinless is neither necessary or Biblical.
The Roman  Catholic Church argues that the immaculate conception is necessary because  without it, Jesus would have been the object of His own grace. The thought goes  like this – for Jesus to have been miraculously preserved from sin, which itself  would be an act of grace, that would mean God essentially “graced Himself.” The  word grace means “unmerited favor.” Grace is giving someone something he or she  does not deserve. God performing a miracle in preserving Jesus from sin is not  “grace.” In no sense could Jesus possibly be infected with sin. He was perfect  and sinless humanity joined with sinless divinity. God cannot be infected or  affected by sin, as He is perfectly holy. This same truth applies to Jesus. It  did not take “grace” to protect Jesus from sin. Being God incarnate, Jesus was  in His essence “immune” from sin.
So, the doctrine of the immaculate  conception is neither Biblical or necessary. Jesus was miraculously conceived  inside Mary, who was a virgin at the time. That is the Biblical concept of the  virgin birth. The Bible does not even hint that there was anything significant  about Mary’s conception. If we examine this concept logically, Mary’s mother  would have to be immaculately conceived as well. How could Mary be conceived  without sin if her mother was sinful? The same would have to be said of Mary’s  grandmother, great-grandmother, and so on. So, in conclusion, the immaculate  conception is not a Biblical teaching. The Bible teaches the miraculous virgin  conception of Jesus Christ, not the immaculate conception of  Mary.
Recommended Resource: Reasoning from the Scriptures with Catholics by Ron  Rhodes.
Saturday, 5 December 2009
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