Dictionary Definition
immaculate adj
1 completely neat and clean; "the apartment was
immaculate"; "in her immaculate white uniform"; "a spick-and-span
kitchen"; "their spic red-visored caps" [syn: speckless, spick-and-span,
spic-and-span,
spic, spick, spotless]
2 free from stain or blemish [syn: undefiled]
3 without fault or error; "faultless logic";
"speaks impeccable French"; "timing and technique were immaculate";
"an immaculate record" [syn: faultless, impeccable]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Etymology
From immaculatus; prefix im- not + maculatus, past participle of maculare to spot, stain, from macula spot. Middle English immaculat. See ''mail armor.Adjective
Derived terms
- Immaculate conception, (Roman Catholic Church): the doctrine that the Virgin Mary was conceived without original sin.
- immaculately
- immaculateness
Translations
having no stain or blemish, spotless, undefiled,
clear, pure
- German: makellos
- Hungarian: szeplőtlen, szeplőtelen, makulátlan, tiszta
Extensive Definition
''For dogmatic
context see Mariology
(Roman Catholic) for the novel by Gaétan Soucy, see The Immaculate Conception.
For the doctrine of the virginal conception of Jesus Christ, see
Incarnation
(Christianity) and Virgin
Birth of Jesus.''
The Immaculate Conception is, according to
Roman
Catholic dogma, the
conception of
Mary, the mother of Jesus without any stain of original
sin, in her mother's womb: the dogma thus says that, from the
first moment of her existence, she was preserved by God from the
lack of sanctifying
grace that afflicts mankind, and that she was instead filled
with divine
grace. It is further believed that she lived a life completely
free from sin.[ in the words
of Pope Pius
XII in Mystici
Corporis , "she was free from any personal or hereditary sin"
Her immaculate conception in the womb of her mother, by normal
sexual
intercourse (Christian tradition identifies her parents as Sts.
Joachim and
Anne),
should not be confused with the doctrine of the virginal
conception of her son Jesus.
The
feast of the Immaculate Conception, celebrated on December 8,
was established as a universal feast in 1476 by Pope Sixtus IV. He
did not define the doctrine as a dogma, thus leaving Roman
Catholics freedom to believe in it or not without being accused of
heresy; this freedom was reiterated by the Council of
Trent. The existence of the feast was a strong indication of
the Church's belief in the Immaculate Conception, even before its
19th century definition as a dogma.
In the Roman Catholic Church, the Solemnity of
the Immaculate Conception is a Holy
Day of Obligation, except where conferences of bishops have
decided, with the approval of the Holy See, not to maintain it as
such. It is a public holiday in some countries where Roman
Catholicism is predominant e.g. Italy. In the
Philippines,
although this is not a public holiday, the predominance of Catholic
Schools make it almost a holiday.
The Immaculate Conception was solemnly defined
as a dogma by Pope Pius
IX in his constitution Ineffabilis
Deus, on December 8
1854. The
Roman Catholic Church believes the dogma is supported by Scripture
(e.g. Mary's being greeted by Angel Gabriel as "full of grace" or
"highly favoured"), as well as either directly or indirectly by the
writings of many of the Church
Fathers, as well as sensus fidei
and often calls Mary the Blessed
Virgin (Luke
1:48).
Catholic theology maintains that, since Jesus became incarnate
of the Virgin Mary, it was fitting that she be completely free of
sin for expressing her fiat. (Ott, Fund., Bk 3, Pt. 3, Ch. 2,
§3.1.e).
For the Roman Catholic Church the dogma of the
Immaculate Conception gained additional significance from the
apparitions of Our
Lady of Lourdes in 1858. In Lourdes a
14-year-old girl, Bernadette
Soubirous, claimed a beautiful lady appeared to her. The lady
identified herself as "the Immaculate Conception" and the faithful
believe her to be the Blessed
Virgin Mary.
In this sense, the dogma of the Immaculate Conception
defined by Pope Pius
IX is also viewed as a key example of the use of sensus
fidelium shared by the faithful and the Magisterium
rather than pure reliance on Scripture and
tradition. The Vatican
quotes in this context Fulgens
Corona, where Pius XII
supported such a faith:
- ''If the popular praises of the Blessed Virgin Mary be given the careful consideration they deserve, who will dare to doubt that she, who was purer than the angels and at all times pure, was at any moment, even for the briefest instant, not free from every stain of sin?”''
Now, the Roman
Catholic tradition has a well established philosophy for the
study of Immaculate Conception and the veneration of the Blessed
Virgin Mary via the field of Mariology with
Pontifical schools such as the Marianum
specifically devoted to this task.
History of the dogma
The Conception of Mary was celebrated as a
liturgical feast in England from the
ninth century, and the doctrine of her "holy" or "immaculate"
conception was first formulated in a tract by Eadmer, companion
and biographer of the better-known St. Anselm,
Archbishop of Canterbury
(1033-1109), and later popularized by the archbishop's nephew,
Anselm the Younger. The Normans had
suppressed the celebration, but it lived on in the popular mind. It
was rejected by St. Bernard
of Clairvaux, Alexander
of Hales, and St. Bonaventure
(who, teaching at Paris,
called it "this foreign doctrine," indicating its association with
England), and by St. Thomas
Aquinas who expressed questions about the subject, but said
that he would accept the determination of the Church. Aquinas and
Bonaventure, for example, believed that Mary was completely free
from sin, but that she was not given this grace at the instant of
her conception.
Despite this formidable array of tradition and
scholarly opinion, the Oxford
Franciscans
William of
Ware and especially Blessed
John Duns
Scotus defended the doctrine. Scotus proposed a solution to the
theological problem involved of being able to reconcile the
doctrine with that of universal redemption in Christ, by arguing
that Mary's immaculate conception did not remove her from
redemption by Christ; rather it was the result of a more perfect
redemption given to her on account of her special role in history.
Furthermore, Scotus said that Mary was redeemed in anticipation of
Christ's death on the cross. This was similar to the way that the
Church explained the Last Supper (since Roman Catholic theology
teaches that the Mass is the sacrifice of Calvary made present on
the altar, and Christ did not die before the Last Supper). Scotus'
defence of the immaculist thesis was summed up by one of his
followers as potuit, decuit ergo fecit (God could do it, it was
fitting that He did it, and so He did it). Following his defence of
the thesis, students at Paris swore to defend the position, and the
tradition grew of swearing to defend the doctrine with one's blood.
The University of Paris supported the decision of the (schismatic) Council of
Basel in this matter. Duns' arguments remained controversial,
however, particularly among the Dominicans, who were willing enough
to celebrate Mary's sanctificatio (being made free from sin), but,
following the Dominican Thomas Aquinas' arguments, continued to
insist that her sanctification could not have occurred at the
instant of her conception.
Popular opinion remained firmly behind the
celebration of Mary's conception. The doctrine itself had been
endorsed by the Council of Basel (1431-1449), and by the end of the
15th century was widely professed and taught in many theological
faculties. However, the Council of Basel was later held not to have
been a true General (or Ecumenical) Council with authority to
proclaim dogma; and such was the influence of the Dominicans, and
the weight of the arguments of Thomas Aquinas (who had been
canonised in 1323, and declared "Doctor Angelicus" of the Church in
1567) that the Council of Trent (1545-63)—which might have been
expected to affirm the doctrine—instead declined to take a
position; it simply reaffirmed the constitutions of Sixtus IV,
which had threatened with excommunication anyone on either side of
the controversy who accused the others of heresy. It was not until
1854 that Pope Pius
IX, with the support of the overwhelming majority of Roman
Catholic Bishops, whom he had
consulted between 1851–1853, proclaimed the doctrine in accordance
with the conditions of papal
infallibility that would be defined in 1870 by the First
Vatican Council.
Other churches
The doctrine is generally not shared by either Eastern Orthodox Churches, the Anglican Communion, or by the various Protestant communities.Eastern and Oriental Orthodox
Orthodox Christians do believe that Mary was without sin for her entire life, but they generally do not share the Augustinian and Medieval Roman Catholic Church's views on original sin. They note that St. Augustine (d. 430), whose works were not well known in Eastern Christianity until after the 17th century, has exerted considerable influence over the theology of sin that has generally taken root in the Latin Rite. However, Augustine's theory that Original Sin is propagated by the concupiscence of reproduction and that it can be expressed in terms of stain and quasi-personal guilt is not shared by Eastern Orthodoxy. However, nor are these the terms that dogmatic pronouncements of the Roman Catholic Church use to define original sin, and an examination of Roman Catholic dogma - as opposed to theological opinion - actually shows significant agreement, as original sin is defined as a privation of the original justice and sanctifying grace which was enjoyed in Eden. Some Eastern Orthodox theologians suggest that the references among the Greek and Syrian Fathers to Mary's purity and sinlessness may refer not to an a priori state, but to her conduct after she was born. However, Eastern Christianity tends to focus on the fact that the main consequence of sin is the distortion of the nature of this world (prominently including, but not limited to, the nature of the human race).In Ethiopian Orthodox tradition, which is
Oriental Orthodox not Eastern Orthodox, there is some suggestion
that Mary was created immaculate as seen in the following:
"He cleansed EVE'S body and sanctified it and
made for it a dwelling in her for ADAM'S salvation. She [i.e.,
MARY] was born without blemish, for He made her pure, without
pollution, and she redeemed his debt without carnal union and
embrace...Through the transgression of EVE we died and were buried,
and by the purity of MARY we receive honour, and are exalted to the
heights."
Anglicanism
The Immaculate Conception is accepted by some
Anglo-Catholics,
but is rejected by most in the Anglican
Communion (and also by the Old
Catholic Churches). In the Book
of Common Prayer, December 8—the
"Conception of the Blessed Virgin Mary"—is a "lesser
commemoration", whose observance is optional. However, members of
the
Society of Mary are required to attend Mass that
day.
Protestantism
Protestants reject the doctrine because they do
not consider the development of dogmatic theology to be authoritative
apart from biblical exegesis, and that Mariology in
general, including the doctrine of the Immaculate Conception, is
not taught in the Bible.
Protestants argue that God would also need to
have intervened in the conception of Mary's mother, and her mother,
and so on down the ages. Roman Catholicism's response to this is
that Mary did not need to be kept free from sin for Jesus to be
sinless, rather her immaculate conception was a special privilege
granted her by God.
A further argument put forward by Protestants is
from Mark 10:18 and the parallel Luke 18:9. When Jesus is addressed
as "Good teacher" (NIV Mk 10:17), He is
quoted as replying "No one is good—except God alone". It is posited
that in doing so Christ clearly
teaches that no one is without sin, whilst leaving room for the
conclusion that he is in fact God incarnate. However, Catholics
respond that this phrase is meant in the sense that a man may only
be good by participation of God's goodness.
Some Protestants also teach that sinful nature is
inherited from the father. Since Jesus of Nazareth did not have an
earthly father, he did not inherit a sinful nature; hence, Mary did
not need to be immaculately conceived. These Protestants base this
view on Romans 5:12 which states that sin entered the world through
a man, Adam (even though this word in the Bible means, merely,
"human being") and 1 Corinthians 11:3 which says that the head of
every woman is the man. In response, however, Catholics hold that
the sin of Adam and Eve stains a person's soul, and both parents
only contribute to the body of a newborn child - not the child's
eternal soul - meaning that God allows original sin to make contact
with, and therefore contaminate the individual spirit - and, by the
same token, God can certainly preserve someone from original sin as
well. Also, as Adam was created before Eve, and as Eve came from
Adam, his sin would cause more effect.
Some Protestant groups of more recent origin,
such as the Restoration
Movement, do not believe in original sin. Consequently, they
believe in the immaculate conception of everyone, not only of Mary,
though this is considered heresy by most other churches and
Christian communities.
For a response to these arguments, see
below.
Scriptural sources
In his Apostolic Constitution Ineffabilis Deus (8 December 1854), which officially defined the Immaculate Conception as dogma for the Roman Catholic Church, Pope Pius IX primarily appealed to the text of Genesis 3:15, where the serpent was told by God, "I will put enmity between you and the woman, between your seed and her seed." According to the Roman Catholic understanding, this was a prophecy that foretold of a "woman" who would always be at enmity with the serpent—that is, a woman who would never be under the power of sin, nor in bondage to the serpent. Some Roman Catholic theologians have also claimed the angel Gabriel's greeting to Mary at the Annunciation (Luke 1:28) as scriptural evidence for the Immaculate Conception.The early Church
Fathers compared Mary to Eve. St. Justin
Martyr said that Mary was a kind of New Eve, "in order that the
disobedience which proceeded from the serpent might receive its
destruction in the same manner in which it derived its origin."
(Dialogue with Trypho, 100) Tertullian
argued in a similar manner: "As Eve had believed the serpent, so
Mary believed the angel. The delinquency which the one occasioned
by believing, the other by believing effaced." (On the Flesh of
Christ, 17) St. Irenaeus declared
that Mary became "the cause of salvation, both to herself and the
whole human race," because "what the virgin Eve had bound fast
through unbelief, this did the virgin Mary set free through faith."
(Against
Heresies, Book III, cap. 22, 4) St. Jerome coined the
phrase, "Death came through Eve, but life has come through Mary,"
(Letter XXII, To Eustochium, 21).
The Catholic
Encyclopedia of 1914, however, states that these scriptures
merely serve as corroborative evidence assuming that the dogma is
already well established, and that there is insufficient evidence
to prove the dogma to someone basing their beliefs solely on
biblical interpretation:
No direct or categorical and stringent proof of
the dogma can be brought forward from Scripture. ... The salutation
of the angel Gabriel — chaire kecharitomene, Hail, full of grace
(Luke 1:28) indicates a unique abundance of grace ... but the term
kecharitomene (full of grace) serves only as an illustration, not
as a proof of the dogma. ― Catholic Encyclopedia
— Immaculate Conception:Proof from Scripture
Other verses sometimes used to defend the
Immaculate Conception include:
"And you shall make the ark of testimony of
incorruptible wood And you shall gild it with pure gold, you shall
gild it within and without; and you shall make for it golden
wreaths twisted round about." (Exodus 25:10-11 Brenton LXX)
"So I made an ark of boards of incorruptible
wood, and I hewed tables of stone like the first, and I went up to
the mountain, and the two tables were in my hand." (Deuteronomy
10:3 Brenton LXX)
Other translations use the words "setim,"
"acacia," "indestructible," and "hard" to describe the wood used.
In any case, Moses used this wood because it was regarded as very
durable and "incorruptible." Mary is regarded by Catholic and
Orthodox
Christians as being the Ark
of the Covenant in the New
Testament and therefore claim it is fitting that the New Ark
likewise be made "incorruptible" or "immaculate." Their basis for
calling the Virgin Mary
the Ark
of the Covenant is based partly on the parallels of the Ark in
Second
Samuel 6 with the Nativity
narrative of the Gospel of
Luke. The early Church
Fathers called Christ, the Church, and the
Virgin
Mary each at one point as being symbolized by the Ark.
It is also claimed that Mary is shown as being
totally faithful to Christ, especially during his Passion, when he
was abandoned by his followers and apostles except for the young
John. In this way, Mary's complete faithfulness is argued to be the
fruit of being sinless, as she could not then reject Christ in the
darkest hour.
Common misinterpretations
There is a widespread misunderstanding of the
term immaculate conception: many believe it refers to Mary's
conception of Jesus, a confusion frequently met in the mass media.
In the sense in which the phrase "Immaculate Conception" is used in
Roman Catholic doctrine, it is not directly connected to the
concept of Mary's "virginal
conception" of the Incarnation of
Christ. The Church celebrates the Immaculate Conception on 8 December,
exactly nine months before celebrating Mary's birthday. The feast
of the Incarnation of
Christ, also known as The Annunciation, is celebrated on
25
March, nine months before Christmas
Day.
Another misunderstanding is that by her
immaculate conception, Mary did not need a saviour. On the
contrary, when defining the dogma in Ineffabilis Deus, Pope Pius
IX affirmed that Mary was redeemed in a manner more sublime. He
stated that Mary, rather than being cleansed after sin, was
completely prevented from contracting Original Sin
in view of the foreseen merits of Jesus Christ, the Saviour of the
human race. In Bible verse |Luke|1:47, Mary proclaims: "My spirit
has rejoiced in God my Saviour." This is referred to as Mary's
pre-redemption by Christ.
Dogmatic definition
Pope Pius IX defined ex cathedra
the dogma of the Immaculate Conception on 8 December,
1854. The Pope
stressed that Mary's sinlessness was not due to her own merits, but
truly, by the merits of her son, Jesus.
"We declare, pronounce and define that the
doctrine which holds that the Blessed Virgin Mary, at the first
instant of her conception, by a singular privilege and grace of the
Omnipotent God, in virtue of the merits of Jesus Christ, the
Saviour of mankind, was preserved immaculate from all stain of
original sin, has been revealed by God, and therefore should firmly
and constantly be believed by all the faithful."
Simply stated, Mary possessed sanctifying grace
from the first instant of her existence and was free from the lack
of grace caused by the "original or first sin" at the beginning of
human history.
References
See also
External links
- Ineffabilis Deus (Apostolic Constitution of Pope Pius IX defining the dogma of the Immaculate Conception)
- Catholic Encyclopedia entry on the Immaculate Conception
- Catholic Encyclopedia entry on Original Sin
- The Immaculate Conception. A study by a Melkite archimandrite
- The Immaculate Conception of the Mother of God based on Juniper Carol's Mariology and Archbishop Ullathorne's book
- "St. Augustine and Original Sin" — a short article on the different understandings of Original Sin in Eastern and Western Christianity, without distinguishing Protestant theology from Roman Catholic. The latter holds that "original sin does not have the character of a personal fault in any of Adam's descendants" (Catechism of the Catholic Church, 405).
- Eastern Catholic arguing Immaculate Conception in Scripture and Tradition
immaculate in Breton: Ar Werc'hez Vari krouet
dinamm
immaculate in Catalan: Immaculada
Concepció
immaculate in Czech: Dogma o neposkvrněném
početí Panny Marie
immaculate in Danish: Jomfru Marias ubesmittede
undfangelse
immaculate in German: Unbefleckte
Empfängnis
immaculate in Spanish: Inmaculada
Concepción
immaculate in Esperanto: Senmakula
koncipiĝo
immaculate in French: Immaculée conception
immaculate in Irish: Féile Mhuire gan Smál
immaculate in Korean: 원죄 없는 잉태
immaculate in Croatian: Bezgrešno začeće Blažene
Djevice Marije
immaculate in Italian: Immacolata
Concezione
immaculate in Hebrew: הנחת הטוהר
immaculate in Latin: Immaculata Conceptio
immaculate in Limburgan: Ónbevlekde
óntvangenis
immaculate in Hungarian: Szeplőtelen
fogantatás
immaculate in Dutch: Onbevlekte Ontvangenis van
Maria
immaculate in Dutch Low Saxon: Onbevlekte
Ontvangenis
immaculate in Japanese: 無原罪の御宿り
immaculate in Norwegian: Den ubesmittede
unnfangelse
immaculate in Polish: Dogmat o Niepokalanym
Poczęciu Najświętszej Maryi Panny
immaculate in Portuguese: Imaculada
Conceição
immaculate in Romanian: Concepţia
Imaculată
immaculate in Russian: Непорочное зачатие Девы
Марии
immaculate in Slovenian: Marijino brezmadežno
spočetje
immaculate in Serbian: Безгрешно зачеће
immaculate in Swedish: Immaculata
conceptio
immaculate in Venetian: Imacołata
concezsion
immaculate in Walloon: Notru-Dame des
Avéns
immaculate in Chinese: 聖母無染原罪瞻禮
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
Christian, absolute, beyond all praise,
blameless, bleached, blotless, bright, chaste, clean, cleanly, creditable, dainty, dapper, decent, defectless, dirt-free,
erect, errorless, estimable, ethical, exquisite, fair, fastidious, faultless, flawless, fresh, full of integrity, good, guiltless, high-minded,
high-principled, highly respectable, honest, honorable, ideal, impeccable, indefectible, indefective, infallible, innocent, inviolate, irreproachable, just, just right, kosher, law-abiding, law-loving,
law-revering, manly,
modest, moral, neat, noble, nonpolluted, of cleanly
habits, peerless,
perfect, principled, pristine, pure, pure in heart, purehearted, reputable, respectable, right, right-minded, righteous, ritually pure,
sexually innocent, shiny,
sinless, smut-free,
smutless, snow-white,
snowy, spick and span,
spotless, spruce, stainless, sterling, sweet, tahar, taintless, tidy, true-dealing, true-devoted,
true-disposing, true-souled, true-spirited, truehearted, tubbed, unadulterated, unbesmirched, unblemished, unblotted, uncontaminated, uncorrupt, uncorrupted, undefiled, unfaultable, unimpeachable, unmixed, unmuddied, unpolluted, unsmirched, unsmudged, unsoiled, unspoiled, unspotted, unstained, unsullied, untainted, untarnished, upright, uprighteous, upstanding, vestal, virginal, virtuous, well-scrubbed,
well-washed, white,
whitened, worthy, yeomanly