From a letter by Saint Cyril of Alexandria, bishop
Defender of the divine motherhood of the Virgin Mary |
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That
anyone could doubt the right of the holy Virgin to be called the Mother
of God fills me with astonishment. Surely she must be the Mother of God
if our Lord Jesus Christ is God, and she gave birth to him! Our Lord’s
disciples may not have used those exact words, but they delivered to us
the belief those words enshrine, and this has also been taught us by the
holy fathers.
In the third book of his work on the holy and con substantial Trinity, our father Athanasius, of glorious memory,
several times refers to the holy Virgin as “Mother of God.” I cannot
resist quoting his own words: “As I have often told you, the distinctive
mark of holy Scripture is that it was written to make a twofold
declaration concerning our Saviour; namely, that he is and has always
been God, since he is the Word, Radiance and Wisdom of the Father; and
that for our sake in these latter days he took flesh from the Virgin
Mary, Mother of God, and became man.”
Again further on he says: “There have been many holy
men, free from all sin. Jeremiah was sanctified in his mother’s womb,
and John while still in the womb leaped for joy at the voice of Mary,
the Mother of God.” Athanasius is a man we can trust, one who deserves
our complete confidence, for he taught nothing contrary to the sacred
books.
The divinely inspired Scriptures affirm that the Word
of God was made flesh, that is to say, he was united to a human body
endowed with a rational soul. He undertook to help the descendants of
Abraham, fashioning a body for himself from a woman and sharing our
flesh and blood, to enable us to see in him not only God, but also, by
reason of this union, a man like ourselves.
It is held, therefore, that there are in Emmanuel two
entities, divinity and humanity. Yet our Lord Jesus Christ is
nonetheless one, the one true Son, both God and man; not a deified man
on the same footing as those who share the divine nature by grace, but
true God who for our sake appeared in human form. We are assured of this
by Saint Paul’s declaration: When the fullness of time came, God sent
his Son, born of a woman, born under the law, to redeem those who were
under the law and to enable us to be adopted as sons.
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