Sunday, December 8, 2024
December 8 — the Catholic feast celebrating that Mary was conceived without original sin.
The Immaculate Conception, celebrated on December 8, is the Catholic doctrine that Mary, the mother of Jesus, was conceived in her mother's womb without the stain of original sin — preserved by God's grace from the inheritance of fallenness that affects all other human beings. This is often confused with the doctrine of the Virgin Birth (which is about Mary's conception of Jesus, not about her own conception). The Immaculate Conception was defined as Catholic dogma by Pope Pius IX in 1854 in the bull Ineffabilis Deus, though it had been widely held for centuries. The doctrine rests on theological reasoning: as the mother of God incarnate, Mary was 'full of grace' (Luke 1:28, kecharitomene — perfectly graced) from the first moment of her existence, fittingly preserved to be a worthy vessel for the Son of God. December 8 is exactly nine months before September 8, the traditional Feast of the Nativity of Mary. The Immaculate Conception is the patronal feast of the United States and is a Holy Day of Obligation in the Catholic Church.
Observance includes white vestments, special readings from Genesis 3 (the promise of the woman whose seed will crush the serpent), Ephesians 1 (chosen before the foundation of the world), and Luke 1:26-38 (the annunciation, where Mary is called 'full of grace'), and special Marian devotions. In many Catholic countries (Spain, Portugal, parts of Latin America), the day is a public holiday.
The traditional Bible readings for The Immaculate Conception include:
The Immaculate Conception is the Catholic doctrine that Mary, the mother of Jesus, was conceived in her mother's womb without the stain of original sin. It is NOT a doctrine about Jesus's conception (which is the Virgin Birth) — it is about Mary's own conception. Pope Pius IX defined it as dogma in 1854 in the bull Ineffabilis Deus.
The doctrine is not explicitly stated in scripture. It rests on theological reasoning from texts like Luke 1:28 (where the angel Gabriel calls Mary 'full of grace' — kecharitomene, a Greek perfect passive participle implying a permanent state) and Genesis 3:15 (the protoevangelium promising enmity between the serpent and the woman). Most Protestant traditions reject the doctrine because it lacks explicit scriptural foundation.
Mary. This is the most common confusion. The Immaculate Conception is about Mary being conceived without original sin in her mother Anne's womb. Jesus's conception by Mary is called the Virgin Birth (or Virgin Conception). Two different doctrines about two different conceptions.
December 8 — exactly nine months before September 8, the traditional Feast of the Nativity of Mary. It is a Holy Day of Obligation in the Catholic Church. In many Catholic countries it is also a public holiday.