Just some random rumination:
1. I was sitting on my back porch last night, smoking a stogie and enjoying some 16 year Lagavulin, reading fan theories about the Christmas movie "Home Alone" - some of these fan theories are ridiculous, but some seem astonishingly plausible - and it donned on me: doctrines such as the "perpetual virginity" of Mary are essentially "fan theories": one starts with a conclusion and then looks back at the source material for "bread crumbs" - whether it be interpreting perplexing interchanges or scenes as evidence or straight up reinterpreting scenes or interchanges in light of the conclusion. Preachers: fan theories and movies. That's a pretty good illustration for what's happening with these unbiblical doctrines and traditions and how they are read back into the biblical storyline.
And it's funny how some "fan theories" simply will not die. To change movies: Die Hard. Both the director and Bruce Willis have publicly said it is "NOT a Christmas movie" ... but what do those two jokers know? Many (including yours truly) believe it is a Christmas movie. Same with some of these traditions and doctrines about Mary.
2. It is interesting that the curated illustrative sermon of John Calvin posted earlier in this thread has Calvin clearly communicating quite strongly about the perpetual virginity of Christ and of what he thinks of those who oppose the idea - one would say he's being... dogmatic. Yet when one compares that sermon with what Calvin wrote in his commentaries, the contrast is stark. Maybe the sermon was preached at a very different point in his life from when he wrote the commentary on the Gospels, maybe the transcriber of his sermon made an error, maybe he got worked up in the moment, who knows. But the contrast is both real and stark, one would not be overstating to say they're almost contradictory. But still, for my purposes here I'll grant that the views communicated in the sermon represent the real full-throated views of John Calvin. Ok, we know for fact that the Catholics did and do view as dogma the doctrines and traditions concerning Mary. We know that Luther, Zwingli, Bullinger, and (apparently) Calvin treated them as dogma as well - with Bullinger going so far as to enshrine Marian beliefs in the 2nd Helvetic Confession. Roll out from the Reformers a couple generations and things start shifting a bit, though as has been posted, continental theologians still number Mary deniers amongst fanatics and heretics... but keep rolling a few more generations and the tone shifts even more so that less vitriol is being spewed towards those who refuse to believe the Marian doctrines. And eventually it shifted so that those want to affirm the Marian doctrines want to eke out a "pious belief" status and the staunch refusal to give an inch to the Marian tradition is called "dogmatic." What happened?
3. I'll tell you what happened: the rise and spread of the historical-grammatical hermeneutic happened. It simply withers these types of views. Even in this thread, most casual readers observe that the biblical argument against PV is like a steamroller.
Re-discovered by Luther, as it was taught and disseminated, it became widely used in the Reformation all the way down to today. And just as the Mississippi River looks remarkably different at the headwaters than it does as it passes St. Louis, so too it took time for the implications of this hermeneutic to be applied and ensconced. Here's a decent article by Ligonier about it:
historical-grammatical Hermeneutics. It focuses on the "literal" or "plain sense" reading of the material. As they say in another article, "
If we want to find the one, true meaning of the text, we must follow the “grammatico-historical method.” This hermeneutical approach investigates the original cultural setting of the text and focuses on grammar and syntax in order to understand what the author of the text meant when he wrote to his original audience. Only this method can give us the original meaning of the biblical text. Otherwise, we end up with a dangerous subjectivism that denies truth itself."
Now, the closer one was to the re-discovery of this hermeneutic, the more charity we can show them in the various blind spots they had (such as in the matter of these Marian doctrines) ... but over time, as the historical-grammatical hermeneutic shaped the very epistemological matrix so that by the time of the Westminster Assembly they repudiated the long-standing notion of multiple senses (sensus plenior) of Scripture. The death knell was sounded for the various holdovers of the superstitious worldview.
As we know WCF chapter 1.6, 1.9, and 1.10 are all powerful statements concerning the Scripture and the regulative nature of it for our beliefs and practices.
In his commentary on the Confession 1.6, as noted by someone previously, AA Hodge writes, "That, while the Scriptures are a complete rule of faith and practice, and while nothing is to be regarded as an article of faith to be believed, or a religious duty obligatory upon the conscience, which is not explicitly or implicitly taught in Scripture" - this is to assert what I have previously said "an article of faith to be believed" (which is precisely how the Church has historically, and to the present day, treats the doctrines of Mary - as dogma) must be established by the word for it to be held forth as something to be held as a "pious belief."
But then he says this - and this is where he gets into the rigorousness demanded by a good and proper hermeneutic: "nevertheless they (the Scriptures) do not descend in practical matters into details, but, laying down general principles, leave men to apply them in the exercise of their natural judgment, in the light of experience, and in adaptation to changing circumstances, as they are guided by the sanctifying influences of the Holy Spirit. This liberty, of course, is allowed
only within the limits of the strict interpretation of the principles taught in the Word, and in the legitimate application of those principles, and applies to the
regulation of the practical life of the individual and of the Church, in detailed adjustments to changing circumstances."
In short, we see that even private opinions are obligated to be subjected to the principles of proper interpretation.
And his last point of commentary regarding 1.7 is likewise telling, "Those Churches which have most faithfully disseminated the Scriptures in the vernacular among the mass of the people have conformed most entirely to the plain and certain sense of their teaching in faith and practice; while those Churches which have locked them up in the hands of a priesthood have to the greatest degree departed from them both in letter and spirit."
And here Hodge communicates that conforming to the "plain and certain sense" of Scripture is a good thing, which of course is the product of the grammatical historical method.
And finally, in regards to 1.10 Hodge writes these words, which reflect a truly Reformed - that is: the principles of the Reformation have had time to be fully fleshed out - perspective on the place of Scripture, "
The Protestant doctrine is, (1) That the Scriptures are the only rule of faith and practice;" (
Boom. Full stop. But I'll go on.) "
2) Negatively, that there is no body of men qualified or authorized to interpret the Scriptures or to apply their teachings to the decision of particular questions in a sense binding upon their fellow Christians. (3) Positively, that the Scriptures are the only authoritative voice in the Church." (
I can practically hear the anguished cries of "this is solo scriptura!" No... its good biblical Sola Scriptura.) "
which is to be interpreted and applied by every individual for himself, with the assistance, though not by the authority, of his fellow-Christians. Creeds and confessions, as to form, bind those only who voluntarily profess them; and as to matter, they bind only so far as they affirm truly what the Bible teaches, and because the Bible does so teach."
And as it stands, as the historical-grammatical hermeneutic arose, so too (conversely) did superstitious traditions and doctrines diminish. And the truly Reformed ought admit nothing that is not established and upheld by positive Scriptural warrant. This includes the doctrine of the perpetual virginity of Mary, and all the other Marian blasphemies.
And your "private beliefs?" Yeah, they're subject to the Word of God, too. So if your "private pious belief" is not derived by sound hermeneutics, then your "private pious belief" is a superstition, so please keep it to yourself.
As it is, there are millions upon millions of people who believe as dogma the various lies about Mary. And these dogmas are both blasphemous in general and they undermine the uniqueness and sufficiency of Christ in particular. They must be treated accordingly.