๐ Introduction
A common Protestant objection claims:
“Mary was full of grace—but still a sinner. Grace proves she needed forgiveness.”
At first glance, this argument sounds biblical. But upon closer inspection, it misunderstands the nature of grace, misinterprets Greek grammar, and ignores the witness of early Christianity.
This article will demonstrate that:
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“Full of grace” (kecharitลmenฤ) indicates a unique and complete state of holiness
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Grace does not only forgive sin—it can prevent sin
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Scripture, properly understood, does not contradict Mary’s sinlessness
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The early Church consistently affirmed Mary’s exceptional holiness
๐ 1. What Does “Grace” Really Mean?
The Greek word for grace is charis (ฯฮฌฯฮนฯ), meaning:
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Favor
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Gift
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Divine life given freely by God
Protestant arguments often reduce grace to:
“Unmerited favor given only because someone is a sinner.”
But this is incomplete.
✅ Biblical Reality:
Grace has two dimensions:
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Healing Grace – restores after sin
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Preserving Grace – prevents sin
Before the fall, Adam and Eve lived in grace without sin (Genesis 1–2). Therefore:
Grace is not proof of sin—it can also be the reason sin is absent.
๐ 2. The Meaning of Kecharitลmenฤ (Luke 1:28)
In Gospel of Luke 1:28, the angel Gabriel greets Mary:
“Hail, full of grace…”
The Greek word used is:
๐ Kecharitลmenฤ (ฮบฮตฯฮฑฯฮนฯฯฮผฮญฮฝฮท)
This word is crucial.
๐ Linguistic Breakdown:
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Perfect tense → completed action in the past
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Passive voice → done by God
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Ongoing result → continues into the present
✅ Full Meaning:
“Having been completely endowed with grace, and remaining so.”
This is not ordinary grace—it describes a permanent, perfected condition.
As theologians note, the term functions almost like a name or title, replacing “Mary” with “the one who has been fully graced.”
๐ 3. Why “Full of Grace” Implies Sinlessness
Grace and sin are spiritually incompatible:
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Romans 6:14 — “Sin will have no dominion over you”
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2 Corinthians 6:14 — light has no fellowship with darkness
If Mary is:
Completely filled with grace
Then logically:
There is no room for sin.
๐ 4. Refuting “Grace Means You’re a Sinner”
The objection claims:
“If Mary has grace, she must be a sinner.”
But this leads to a contradiction.
In Gospel of John 1:14:
Jesus is described as “full of grace”
So ask:
Was Jesus Christ a sinner?
Of course not.
✅ Conclusion:
“Full of grace” does not mean sinful—it can mean perfectly holy.
๐ 5. “All Have Sinned” (Romans 3:23)
Another objection states:
“The Bible says ALL have sinned.”
⚠️ Important Context:
Scripture often uses “all” in a general, not absolute sense.
Examples:
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Gospel of Luke 2:1 — “All the world” taxed
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Hebrews 9:27 — “All die”
Yet:
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Elijah
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Enoch
did not experience death in the ordinary way.
✅ Therefore:
“All” allows exceptions—especially by divine intervention.
The clearest exception:
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Jesus Christ
Mary’s exception is by grace, not by nature.
๐ 6. “My Spirit Rejoices in God My Savior” (Luke 1:47)
Protestants argue:
“Mary needed a Savior, so she sinned.”
✅ Catholic Explanation:
Mary was saved in a higher way.
Two types of salvation:
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Rescue – after falling into sin
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Preservation – preventing the fall
Mary experienced:
Preventive redemption through Christ
This is called:
๐ Prevenient Grace
๐ 7. The Early Church Fathers Agree
The earliest Christians testify to Mary’s extraordinary holiness.
๐ง St. Irenaeus of Lyons (2nd century)
“The knot of Eve’s disobedience was loosed by the obedience of Mary.”¹
Mary is presented as the New Eve—implying purity before the fall.
๐ง St. Ephrem the Syrian (4th century)
“You and your Mother are the only ones who are totally beautiful… there is no stain in you, nor any stain in your Mother.”²
๐ง St. Augustine of Hippo (5th century)
“We must except the Holy Virgin Mary… concerning whom I wish to raise no question when it touches the matter of sins.”³
๐ 8. The Catechism of the Catholic Church (CCC)
The Church formally teaches:
๐ Catechism of the Catholic Church §491
“Mary… was enriched by God with gifts appropriate to such a role… ‘full of grace.’”⁴
๐ CCC §492
“The Blessed Virgin Mary was preserved immune from all stain of original sin.”⁵
๐ 9. The Real Meaning of Grace in Mary
Mary is not an example of:
“Grace after sin”
She is the supreme example of:
Grace that prevents sin entirely
She is:
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Fully redeemed by Christ
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Perfectly transformed by grace
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A model of what God’s grace can do completely
๐ Final Conclusion
The claim that:
“Mary was full of grace, therefore a sinner”
fails because it:
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Reduces grace to forgiveness only
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Ignores the Greek kecharitลmenฤ
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Misinterprets “all have sinned”
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Contradicts Scripture and early Christianity
✅ The Biblical Truth:
Mary is “full of grace” because:
She was completely transformed and preserved by God’s grace
๐ฅ One-Line Apologetic Summary
“Grace doesn’t just forgive sin—it can prevent it. Mary isn’t proof that grace follows sin; she’s proof that grace can conquer sin completely.”
๐ Footnotes (Chicago Style)
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St. Irenaeus of Lyons, Against Heresies, III.22.4.
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St. Ephrem the Syrian, Carmina Nisibena, 27:8.
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St. Augustine of Hippo, On Nature and Grace, 36.42.
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Catechism of the Catholic Church, §491.
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Ibid., §492.


