Yes, everybody in the past and future has sinned and will sin.
Mary was born without Original Sin .
According to Catholic doctrine, Mary was born without original sin, a belief known as the Immaculate Conception.
The Blessed Virgin Mary was preserved from original sin.
Because she was Born without the stain of Original Sin.
No, Saint Anne is not considered to be immaculately conceived - born without the stain of Original Sin.
.Catholic AnswerOur Blessed Lady as preserved by God from original sin from the first moment of her conception. This is a dogma of Christianity called the Immaculate Conception.
The feast of the immaculate conception. This feast celebrates the fact that God chose Mary to be the mother of Jesus even before she was born and to make her a more perfect mother allowed her to be conceived without the stain of original sin.
According to the Catholics, one is born a sinner. The sin of being born is called "the original sin". The meaning of baptism is to 'cleanse' a baby from its original sin.
The Immaculate Conception. This is on December 08.
The concept of "Immaculate Conception" is widely misunderstood. It has nothing to do with Mary's conception of Jesus (Virginal Conception), but with the conception of Mary herself in her mother's womb. Her parents, Saints Joachim and Anne, obviously conceived her through normal sexual intercourse, but she was -and still is- considered to be free of Original Sin. Original Sin is not a sin per se, but the potential to do sin. In any case, Immaculate Conception refers to the conception of Mary, not of Jesus. This is not true as it is said in the bible that Mary has more then one son! so she is not free of sin but ^^ what is said about is true accept for she being free of sin.
AnswerSince the earliest centuries, the Catholic Church has sought to define Mary as free from sin. However, a problem arose with the acceptance of St Augustine's definition of original sin: if every human necessarily inherits original sin from Adam and Eve, then so did Mary. She could no longer be free from sin. The solution, which seems to date back to the first millennium, was the notion that Mary was born free from sin, by "immaculate conception". It was not until 1854 that Pope Pius IX promulgated the papal bull that defined the dogma of the Immaculate Conception. Immaculate Conception was not necessary in the Orthodox Churches, as they did not accept Augustine's notion of original sin.
St. Thomas Aquinas did not fully support the doctrine of the Immaculate Conception, as he believed that Mary was conceived without original sin but was later cleansed from it. He argued that only Christ was born without original sin.