Author suggests unicorns were after African/Asian rhinos, but there is another genus that better fits the description "forest-dwelling creatures with this monstrous four-foot long horn that they used to stab the wombs of elephants, and they were regarded as the most dangerous beast in the forests” and may have existed alongside humans- https://www.ox.ac.uk/news/2018-11-27-extinct-siberian-unicor...
NaN years ago
undefined
NaN years ago
undefined
geerlingguy1 day ago
As a Catholic, the part discussing Mary's role in the story is quite at odds with what I read, both from medieval times and more modern.
I wonder if the perspective in the article comes more from a Protestant understanding of Mary?
In Catholic teaching at least, Mary's "fiat" ("Yes") was one of the most pivotal moments in salvation history, and Mary is regarded as the "Queen" of all saints, for her role and her personal decision to say yes.
Author suggests unicorns were after African/Asian rhinos, but there is another genus that better fits the description "forest-dwelling creatures with this monstrous four-foot long horn that they used to stab the wombs of elephants, and they were regarded as the most dangerous beast in the forests” and may have existed alongside humans- https://www.ox.ac.uk/news/2018-11-27-extinct-siberian-unicor...
undefined
undefined
As a Catholic, the part discussing Mary's role in the story is quite at odds with what I read, both from medieval times and more modern.
I wonder if the perspective in the article comes more from a Protestant understanding of Mary?
In Catholic teaching at least, Mary's "fiat" ("Yes") was one of the most pivotal moments in salvation history, and Mary is regarded as the "Queen" of all saints, for her role and her personal decision to say yes.
undefined
undefined