Are there any Protestant Founders, theologians, or biblical scholars outside of Catholic Church that say Mary saw the face of God before annunciation?
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> **“Blessed are the pure in heart, for they will see God."** - Matthew5:8
**IMPORTANT NOTE:**
We cannot add nor subtract any word from the bible.
When Jesus said this beatitude, He said this promised to all the living not dead nor this promise can only be gain after death.
Jesus did not said, *"Blessed are the pure of heart, for they will see God,* ***after death***."
Archangel Gabriel have faculties to see the state of soul of every human being.
Archangel Gabriel saw the majestic soul of Mary, and proclaimed that it was *"full of grace"*.
Mary was seen having the most pure heart.
> [**Mary: Woman of Most Pure Heart**](https://carmelite.org/spirituality/mary-woman-most-pure-heart/)
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> As well as regarding Our Lady, the Blessed Virgin Mary, as patron of our Order, we Carmelites revere her under a number of special titles such as ‘Beauty of Carmel’, ‘Sister’, and ‘Woman of Most Pure Heart’.
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> Purity of Heart (Puritas Cordis in Latin) is an important concept in Carmelite spirituality, and Mary is seen as its greatest exemplar and embodiment. For this reason medieval Carmelites were among the most fervent promoters of the doctrine of Mary’s ‘Immaculate Conception’, which was not formally proclaimed a dogma of the Catholic Church until 1854.
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> Carmelites have always sought to imitate Mary in her purity of heart. The medieval Carmelite writer Felip Ribot said that the goal of the Carmelite life is to offer to God a holy heart purified from all stain of sin. The purpose of this is to achieve, by God’s grace, union with God. Mary, the Most Pure Virgin, is seen as the perfect model of one who was totally available for union with God.
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> To explain the significance of purity from a Carmelite perspective, the Irish theologian Chris O’Donnell, O.Carm., uses the image of a milk jug. The purpose of a milk jug is to dispense milk. In order to do so properly, it must be clean; if the milk jug is dirty, then the milk will become infected. However, there is no point in the milk jug being clean simply for the sake of it; if the purpose of a milk jug is to dispense milk, then it can be as clean as you like but if it’s empty then it isn’t useful. This is an analogy of the human heart. Its purpose is to pour out love for others. If our hearts are impure, then what we ‘pour our’ to others will be infected. But there is no point is having a pure heart simply to leave it empty; the point of purity is not an end in itself but a means to be useful for others.
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> This is what Carmelites mean by purity: having a heart undivided for God, free from our own motives and desires so that God’s will be done in us. Today’s society often associates ‘purity’ with puerile notions of sex. Carmel teaches us that purity is more a matter of the heart than the rest of the body.
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> *Maria Purissima*, Mary Most Pure, is the great example of purity, in that her heart is totally given over to God and pours out love towards those around her.
**Looking for Protestant Founders like Luther,Calvin, Zwingli, etc. also theologians and biblical scholars outside of Catholic Church, before reformation and early reformation era, who look upon the Blessed Virgin Mary as having a pure heart**."
A citation from Protestant Founders and Theologians in harmony with Early Church and Church Fathers would be a perfect answer.
Asked by jong ricafort
(1055 rep)
Feb 2, 2026, 02:58 AM
Last activity: Feb 4, 2026, 12:19 AM
Last activity: Feb 4, 2026, 12:19 AM