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Did St. Mary have the pain of labor when Jesus was born? I would think yes, because He was fully human, and obviously so was she; but the whole reason that there is pain associated with labor (the original sin) is what He came to take away. Please clarify.

St. Mary was fully human. She was born with the original sin and the corrupted nature of man as a result of Adam's sin. She needed salvation and called her Son Jesus Christ, her Savior. When she gave birth to Christ; He was born of her without the original sin.

As for the birth pains, St. Gregory of Nyssa says, "As the Son has been given to us without a father, so the Child has been born without a birth. As the Virgin herself did not know how the body that received divinity was formed in her own body, so neither did she notice the birth. Even the prophet Isaiah affirms that her giving birth was without pain, when he says: 'Before the pangs of birth arrived, a male child came forth and was born' (Is 66:7)...Just as she who introduced death into nature by her sin was condemned to bear children in suffering and travail, it was necessary that the Mother of life, after having conceived in joy, should give birth in joy as well. No wonder that the angel said to her, 'Rejoice, O full of grace!' (Lk 1:28). With these words he took from her the burden of that sorrow which, from the beginning of creation, has been imposed on birth because of sin” (St. Gregory of Nyssa, On the Song of Songs 13; PG 44, quoted in Gambero, Mary and the Fathers of the Church, p. 158).

John of Damascus puts a similar argument:

"As pleasure did not precede it, pain did not follow it, according to the prophet that says: 'before her pain came, she was delivered of a man child'" (Exposition of the orthodox faith Book IV, chapter XIV, NPNF Vol IX pp 85-86).
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