Thursday, September 23, 2021

The Amazing Story of Mary!


 

Author’s Note

 

“Piazzas, churches named for a teenager who gave life to the Christ. Sculptures, paintings, frescoes devoted to her holiness. But the only thing about her we remember, she was a virgin.”

-Joy McCullough

 

Reflections

 

Next to Jesus, Mary may be one of the most revered people in the history of Christianity. If you rely on the accounts of her in the New Testament, you may be hard pressed to know who she is. Paul in his epistles, only mentions her when he refers to Christ as having been born of a woman, but he doesn’t say anything else about her and does not talk about Jesus’ birth. When reading the Gospel accounts, you can sense some tension between Jesus and his family, some estrangement between Jesus and his family. In the gospel of Mark, little is said about Mary. In the gospel of John her name is never mentioned, she is mentioned only as the mother of Jesus. She is clearly described in the gospels of Matthew and Luke as Mary, who was betrothed to Joseph, was a virgin, and gave birth to Jesus in Bethlehem, although the accounts differ significantly in details about Jesus’ birth.

 

So how did Mary become the leader of the saints in the Catholic Church, and beloved by many who call themselves Christian? The serious gaps in the amazing story of Mary are filled by the apocryphal texts. As David Bakker tells us in his course entitled, The Apocryphal Jesus, these texts provide the reader with insights into “her purity and holiness, her access to divine knowledge, her ability to intercede with God on behalf of others, and the unusual circumstances of her death.”

 

In the middle of the second century CE, the Proto-Gospel of James was written. This apocryphal text deals with Mary, giving the reader more information about Mary’s life. This text tells the reader Mary’s birth was miraculous, because her father and mother, Joachim, a rabbinic priest, and Anna, were unable to have a child, but through prayer, God intervened and gave them Mary. From an early age Anna believed Mary was special and she dedicated Mary to God. The text goes on to say because Anna thought Mary should only walk on sacred ground, Mary grew up secluded in the Temple. While in the temple, Mary spent her time weaving, praying, and receiving food from an angel. At the age of twelve, Mary left the Temple, under the guardianship of Joseph, chosen by the family. Joseph was an elderly man, who had sons from a prior marriage, and agreed to marry her and not to have sex with her. The text goes on to strongly emphasize Mary’s virginity before and after the birth of Jesus. After Jesus’ birth, Joseph has Salome examine Mary, who confirms Mary remained a virgin. This account of Mary became and remains authoritative for the Catholic Church.

 

Other apocryphal literature from the second and third centuries CE, speak of a Mary. Historians generally believe the Mary spoke of in the Gospel of Thomas and the Gospel of Mary is actually Mary Magdalene, but some scholars suggest this Mary could be Mary, the mother of Jesus.

 

These last days of Mary’s life have been detailed in stories, hymns, and sermons from late antiquity and the early Middle Ages. These sources differ in some details, but generally advocate that because of her status as the mother of Jesus, her body was not left in the ground to suffer decay and corruption. A delightful account of this can be found in the Six Books of Dormition where Christ, Michael, and the other angels take Mary’s soul and body out of the tomb, to paradise.

 

Some of these apocryphal texts also emphasize Mary’s special relationship with God. Because of this special relationship, she is given special knowledge of mysteries, allowing her to intercede with Jesus on behalf of other human beings.

 

The ascendancy of Mary to sainthood and worship is not without controversy. Jewish writings from the second and third centuries refer to Mary by her Jewish name, Miriam, and say that she's a hairdresser and that Jesus is the illegitimate son of a Roman soldier called Panthera. 

In the early fifth century CE, the bishop of Constantinople, Nestorius, denied Mary should be called the mother of God. His view was condemned at a major church council at Ephesus in 431. At that council meeting, Mary was declared the mother of God. Today many people, including some Protestants, object to the figure that Mary has become, a goddess-like figure, like the Pagan goddesses of Aphrodite or Artemis. In the 1950’s, Pope Pius XII, defined as official Catholic doctrine, the assumption of the Virgin’s body and soul into heavenly glory.

 

            So, just who was this person called Mary and who are those who belong to the Cult of Mary?

 

Silent Prayer

 

Creator God, thank you for the beauty of Your creation!

 

Music

 

Mary Did You Know? – Pentatonix

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ifCWN5pJGIE

 

Barry

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