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Dear Rev. Know it
all,
A question came up at
Bible Study last night. One of the group insisted that the Bible says Mary had
other children than Jesus, and that, though Jesus was miraculously conceived,
Mary and Joseph were just like any other married couple. Also, I noticed that
there is no genealogy of Mary in the Bible, and that the genealogies of Joseph
in Matthew and Luke seem to contradict each other. If Joseph wasn’t actually the
father of Jesus, how can Jesus be descended from David?
Yours,
Gene E. O’Lojey
Dear Gene,
These are two
important and interrelated questions. It is true that the Bible says Jesus had
brothers. It doesn’t say that Mary had other children. One thing is not the same
as the others.
The first question
asks about something usually called “the perpetual virginity of Mary.” We
believe that Mary remained a virgin her whole life. This is emphatically
believed by both Catholic and Orthodox Churches and even by the first Protestant
reformers, Zwingli, Luther and Calvin. Since it’s not directly mentioned in the
Bible, it was not included in Protestant creeds. Only modern evangelical
Protestants insist that Mary and Joseph were the parents of other children. In
doing this, they try to de-emphasize the reverence that traditional Christians
have for the Blessed Mother.
Well, what does the
Bible say? James and Joses are mentioned in Mark 6:3. "Is he (Jesus) not the
carpenter, the son of Mary, and the brother of James and Joses and Judas and
Simon? And are not his sisters here with us? And they took offense at him."
This would make it seem that Mary had children. However James and Joses are
mentioned again in Mark 15:40, which mentions among the women present at Jesus'
crucifixion a "Mary, the mother of James the Less and Joses". This would make
it seem that they are cousins of Jesus, by a different Mary. Catholic tradition
favors the “cousins” approach. It was taught by St. Jerome and other Church
fathers that the term "brother" in biblical times had a broader meaning and
included cousins and other more distant relatives as well.
The Greek and Eastern
Churches follow a different but very ancient tradition that’s first recorded in
the Protevangelion of St. James. It was probably written around 150AD. Here is a
quote from the Protoevangelion (Book I chapter 7. Vs12,13)
“And the
high-priest said, ‘Joseph, you are the person chosen to take the Virgin
of the Lord, to keep her for him. But Joseph refused, saying, I am an
old man, and have children, but she is young, and I fear, for fear that
I should appear ridiculous in Israel.”
Some traditions
even say that Salome was the name of Joseph’s first wife who had died, leaving
him a widower. This tradition was held by all the Western Church fathers until
after St. Ambrose, as well as the Greek fathers.
Fr. Bargil Pixner,
the great, recently deceased Benedictine scholar and archeologist has some
interesting ideas that tie together the Protoevangelion and the archeology of
the Holy Land. Many authorities maintain that a vow of celibacy was unheard of
at the time of Christ, and thought the Pharisees certainly didn’t believe in
permanent celibacy, there were some Jewish who did.
In the Qumran “Great
Temple Scroll,” (11QMiq), we read, “When a young woman makes a vow of continence
to the Lord.... and her father hears about it....and says nothing about it....
the vow will be binding on both father and daughter. The same holds true for a
married wife in respect to her husband. If he confirms the vow, both spouses
will be obligated to it.”
Fr. Pixner points
out that Royal Davidic family was late in returning to the Holy Land after the
Babylonian exile. They only returned in the century before the time of Christ,
and when they returned and settled in places that had associations with radical
sects of Judaism, such as the Essenes, that preached the immanent coming of the
Messiah. The traditional place of Mary’s early childhood in Jerusalem adjoins
the temple and was an Essene neighborhood. The traditional site of the Last
Supper and Pentecost are in the Essene quarter in southwest Jerusalem. John the
Baptist, a close relative of Jesus seems to have been involved in one these
groups, and was quite possibly the leader of one.
Fr. Pixner pays
serious attention to the old stories of Mary’s childhood that are found in the
Protoevangelion because they reflect the beliefs and practices of the Messianic
sects like the Essenes. The Davidic family would have had common cause with
these groups who longed for the Messiah to purify the temple, the priesthood and
the monarchy. It only makes sense. After all, job prospects would certainly
have looked brighter if the Herod/Maccabee family were tossed out of the
monarchy and the Davidic family restored. That is certainly the backdrop of the
Gospel, and explains Jesus’ strained relation with some members of His family.
They wanted revolution. Jesus preached conversion.
So, the story may go
something like this. Mary was raised in the shadow of the temple and served as
some young Jewish girls did with the traditional women’s tasks of sewing and
weaving. (Please no politically correct grumbling. History is history and I
would never dream of asking women to do that sort of thing for the Church in
this enlightened age.) She may have taken a vow of virginity, with the
permission of her father, Joachim and when it came time to arrange her marriage,
Joachim may have found an older, widowed relative to marry her and thus protect
her vow. None of that is inconsistent with the Gospel or the customs of the
time.
Though the
Protoevangelion has a lot of fanciful material in it, it does seem to reflect
very old stories. These traditions seem what the relatives of Jesus believed in
the first century, and there were quite a few relatives around. Julius Africanus
was a Christian historian born in the Holy Land around 160AD. He claims to have
gotten his information from the family of Jesus, who were called the “desposyni,”
that is “the family of the master.” Their identities were well known in the
ancient world. Some of the relatives of Jesus claimed special distinction in the
early Church. The bishops of Jerusalem all seem to have been relatives of Jesus
up until 135AD when the city was destroyed by the emperor Hadrian. (By the way,
none of these relatives of Jesus ever claimed descent from Him, no matter what
the DaVinci Code claims.)
The family of Jesus
and the first believers didn’t forget these things. The memory of families in
the traditional societies goes back centuries, even in families without famous
members. Certainly, Jesus would have been well remembered and the stories about
Him cherished by His relatives. These old stories don’t die out.
It always amazes me
that we in the 21st
century think we know better than those who were Jesus’ close relatives in the
first years of Christianity. We have received these things from them. It is the
consistent tradition of Christianity until very recent times that the
relationship between Mary and Joseph was not a typical marriage, and that Mary
was perpetually a virgin. The Bible witnesses to this too, when Jesus asks John
to care for His mother. The Scriptures say that she lived with him from that day
on. (John 19:26,27) If she had other children, custom and family feeling would
certainly have dictated that she live with them, but the evidence of Scripture
is clear that Mary stood alone at the foot of the cross. Thus, we have the
witness of both Scripture and very strong tradition that Mary was Ever-Virgin.
Your second question
is also very important and actually related to your first question, “Why do the
Gospels not have a genealogy of Mary and why do the genealogies of Joseph seem
to contradict each other?” the answer is really quite simple. The same Julius
Africanus mentioned above learned it from the relatives of Jesus. (Look in
Eusebius Ecclesiastical History Chapter 7.) The Jews, as many other cultures,
have a way to keep family lines from dying out, if a man dies leaving no sons
to keep his name alive. This is called a levirate marriage. Deuteronomy 25:5-6
says that a brother should marry the widow of his deceased brother if his
brother has no sons. The firstborn child is considered the firstborn son of the
deceased brother. (In certain cases in the Middle East, adoption rather than
actual marriage, is also used to keep families from dying out.) Julius Africanus
claims that he was told by Jesus’ relatives Joseph’s lineage comes such levirate
relationships. The Gospel of Matthew records the biological genealogy of Joseph
and the Gospel of Luke records the legal genealogy of Joseph. Eusebius of
Caesarea in this same chapter 7 points out that Mary’s genealogy is essentially
the same as Joseph’s because people married within families, and they still do
in much of the Near East.
How are these two
things related? Simple. Your friend at the Bible study said that “The Bible
says....” the Bible doesn’t say that Mary had other children. It says that Jesus
had brothers named James and Joses. The text no where says that Mary was their
mother. Your friend thinks he knows the bible, but he doesn’t know it very well.
The Bible when taken
alone and out of its context does say that Joseph is the son of both Eli and
Matthan. Look at the genealogies. They don’t match at all! The Church could have
edited out difficult passages, but she never has. She kept them and guarded them
as family treasures passed down through the ages. The Bible is our book. By the
inspiration of the Holy Spirit, we wrote it, (at least the later parts) we
compiled it and we have faithfully passed it on from generation to generation.
It can only be read and understood in the light of the traditions we have
received and that the Church has studied since the very beginning. Modern
arrogance is no substitute for the authority Christ gave His Bride, the Church.
Yours,
Rev. Know-it-all |