Who Was Mary Magdalene?
From the writing of the New Testament to the filming of The Da Vinci Code, her image has been repeatedly conscripted, contorted and contradicted. But through it all, one question has gone largely unanswered
- By James Carroll
- Smithsonian magazine, June 2006, Subscribe
The whole history of western civilization is epitomized in the cult of Mary Magdalene. For many centuries the most obsessively revered of saints, this woman became the embodiment of Christian devotion, which was defined as repentance. Yet she was only elusively identified in Scripture, and has thus served as a scrim onto which a succession of fantasies has been projected. In one age after another her image was reinvented, from prostitute to sibyl to mystic to celibate nun to passive helpmeet to feminist icon to the matriarch of divinity’s secret dynasty. How the past is remembered, how sexual desire is domesticated, how men and women negotiate their separate impulses; how power inevitably seeks sanctification, how tradition becomes authoritative, how revolutions are co-opted; how fallibility is reckoned with, and how sweet devotion can be made to serve violent domination—all these cultural questions helped shape the story of the woman who befriended Jesus of Nazareth.
Who was she? From the New Testament, one can conclude that Mary of Magdala (her hometown, a village on the shore of the Sea of Galilee) was a leading figure among those attracted to Jesus. When the men in that company abandoned him at the hour of mortal danger, Mary of Magdala was one of the women who stayed with him, even to the Crucifixion. She was present at the tomb, the first person to whom Jesus appeared after his resurrection and the first to preach the “Good News” of that miracle. These are among the few specific assertions made about Mary Magdalene in the Gospels. From other texts of the early Christian era, it seems that her status as an “apostle,” in the years after Jesus’ death, rivaled even that of Peter. This prominence derived from the intimacy of her relationship with Jesus, which, according to some accounts, had a physical aspect that included kissing. Beginning with the threads of these few statements in the earliest Christian records, dating to the first through third centuries, an elaborate tapestry was woven, leading to a portrait of St. Mary Magdalene in which the most consequential note—that she was a repentant prostitute—is almost certainly untrue. On that false note hangs the dual use to which her legend has been put ever since: discrediting sexuality in general and disempowering women in particular.
Confusions attached to Mary Magdalene’s character were compounded across time as her image was conscripted into one power struggle after another, and twisted accordingly. In conflicts that defined the Christian Church—over attitudes toward the material world, focused on sexuality; the authority of an all-male clergy; the coming of celibacy; the branding of theological diversity as heresy; the sublimations of courtly love; the unleashing of “chivalrous” violence; the marketing of sainthood, whether in the time of Constantine, the Counter-Reformation, the Romantic era, or the Industrial Age—through all of these, reinventions of Mary Magdalene played their role. Her recent reemergence in a novel and film as the secret wife of Jesus and the mother of his fate-burdened daughter shows that the conscripting and twisting are still going on.
But, in truth, the confusion starts with the Gospels themselves.
In the gospels several women come into the story of Jesus with great energy, including erotic energy. There are several Marys—not least, of course, Mary the mother of Jesus. But there is Mary of Bethany, sister of Martha and Lazarus. There is Mary the mother of James and Joseph, and Mary the wife of Clopas. Equally important, there are three unnamed women who are expressly identified as sexual sinners—the woman with a “bad name” who wipes Jesus’ feet with ointment as a signal of repentance, a Samaritan woman whom Jesus meets at a well and an adulteress whom Pharisees haul before Jesus to see if he will condemn her. The first thing to do in unraveling the tapestry of Mary Magdalene is to tease out the threads that properly belong to these other women. Some of these threads are themselves quite knotted.
It will help to remember how the story that includes them all came to be written. The four Gospels are not eyewitness accounts. They were written 35 to 65 years after Jesus’ death, a jelling of separate oral traditions that had taken form in dispersed Christian communities. Jesus died in about the year a.d. 30. The Gospels of Mark, Matthew and Luke date to about 65 to 85, and have sources and themes in common. The Gospel of John was composed around 90 to 95 and is distinct. So when we read about Mary Magdalene in each of the Gospels, as when we read about Jesus, what we are getting is not history but memory—memory shaped by time, by shades of emphasis and by efforts to make distinctive theological points. And already, even in that early period—as is evident when the varied accounts are measured against each other—the memory is blurred.
Regarding Mary of Magdala, the confusion begins in the eighth chapter of Luke:
Now after this [Jesus] made his way through towns and villages preaching, and proclaiming the Good News of the kingdom of God. With him went the Twelve, as well as certain women who had been cured of evil spirits and ailments: Mary surnamed the Magdalene, from whom seven demons had gone out, Joanna the wife of Herod’s steward Chuza, Susanna, and several others who provided for them out of their own resources.
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Comments (19)
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The unnamed woman in Lk 7 is not among those "expressly identified as sexual sinners," unless any sinner with gender is a sexual sinner. That this woman's sins were increasingly *assumed* to be sexual from late antiquity to the present doesn't mean that a first-century audience would concur.
Posted by Andrew Dolan on December 16,2011 | 04:44 PM
Thank you for a pleasing expose. I can accept personal observation based on the facts as part of an author's presentation of his or her premise. With all the rot (my view) written about Mary Magdalen I found this a well presented article based on academic principles.
It should be more widely read as the misinformation is still out there!
Posted by Shane Poulson on November 24,2011 | 07:26 PM
In response to "kevin on April 18,2011 | 01:57 PM"
Lest you fall into the same trap you accuse Carroll of, could you elaborate on where "the writer has inserted some non factual points of view that are used to support his premise." It's one thing to say this is what Carroll has done, but you lose credibility by not providing examples.
Again, what are the "other early well accepted teachings about womens (sic) roles" that the author eludes? Thanks.
I doubt any author's conclusions are ever valid on all levels, but I am of the opinion that ones that speak for the redemption of a previously miscast character in the Bible, and the ways in which her spotless biblical reputation has been marred by time, history and politics, is valid.
Posted by Pamela on November 7,2011 | 11:43 AM
A lot of good research, but also the writer has inserted some non factual points of view that are used to support his premise. This causes it to lose some credibility. The author also eludes other early well accepted teachings about womens roles, which are vital to drawing conclusions. While the distortion of Mary M. may be true. His conclusions are not necessarily valid on all levels.
Posted by kevin on April 18,2011 | 01:57 PM
Devotion is what I glean from this very informative article. Devotion of the repented heart.
Posted by G. Hulett on January 9,2011 | 10:03 PM
Isn't it strange that the west that is supposedly championing the cause of men/women equality will still allow its greatest fondation and legacy to trample on women in such horrific manner? And strangely, this has been sustained for so many centuries that most women have even come to accept is as divined
Posted by Tan on January 2,2011 | 12:16 PM
Regarding previous posting dated Nov., 12th.,2010:
For an insight to what was once "gender-equality" amongst the first Jewish-Christians, indeed long before the first Roman Emperor became what he thought was a Christian, also buildings in England sanctified to a special Mary (not the one most people would first think of), please refer to previous posting.
" A Merry Christmas (Christ's Mass, e.g., midnight mass, etc.) and a pending Happy New Year ".
Kind regards,
Raymond.
Posted by Raymond on December 24,2010 | 12:29 PM
For an insight to a special respect for Mary Magdalene, please type Raymond E.O.Ella in a www.google.co.uk searchbox and click, then go to "Reedness & Ousefleet" and click.
Kind regards,
R.
Posted by Raymond on November 12,2010 | 06:28 PM
What if all this debate misses the point? So what if Jesus and Mariam "hooked up" , what's the message?
Couldn't it be that there is truth in the Gnostic Gospel of Mary as well as the canonical Gospels of the new testement?
Every Gospel, it seems to me, is written (and edited) for a different audience.
Not unlike today's political scene.
After all, what is written, at any time in history, is what was heard by the writer, not necessarily what was stated.
DO you have ears to listen? Eyes to see?
Posted by Vicky Klopp on November 4,2010 | 01:28 PM
Two books on this subject, that I found very enlightning are: "The Sarced Marriage" and "The Beloved One". Both by http://www.hierosgamospublications.com/ hope this helps.
Posted by grap.lolbroek@gmail.com on November 2,2010 | 03:46 AM
i know this post is over a year old, but it seems a shame for such an incorrect post to be the final one. there are many different kinds of gnostics as there are christians, yes. also stated was that gnostics and christians considered each other as their enemy...hm...did they? there were however, throughout history many examples of christians persecuting and murdering other christians because they didn't believe in the same way. never the less, they were both christians, though called the cathars. in 1209 on the feast day of st. mary magdalene, pope innocent (how curious)III had 20,000 cathars murdered for that difference in belief. today that would be as if the methodists went to war on the lutherans for their differences in faith. both are still christians, but are still different. today, we can be believers of the christian faith holding different views without the need to eradicate the "enemy".
now regarding the gospels that were "twisted, slandered and misrepresented"...people who live in glass houses, shouldn't throw stones. it is common knowledge that the dates of the gnostic texts are older than the canonical gospels...so which version is more likely to have been tainted? "canonical" meaning chosen to be included in the bible, not meaning more truthful or worthy of being selected...
Posted by patti on July 14,2010 | 11:53 AM
Many syncretistic religions formed gnosticism. Gnosticism was rivaling against Christianity and gnosticism held itself better religion as Christianity was. Word gnosticism comes from Greek word gnosis, which means knowledge. Gnosticism was various effects, for instance, some Gnostics taught that divinity can be achieved through unity of the man and woman. This thought led some Gnostics to reach for divinity through sexual intercourse between the man and woman. There existed also some Gnostics, who abstained from sexual intercourse. When we know the fact that Gnostics held Christians as their enemies and that Gnostics held themselves better as Christians and that Gnostics wanted to show in every way that Gnosticism was better as Christianity, so Gnostics made so called gnostic gospels were they twisted, slandered and misrepresented the real gospels. Gnostics went so far in this misrepresent that they wrote "new gospels" by faking the real gospels. In these faked gospels Gnostics wrote that Jesus Christ was an ordinary man who has a sexual relationship with Mary Magdalene.
http://koti.phnet.fi/elohim/marymagdalene.html
Posted by telson on July 12,2009 | 06:47 AM
Annoiting the mans feet with alabaster oil is not just done when he dies. It is also part of the ritual that's "seals" the marriage when a bride is pregnent. Royalty was required to have children, and a man was not truly married until his wife became pregnent. A "barren" clause, so to speak. Mary Magneline was married to Jesus, and it was common knowledge in the 1-3 centuries. All the Marys in the Bible were of the Covet Of Mary. Just as Nuns take on a religious name, when you attained the Order and statis, your first name became Mary. Did you know Mother Teressa was Mother Mary Teressa? She belonged to that Order.
Posted by JDS on March 18,2009 | 06:38 PM
It seems to me that Saint Mary Magdalene was the first Pope. The church should give her her tittle back and recognize her as the first Pope in history.
Posted by LM on February 11,2009 | 07:07 AM
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