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
(Page 7 of 8)
Simultaneously, the emphasis on sexuality as the root of all evil served to subordinate all women. The ancient Roman world was rife with flesh-hating spiritualities—Stoicism, Manichaeism, Neoplatonism—and they influenced Christian thinking just as it was jelling into “doctrine.” Thus the need to disempower the figure of Mary Magdalene, so that her succeeding sisters in the church would not compete with men for power, meshed with the impulse to discredit women generally. This was most efficiently done by reducing them to their sexuality, even as sexuality itself was reduced to the realm of temptation, the source of human unworthiness. All of this—from the sexualizing of Mary Magdalene, to the emphatic veneration of the virginity of Mary, the mother of Jesus, to the embrace of celibacy as a clerical ideal, to the marginalizing of female devotion, to the recasting of piety as self-denial, particularly through penitential cults—came to a kind of defining climax at the end of the sixth century. It was then that all the philosophical, theological and ecclesiastical impulses curved back to Scripture, seeking an ultimate imprimatur for what by then was a firm cultural prejudice. It was then that the rails along which the church—and the Western imagination—would run were set.
Pope Gregory I (c. 540-604) was born an aristocrat and served as the prefect of the city of Rome. After his father’s death, he gave everything away and turned his palatial Roman home into a monastery, where he became a lowly monk. It was a time of plague, and indeed the previous pope, Pelagius II, had died of it. When the saintly Gregory was elected to succeed him, he at once emphasized penitential forms of worship as a way of warding off the disease. His pontificate marked a solidifying of discipline and thought, a time of reform and invention both. But it all occurred against the backdrop of the plague, a doom-laden circumstance in which the abjectly repentant Mary Magdalene, warding off the spiritual plague of damnation, could come into her own. With Gregory’s help, she did.
Known as Gregory the Great, he remains one of the most influential figures ever to serve as pope, and in a famous series of sermons on Mary Magdalene, given in Rome in about the year 591, he put the seal on what until then had been a common but unsanctioned reading of her story. With that, Mary’s conflicted image was, in the words of Susan Haskins, author of Mary Magdalene: Myth and Metaphor, “finally settled...for nearly fourteen hundred years.”
It all went back to those Gospel texts. Cutting through the exegetes’ careful distinctions—the various Marys, the sinful women—that had made a bald combining of the figures difficult to sustain, Gregory, standing on his own authority, offered his decoding of the relevant Gospel texts. He established the context within which their meaning was measured from then on:
She whom Luke calls the sinful woman, whom John calls Mary, we believe to be the Mary from whom seven devils were ejected according to Mark. And what did these seven devils signify, if not all the vices?
There it was—the woman of the “alabaster jar” named by the pope himself as Mary of Magdala. He defined her:
It is clear, brothers, that the woman previously used the unguent to perfume her flesh in forbidden acts. What she therefore displayed more scandalously, she was now offering to God in a more praiseworthy manner. She had coveted with earthly eyes, but now through penitence these are consumed with tears. She displayed her hair to set off her face, but now her hair dries her tears. She had spoken proud things with her mouth, but in kissing the Lord’s feet, she now planted her mouth on the Redeemer’s feet. For every delight, therefore, she had had in herself, she now immolated herself. She turned the mass of her crimes to virtues, in order to serve God entirely in penance.
The address “brothers” is the clue. Through the Middle Ages and the Counter-Reformation, into the modern period and against the Enlightenment, monks and priests would read Gregory’s words, and through them they would read the Gospels’ texts themselves. Chivalrous knights, nuns establishing houses for unwed mothers, courtly lovers, desperate sinners, frustrated celibates and an endless succession of preachers would treat Gregory’s reading as literally the gospel truth. Holy Writ, having recast what had actually taken place in the lifetime of Jesus, was itself recast.
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Comments (41)
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why isnt there like anything about her, every website I look at has no personal information about her.. This website only shows what the person has done in their past, nothing about.. How old they died, their birth date.
Posted by Alli on May 5,2013 | 07:47 PM
The Magdalene Complex, The Silent Apostle I & II fiction can be so easy, whereas fact has moe twists to cover the real message. If Mary Magdalene was all of these things? metaphorically speaking, where are we today with technology and belief. I offer a complete twist of fact and fiction...enjoy A.D.Doyle
Posted by Andrew David Doyle on April 3,2013 | 11:09 AM
A wonderful, provocative, stimulating article. I would like to make one correction. Christians do not worship Mary, his Mother, only God is worthy of worship. What Christians do is cultivate a devotion to her, ask for her intercession,remember us. If there is Marian worship in someone's life, then it is no longer Christian.
Posted by John on April 2,2013 | 08:24 PM
I enjoyed the article very much. That is very much in line with the Jesus I know. To bad all the believers get stuck in the black and white.
Posted by Marc M on March 31,2013 | 02:20 AM
the fact is we all will never know the truth,because all have their agenda,lies. the truth only will be revealed if he really comes back,which I hope 4 the better of humankind..Frank walker...Denver
Posted by frank walker on March 23,2013 | 06:56 PM
Sometimes it is better to read the Bible as is because when trying to search more what you get is people's minds not of the Holy spirit whom Jesus says will teach us everything. What is more important is to seek Him and ask the Holy spirit to reveal more as it happened with John at Patimmos whatever that he saw there it was in the Spirit.
Posted by Jabu on February 27,2013 | 01:11 AM
I don't know much of anything but from research, I don't think the Catholic church was factual at all. Emperor Constantine came 200 years after the Christ. John, Peter, Paul were already dead. I think the Mary Magdalene portrayed is fake and has a resemblance to the ancient Goddess Ishtar. Christmas is a pagan holiday and so is Easter, the only truth one can come up with would be the actual bible. I wouldn't trust the Catholic bible or the King James version though. The only truth would be to study the ancient customs around those areas at the time of Christ. Ancient Israel and Greece seem like a good start.
Posted by believer of truth on January 23,2013 | 02:19 AM
Mary Magdalene was a divine mother...She is a divine being whom the world doesnt know..Real teachings of Jesus Christ has been misunderstood because of Business minded people who modified his teachings according to their limited mind. She is same like saint Theresse Neuman of Germany.If you want to know who is Mary Magdalene read the biography of theresse neumann. She is same as theresse neumann..
Posted by saint on January 3,2013 | 03:49 PM
"The world suffers a lot, Not because of the violence of bad people...but because of the SILENCE of good people" It is time the Vatican came out open with the missing books... book on st. Philiph, St.Barbanas, and Mary Magdeline. And tell the world about the lost years of Jesus. Man is searching you cannot hide it for too long.
Posted by d. pillay on December 31,2012 | 07:38 AM
Interesting!
Posted by Jaqui Dingemans on September 24,2012 | 06:43 PM
are u saying jesus had a lover anad was never maarried to marry the question came up on the news one night was jesus ever married im niot sure but i dio belive in him and our god
Posted by corless woodland on September 23,2012 | 08:29 PM
A slight correction: None of the women mentioned in this article would have recognized the name "Mary". They were Jews and had Jewish names, in this case Miriam. Mary is an English distortion of a Greek distortion of an ancient Hebrew name. English did not exist at the time; none of the characters mentioned ever spoke the name "Mary".
Posted by Spectator on September 9,2012 | 01:51 AM
hope these are the true history of Mary Magdalene. goog j to read.
Posted by maniam on September 3,2012 | 07:11 AM
Very informative. thx n god bless
Posted by Kas on August 2,2012 | 03:58 AM
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