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 5 of 8)
Such a woman lives on as Mary Magdalene in Western Christianity and in the secular Western imagination, right down, say, to the rock opera Jesus Christ Superstar, in which Mary Magdalene sings, “I don’t know how to love him...He’s just a man, and I’ve had so many men before...I want him so. I love him so.” The story has timeless appeal, first, because that problem of “how”—whether love should be eros or agape; sensual or spiritual; a matter of longing or consummation—defines the human condition. What makes the conflict universal is the dual experience of sex: the necessary means of reproduction and the madness of passionate encounter. For women, the maternal can seem to be at odds with the erotic, a tension that in men can be reduced to the well-known opposite fantasies of the madonna and the whore. I write as a man, yet it seems to me in women this tension is expressed in attitudes not toward men, but toward femaleness itself. The image of Mary Magdalene gives expression to such tensions, and draws power from them, especially when it is twinned to the image of that other Mary, Jesus’ mother.
Christians may worship the Blessed Virgin, but it is Magdalene with whom they identify. What makes her compelling is that she is not merely the whore in contrast to the Madonna who is the mother of Jesus, but that she combines both figures in herself. Pure by virtue of her repentance, she nevertheless remains a woman with a past. Her conversion, instead of removing her erotic allure, heightens it. The misery of self-accusation, known in one way or another to every human being, finds release in a figure whose abject penitence is the condition of recovery. That she is sorry for having led the willful life of a sex object makes her only more compelling as what might be called a repentance object.
So the invention of the character of Mary Magdalene as repentant prostitute can be seen as having come about because of pressures inhering in the narrative form and in the primordial urge to give expression to the inevitable tensions of sexual restlessness. But neither of these was the main factor in the conversion of Mary Magdalene’s image, from one that challenged men’s misogynist assumptions to one that confirmed them. The main factor in that transformation was, in fact, the manipulation of her image by those very men. The mutation took a long time to accomplish—fully the first 600 years of the Christian era.
Again, it helps to have a chronology in mind, with a focus on the place of women in the Jesus movement. Phase one is the time of Jesus himself, and there is every reason to believe that, according to his teaching and in his circle, women were uniquely empowered as fully equal. In phase two, when the norms and assumptions of the Jesus community were being written down, the equality of women is reflected in the letters of St. Paul (c. 50-60), who names women as full partners—his partners—in the Christian movement, and in the Gospel accounts that give evidence of Jesus’ own attitudes and highlight women whose courage and fidelity stand in marked contrast to the men’s cowardice.
But by phase three—after the Gospels are written, but before the New Testament is defined as such—Jesus’ rejection of the prevailing male dominance was being eroded in the Christian community. The Gospels themselves, written in those several decades after Jesus, can be read to suggest this erosion because of their emphasis on the authority of “the Twelve,” who are all males. (The all-male composition of “the Twelve” is expressly used by the Vatican today to exclude women from ordination.) But in the books of the New Testament, the argument among Christians over the place of women in the community is implicit; it becomes quite explicit in other sacred texts of that early period. Not surprisingly, perhaps, the figure who most embodies the imaginative and theological conflict over the place of women in the “church,” as it had begun to call itself, is Mary Magdalene.
Here, it is useful to recall not only how the New Testament texts were composed, but also how they were selected as a sacred literature. The popular assumption is that the Epistles of Paul and James and the four Gospels, together with the Acts of the Apostles and the Book of Revelation, were pretty much what the early Christian community had by way of foundational writings. These texts, believed to be “inspired by the Holy Spirit,” are regarded as having somehow been conveyed by God to the church, and joined to the previously “inspired” and selected books of the Old Testament to form “the Bible.” But the holy books of Christianity (like the holy books of Judaism, for that matter) were established by a process far more complicated (and human) than that.
The explosive spread of the Good News of Jesus around the Mediterranean world meant that distinct Christian communities were springing up all over the place. There was a lively diversity of belief and practice, which was reflected in the oral traditions and, later, texts those communities drew on. In other words, there were many other texts that could have been included in the “canon” (or list), but weren’t.
It was not until the fourth century that the list of canonized books we now know as the New Testament was established. This amounted to a milestone on the road toward the church’s definition of itself precisely in opposition to Judaism. At the same time, and more subtly, the church was on the way toward understanding itself in opposition to women. Once the church began to enforce the “orthodoxy” of what it deemed Scripture and its doctrinally defined creed, rejected texts—and sometimes the people who prized them, also known as heretics—were destroyed. This was a matter partly of theological dispute—If Jesus was divine, in what way?—and partly of boundary-drawing against Judaism. But there was also an expressly philosophical inquiry at work, as Christians, like their pagan contemporaries, sought to define the relationship between spirit and matter. Among Christians, that argument would soon enough focus on sexuality—and its battleground would be the existential tension between male and female.
Single Page « Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Next »
Subscribe now for more of Smithsonian's coverage on history, science and nature.









Comments (42)
I recently acquired a Holy relic of Mary Magdalene and have written a series of Fictional books about this one woman, and this parchment albeit a new revelation fits in nicely with the genre. The Magdalene Complex or The Silent Apostle series. Simply a potent revelation in its own right...be fantastic to see where this story goes. Andrew D Doyle
Posted by Andrew David Doyle on June 4,2013 | 03:53 PM
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
A wonderfully written article about very exciting mythical/literary figures. It is fascinating how these myths illuminate humankind and its nature. Well done.
Posted by Ala on July 29,2012 | 10:14 AM
The truth is we know little authentic historical truth regarding Mary Magdalene. We have hints about her through the four gospels and mainly St. John's gospel. Regardless of the actual truths, we do have Mary's gospel which certainly indicates the spiritual closeness between Mary and Jesus. Truly, she was a mystic and saw the " Glorified Christ " which the apostles were unable to see through their spiritual eyes. Mary Magdalene is the sacred icon of the role of women in the Catholic Church. She points the way of life that Jesus taught and lived. No we do not have all e details about Mary and Jesus's relationship. However, we know that they were close and that Mary was strongly attracted to the man Jesus and took care of him during his three year ministry on earth. The Jewish people have a male dominant culture. Jesus dared to associate with women. He went outside the box of beliefs, and lived a way of life that was all inclusive and showed respect to women. In the first century women had a teaching role inside their own homes but as the christian community became more public outside the private homes, women were not allowed authority of teaching spiritual lessons. Hopefully this will change. It is a slow process. Mary Magdalene pray for us.
Posted by on July 22,2012 | 12:06 PM
WHO wrote or from where did the story of the woman (bad or otherwise) who washed Jesus' feet originate?
Posted by Tony on May 10,2012 | 02:33 PM
After reading the entire article, I'm not sure if the unanswered question is "who was Mary Magdalene?" An even more relative question might be; does the story of the washing of Jesus feet related in ANY of the gospels have ANY basis of fact or is it purely a story to illustrate a theological point? Who IS the author?
Posted by Tony on May 8,2012 | 05:02 PM
I found this acticle to be accurate that the accounts were told by many scholars or disciples. I believed that Mary Magdalene lived and was said to be the wife of Jesus. Why couldn't Jesus have a life just like any other person. What I would like to know is is there a testament that Mary Magdalene wrote cause I never heard of it until sometime last year. It would be fascinating to see her account too. I am definately going to look up The Sacred Marriage and The Beloved One.
Posted by Christine LaBarge on April 23,2012 | 03:59 PM
YES I BELIEVE
Posted by Blessed stanley ucheGod okwara on April 9,2012 | 06:45 PM
It stikes me that much of this whole thing, article and comments, rests on some shaky premises: 1. That the gospels can be trusted to be historically accurate. From what we already know about the events of those times, we know that they cannot. 2. That the gospels are each of a single cloth from start to finish. It is well recognized by New Testament scholars that the birth and resurection narratives were added later and by different hands (and for differing reasons) than the originals. Each gospel was written for is own purposes, much of them political within and outside the church. They had almost nothing to do with historical accuracy. 3. That Mary of Magdala was an actual, historical, person. We do not know that to be true. 4. That Jesus himself was an actual, historical figure, and that the things recorded of him in the gospels actually happened. Again, we do not know any of that to be true, which is to say, historically accurate. The fact is...the facts are not known. All of this is mere speculation among people who want to believe or disbelieve certain things, much of them for their own reasons, as was the case with the authors of the gospels in the first place. For the Smithsonian to lend its name to this kind of nonsense makes me wonder if it would also like to get behind an article that says the world is flat.
Posted by Rev. Dr. Robert Herrmann-Keeling on April 2,2012 | 11:06 PM
As we all know, history is just a collection of memories and beliefs intertwined and retold from generation to generation. Over time there are many influences on how these stories are retold. We must accept that there is truth in the Scripture, but we also know that we each interpret what we read differently. Those who have lead the churches of Christianity are human and their beliefs and biases will be present in their interpretation. The truth remains: Mary Magdalene was the first person Jesus appeared to and sent her to preach the Good News. Clearly this indicates who Mary Magdalene was to Jesus.
Posted by AB on March 6,2012 | 10:40 AM
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
it seems that no body is really know about the ultimate fact that surrounding the real personal life of jesus while he was living as a regular human being.If he was a wholly person, feeling was his attributs,any human behavior was part of his mission, therefore, was jesus the one who got married to mary of magdala?
Posted by pierre polycarpe on December 11,2008 | 06:00 PM
I understand the promiscuity label on Mary Magdalene. It seems if times have not changed at bit. Mary came to Jesus in faith and repentance. It would be amazing if all of us could ever be so courageous. God Bless Josephine Delgado
Posted by josephine delgado on December 4,2008 | 06:52 PM
it all boils down to whether you are a creationist or an evolutionist, et.al.
Posted by L.Mac on May 23,2008 | 09:06 AM
This was a very interesting article. Relating to the Jesus-Mary Magdalene mystery, a new documentary is coming out next month called BLOODLINE. It follows the director as he tries to find out if a bloodline between the two really exists. He interviews members of the Priory of Sion, as well as others who are searching for the so-called Holy Grail. Check out the trailer and info about the film at http://www.bloodlinethemovie.com
Posted by Lindsey on April 8,2008 | 05:00 PM
It's great to see this article presenting a true picture of Mary of Magdala - at least as true as the current scholarship shows - published in the Smithsonian. Thank you. I'd love to see an article on other early christian women leaders such as Phoebe the deacon who most likely carried Paul's letter to the Romans and about Prisca who, with her husband did extensive missionary work with and for Paul. Sincerely, Rita L. Houlihan New York, NY
Posted by Rita L. Houlihan on November 30,2007 | 02:54 PM