16th Sunday in Ordinary Time, Year C
A certain woman named Martha received him
into her house. And she had a sister called Mary. (Luke 10:38-39)
Although
doubted by most modern biblical “scholars” and somewhat obscured by the Novus
Ordo Liturgy, there is no reason to doubt that St. Mary Magdalene is St. Mary
of Bethany, the sister of Sts. Martha and Lazarus. Furthermore, she is the
penitent woman described in Luke 7 who wept at the Lord’s feet and drying then
with her hair anointed them with the rich perfume.
The key
to recognizing the identity of St. Mary Magdalene as St. Mary of Bethany is to
see that the Magdalene is the penitent woman. Knowing her to be the repentant
sinner who anointed the Lord, we quickly recognize her as the sister of Sts.
Martha and Lazarus.
St. Mary Magdalene is the penitent woman
The
evidence of Scripture points to a connection between St. Mary Magdalene and the
penitent woman. Immediately after relating the story of the conversion of the
woman who had been known as sinner in the city, St. Luke tells us that a number
of women followed the Lord, among whom was “Mary
who is called Magdalen, out of whom seven devils were gone forth” (Luke
8:2). She is named first in the group, and is the only one about whom
information beyond simply her name is given.
Can
anyone doubt that the penitent woman must have been known in the early Church?
Is it at all likely, even on an human level, that after such a display of
repentance and affection she would not follow after the Lord and minister to
his needs? Can we really believe that the rest of her story would be entirely
forgotten by the Evangelist? Not likely.
In order
to preserve her dignity, St. Luke refrains from naming St. Mary Magdalene
directly in the story of her repentance, but he makes the connection by
introducing her in the verses immediately following and draws our attention by
indicating that she is a woman who has repented from a life of sin as being
freed from “seven demons” (representing the seven capital sins).
This is a
technique common to the Gospels -- consider a few other examples. While Mark
and Luke name the tax collector convert “Levi”, St. Matthew uses his more well
known name of “Matthew”. The two evangelists cover the shame of the apostle's
previous life, while St. Matthew states clearly that he had been a tax
collector. Again, the other evangelists do not reveal the identity of the one
who struck the high priest’s servants ear in the garden, but St. John names him
as Peter – indeed, the Fourth Gospel relates many more details about St. Peter
than any other, as John and Peter were very close (evidence from Acts of the
Apostles). Thus, in concealing the past sinfulness of St. Mary Magdalene, St.
Luke is doing something common to the gospel tradition.
The Saints and the Popes Say She is St. Mary
Magdalene
The most significant
papal approval of the tradition that St. Mary Magdalene is the penitent woman
of Luke 7 comes from a sermon of St. Gregory the Great. As this is a sermon of
a Roman Pontiff, it has the authority not only as being the words of a saint and
Father of the Church, but also as belonging to the ordinary magisterium.
“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. What did these seven devils signify, if not all
the vices? It is clear, 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.” (Sermon 33)
In
another place, St. Gregory the Great refers to St. Mary Magdalene as the “witness
of Divine Mercy” (XL Hom. In Evangelia, lib. II Hom. 25,10) – as she has
repented from her life of sin as expressed in Luke 7, and has been united to
the Lord by her act of repentance and love. This quote is significant, since it
has been taken up by Pope Francis in his recent elevation of the commemoration
of St. Mary Magdalene of a true feast. Hence, at least implicitly, Pope Francis
has likewise made use of his magisterial authority to teach the Church that St.
Mary Magdalene is a “witness of Divine Mercy” as having repented from her
previous life of sin and becoming one of the greatest saints in the life of the
Church!
In
addition to the teaching of Pope St. Gregory the Great and Pope Francis, this
tradition has been affirmed at least implicitly by countless popes through the
ages, and is recognized in the Church’s Liturgy – for the Tradition Mass of St.
Mary Magdalene affirms that she is the penitent sinner of Luke 7, and this
tradition has again become a normal part of the life of the Church since Pope
Benedict XVI has clarified that the Traditional Latin Mass is a legitimate and
necessary part of the Church’s liturgical life even today. Additionally, which
the Mass of Vatican II does not explicitly state that St. Mary Magdalene is the
penitent woman, neither does it reject this thesis.
Finally,
without quoting the innumerable saints of the Latin tradition, we will simply
state that nearly every saint and mystic of the western Church has recognized
that St. Mary Magdalene is the penitent sinner.
With such
a tradition as this, the modern(ist) scholars will have to give strong reasons
to prove that St. Mary Magdalene can’t be
the penitent woman – as no such reasons can be found, we ought to accept with religious
obedience the official teaching of the ordinary magisterium that St. Mary
Magdalene is the penitent woman.
St. Mary Magdalene is St. Mary of Bethany
“And Mary was she that anointed the Lord with
ointment and wiped his feet with her hair: whose brother Lazarus was sick.”
John 11:2
While
some will claim that St. John’s Gospel must be read in total isolation from the
other Gospels, the Catholic Church has always known that St. John (who wrote
his Gospel last of all) intentionally made only slight references to various
points stated more fully by Sts. Matthew, Mark and Luke. This is precisely what
occurs in John 11:2.
St. John
tells us that St. Mary of Bethany is the woman who anointed Jesus and wiped his
feet with her hair. While St. John Chrysostom denies that this passage refers
to the penitent of Luke 7, St. Augustine and the great commentators of the
Latin tradition affirm that this passage most certainly refers to the
Magdalene. Indeed, St. Augustine is giving the most natural reading of the
text.
It is
unlikely that St. John could be referring to the anointing of our Lord which he
will relate in chapter 12, since he introduces St. Mary of Bethany in chapter
11 as the one who had already
anointed the Lord! Furthermore, it would be profoundly confusing for St. John to
say, “This is the Mary that anointed the Lord,” if there were two well-known
women named Mary (namely, one Mary Magdalene and another Mary of Bethany)! We
would say, “St. John! Which Mary?” And he will reply, “They are one and the
same! She who anointed the Lord in her repentance is the same Mary who anointed
him prior to his death! St. Mary Magdalene is the sister of Sts. Martha and
Lazarus!”
Pope St.
Gregory the Great, in the passage sited above has already taught the Church
that St. Mary Magdalene is St. Mary of Bethany – “She whom Luke calls the
sinful woman, whom John calls Mary.” Furthermore, St. John himself specifies
that St. Mary Magdalene had come to the tomb to anoint Jesus (and in this place
he names her explicitly as the Magdalene), which fulfills what our Lord has said
of St. Mary of Bethany, “Let her alone,
that she may keep it against the day of my burial.” (John 12:7)
From the
anointing in John 12, shortly before our Lord’s death, we know that the sister
of Sts. Martha and Lazarus will be among the women to anoint the Lord in his
burial. This was fulfilled when “on the
first day of the week, Mary Magdalene cometh early, when it was yet dark, unto
the sepulcher” (John 20:1).
The Liturgy proves St. Mary Magdalene is the
sister of Sts. Martha and Lazarus
A final
argument, which to my mind is most convincing of all, is based on the Sacred
Liturgy. Not only do we point out that the Traditional Mass has enshrined the
tradition that St. Mary Magdalene is the sister of Sts. Martha and Lazarus, we further
stress that, if St. Mary Magdalene is not St. Mary of Bethany, then the Church
has no proper liturgical feast of St. Mary of Bethany!
How
strange would it be to celebrate the feast of St. Martha, but ignore in the
liturgy the sister who has “chosen the
better part”! Is it even reasonable to think that, in either the traditional
Mass or the Mass of Vatican II, there could be no proper Mass for St. Mary of
Bethany? In the modern martyrology, St. Mary of Bethany is mentioned on the
feast of St. Martha (which is fitting), but can we possibly believe that the
Church would fail to give her a feast day proper to herself? Truly, it is
unthinkable!
On the
other hand, the feast of St. Mary Magdalene falls on July 22, with the feast of
St. Martha falling on the octave day (July 29). We know that the octave day of
a feast is a “second celebration” of the feast day – hence, the feast of St. Martha
is rightly understood as another feast of St. Mary Magdalene. This connection
of the two feasts would make perfect sense if, as we have always believed, St.
Mary Magdalene is the sister of St. Martha!
Obviously,
the feast days for these two women were assigned on account of being the true
dates of their respective deaths, but surely God arranged it in his divine
providence so that we might never forget that St. Mary Magdalene is the true
sister of Sts. Martha and Lazarus. The Liturgy teaches us that St. Mary
Magdalene and St. Mary of Bethany are one and the same.
Below, a
homily on St. Mary Magdalene (the recording is not live, and the sound quality
is slightly compromised in a few spots)
Listen
online [here]!
But in the Benedictine Calendar, and I think in the revision of some calendars there IS a feast of Mary, Martha and Lazarus. There is some incongruity here!
ReplyDeleteUnknown, Correct. I refer to that point when I say, " In the modern martyrology, St. Mary of Bethany is mentioned on the feast of St. Martha (which is fitting), but can we possibly believe that the Church would fail to give her a feast day proper to herself?"
ReplyDeleteBut can we really believe that the best St Mary of Bethany gets is a slight reference on the feast of her sister St. Martha (July 29)? Can we really think that the sister who "chose the better part" is just one additional saint among many on the great feast of St Martha?
It seems impossible to me. On the other hand, it would make perfect sense for St Mary Magdalene to be commemorated again on her octave day with her brother St Lazarus on the feast of her sister St Martha.
\\Can we really think that the sister who "chose the better part" is just one additional saint among many on the great feast of St Martha?
ReplyDelete\\
Yes, we can.
In the Liturgy of the Byzantine Churches, both Catholic and Orthodox, St. Mary of Bethany and St. Mary Magdalene are two different people with two different feast days.
The Latin Church is NOT the standard of Catholicity, you know.
Thank you for the post, Father. I have been uncomfortable with conflating the Mary's before, but this is a very convincing argument. Seeing Mary of Bethany and Mary Magdalene as the same person, especially relating the contemplative nature of the former with the experience of the crucifixion and the resurrection of the latter, is wonderful.
ReplyDeleteYou mention St. John Chrysostom's interpretation of John and I wonder if you could talk more about that. If there is such a longstanding tradition of separating in the East, how should we take that?
Jack,
ReplyDeleteYou're over the top! True that the Latin Church is not the only in the Catholic Tradition, but there is only one Pope over the whole world, and the popes have repeated said (from St Gregory the Great to Pope Francis) that St Mary Magdalene is St Mary of Bethany.
In any case, I didn't claim that this is a matter of dogma (one's catholicity does not hang on this point) -- if a man (like St John Chrysostom) were to hold that St Mary of Bethany were not the same as St Mary Magdalene, he would still be Catholic, he would just be wrong.
Peace!
Christopher,
ReplyDeleteThere are many points of diversity in Scriptural interpretation of the East and the West. St John Chrysostom is a particularly interesting case -- he has many positions which most of the saints (even many of the east) would later dispute, for example: That St Joseph actually judged the Blessed Virgin as guilty of adultery, or that the Blessed Virgin Mary spoke out of personal ambition and put herself forward inappropriately at Cana or in Caparnaum.
He is perhaps not the most reliable author in certain disputed points...
Did you know that St. John Fisher wrote an entire book on this subject--that the Three Marys are one and the same, namely, St. Mary Magdalene? In this work, St. John Fisher was opposing Jacques Lefèvre d'Étaples (a sort of protestant forerunner in France), who in 1517 was really the first in the West to oppose the traditional doctrine. I recommend getting a copy and reading St. John Fisher's book. He thought this was an important topic!
ReplyDeleteAnonymous, please use a pseudonym or name.
ReplyDeleteThat is wonderful to hear! St John Fisher is one of the greatest minds of his time, and far too neglected. I will look for this book! thank you! +
Does not "Magdalene" denote the fact that Mary Magdalene was from the town of Magdala on the shore of the Sea of Galilee? If that was the case, she would be distinct from Mary of Bethany, a village of Judea southwest of Jerusalem. A single Mary cannot be from both Magdala and Bethany.
ReplyDeleteFather,
ReplyDeleteThank you for your post! I love posts like these that seek to answer questions about scripture we always have wondered about, but are usually not specifically addressed by our parish priests.
Anyhow, my only question to your argument would be: why is she called St. Mary Magdalene instead of St. Mary of Bethany? I'm assuming that you're assuming she was known as "Magdalene" because she moved from Bethany to Migdal in Galilee where she could pursue a sinful life far from her family in Bethany?
What do you think?
Thanks again!
-Dan
One of the more compelling arguments, which you touch upon, is the fact that Gog, the primary author of Scripture, thought it not necessesary to distinguish the Marys. Hence, they can only be the same woman. In every other case in the NT the person with the same name is distinguished!
ReplyDeleteVince,
ReplyDeleteIf a man were born in Boston but lived in New York for 30yrs after college - he could be said to be both from New York and from Boston.
Dan,
ReplyDeleteYes! I'd say that is one very plausible explanation!
The fact that Mary of Bethany is not mentioned to be at the foot of cross or present anytime during Our Lord's Passion is most implausible when one considers the deep love she had for Our Lord. If there was a reason for her absence I believe the Scriptures would have mentioned it. Mary of Bethany was present and is Mary Magdalene.
ReplyDelete\\n any case, I didn't claim that this is a matter of dogma (one's catholicity does not hang on this point) -- if a man (like St John Chrysostom) were to hold that St Mary of Bethany were not the same as St Mary Magdalene, he would still be Catholic, he would just be wrong.
ReplyDelete\\
Popes can be wrong, too. One of the popes (a Celestine, I think) taught an erroneous idea of the Beatific Vision, and Pope Honorius was a monothelite heretic.
Jack,
ReplyDeleteOf course a particular Pope can be wrong, I'm claiming that the authority of countless popes from St Gregory to Pope Francis makes a good argument in favor of the point. Additionally, the Latin Liturgy is another good argument. And also the writings of the saints and theologians of the west. But I didn't make this post a mere argument from authority - I showed from Sacred Scripture as well that there are many reasons to believe this.
You, on the other hand, act like a teenage brat who insists on the opposite point just as a way to spite his parents. Either engage the argument and offer your own biblical and patristic reasons for why Mary of Bethany cannot be Mary Magdalene, or be silent.
Bravo. Excellent article. I have now changed my mind on this, having thought otherwise.
ReplyDeleteLots of moving parts to your argument and a pretty stubborn response to your critics makes me less than convinced. I think the best we can say is that there are different traditions in the Church. Your certainty on this point is puzzling. Why be so definitive on a matter that is murky and on which no doctrinal needs demand precision?
ReplyDeleteBy the way a lot of people comment as "anonymous" because the site seems to require a lot to enter a comment under your actual name.
ReplyDeleteMany, many Blogger readers leave comments under a nom de Web, as it were. I use my real name, but I track people across the Catholic blogosphere easily with their pseudonyms being used for different accounts, e.g. Google, Disqus, etc.
DeleteAnonymous, its very easy to simply use pseudonym or name placed at the end of your comment - like this:
ReplyDelete- Fr Ryan
Anonymous (9:15),
ReplyDeleteNot sure about moving parts -- the only transition is that if Mary Magdalene is the penitent who anointed Jesus' feet, then it is most likely that she is also Mary of Bethany. That seems like a pretty simple premise.
I would not want to be dogmatic about this point - insofar as it isn't an absolute. However, it is amazing to recognize that nearly every saint and pope and theologian of the west has been just as certain as I. It has only been the influx of protestant thought in the Catholic Church that has made any Catholic in the west less than cerain.
My only point -- don't reject the doctrine just because it is our tradition, give some reasoning.
The only other figure with such ambiguity is St. James the Lesser, the Just, and/or the brother of the Lord.
ReplyDeleteMatthew, and I have published an article on James the Less which you can find by "searching" him in the search box in the upper right.
ReplyDeleteAccording to the Greek Calendar and Roman Martyrology
ReplyDeleteMary of Bethany is not Mary Magdalene. I find this blog
wrong because it reversed the changes in the teachings of
our Church.
Even Protestants believe Mary of Bethany is not to be
mixed with Mary Magdalene.
Anonymous, please use a pseudonym when commenting.
ReplyDeleteThe fact that you say "even the protestants" shows the weakness of your arguments. It is a protestant idea to think Mary Magdalene is not Mary of Bethany, and further to claim that she is not the penitent woman.
Pope Francis has revived the traditional belief that she is the penitent woman, and in doing so he quotes the sermon of St Gregory the Great in which further connection is made with Mary of Bethany.
The new martyrology doesn't even have a proper feast for Mary of Bethany, but mentions her almost as an after-thought on St Martha's day -- is it likely that this is all the honor God would desire for the sister who "chose the better part"?
In any case, I made a Sriptural argument as well -- engage the argument, don't just say "I disagree".
Just as a reference, I wanted to mention that Seventh-day Adventists (Protestants) also teach that they are the same person. I don't think we are entirely unique in this amongst Protestants as I have in the past read the same in some evangelical writings.
ReplyDeleteThe reference to Magdela being where Mary lived and practiced her sinful life before she met Jesus. This changed her life and she returned to original home of Bethany and to her brother and sister where most of her story in the gospel took place.
John wrote his gospel many years later, and named her at Simon's feast, which the other gospel writers did not do as they wrote while she was still alive.
A interesting article. Thank you.
I love this....I have been rereading through the bible again and love that it is ALIVE with truth...this time around my attention was caught on Mary being at our Lords feet many times in scripture. I was rereading and comparing all mentions of all "Marys" and suddenly the thought came to me. "This is the same woman". As a woman with a repentant heart myself and in this part of my later life where I have completely given my life to my Lord & Savior, I can relate to finding her at His feet. I immediately thought to research the distance between Bethany and Magdala. It makes complete sense: she was sinful so she went a distance away. She was wealthy because of her sins: she had the oil to anoint Him. She loved Him, she repented, she returned to her family. This is all makes sense. She is the same: Mary originally from Bethany, life of sin in Magdala, then repented and we find with our Lord and her family. Present with her brother and sister. Also side note: following a sinful life and luxury, she would not have been inclined to do housekeeping over sitting at our Lords feet to hear Him speak. Whereas that was her sisters routine.
ReplyDeletePrinting this article to share.
Thank You,
Elizabeth
Although I am a little late to this party, I think the book on St. Mary Magdalene by Fr. Sean Davidson (Ignatius Press) gives the best overall take as to the identification argument (Mary of Bethany is Magdalene) His thesis is very persuasive and in my mind no longer debatable...Check it out.... Vince
ReplyDelete