Topic:Mary

Click to see an enlarged picture
Mary. Wikimedia Commons (Public Domain)
Visit our new topic page about Mary

Mary

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition | Date: 2008

Mary in the Bible, mother of Jesus. Christian tradition reckons her the principal saint, naming her variously the Blessed Virgin Mary, Our Lady, and Mother of God (Gr., theotokos ). Her name is the Hebrew Miriam.

Her Life

The events of her life mentioned in the New Testament include her betrothal and marriage to Joseph; the archangel Gabriel's annunciation to her of Jesus' birth; her visitation to her cousin Elizabeth, mother of John the Baptist; Jesus' nativity; her purification at the Temple; her station at the Cross, where Jesus instructed that she and his disciple John should consider themselves related as mother and son; her visit to Christ's tomb after his resurrection; and her attendance in the room with the Twelve Apostles at Pentecost.

Although few other details of her life are mentioned or implied in the Bible, tradition has it that she was the daughter of St. Joachim and St. Anne , announced miraculously to them; that she was presented and dedicated at the Temple as a virgin; and that she was "assumed" directly into heaven, a doctrine that did not appear until the 5th cent. In 1950, Pope Pius XII's bull Munificentissimus Deus made Mary's bodily assumption into heaven an article of faith.

Her Significance in Christianity

Virginity and Immaculate Conception

Since the early church the theme of Mary's virginity has served as an important emblem of Christianity's ascetic ideal. The Orthodox, Roman Catholic, and some Protestant traditions teach the perpetual virginity of Mary, placing a nonliteral interpretation on New Testament references to Jesus' "brothers." The Roman Catholic Church additionally has proclaimed the dogma of the Immaculate Conception (declared in the bull Ineffabilis Deus of Pius IX, 1854), according to which Mary was conceived without original sin. The Roman Catholic Church further teaches that Mary was freed from actual sin by a special grace of God.

Intercession and Veneration

From earliest times Mary's intercession was believed to be especially efficacious on behalf of humankind and the church; since the Middle Ages, recitation of the rosary has been among the most popular expressions of Marian devotion. The Roman Catholic Church teaches that Mary is the mediatrix of all graces. The body of doctrine about Mary is called Mariology; Mariolatry is an opprobrious term used since the Reformation to mean the worship of Mary—a criticism leveled by many Protestants at the cult of Mary within the Roman Catholic Church. Catholics maintain that the veneration (hyperdulia) accorded Mary, while higher than that accorded any other creature, is infinitely lower than the worship (latria) reserved for Jesus. The principal feasts honoring Mary are those of the Assumption (Aug. 15), the Birthday of Our Lady (Sept. 8), the Immaculate Conception (Dec. 8), the Purification (Feb. 2: see Candlemas ), and the Annunciation or Lady Day (Mar. 25).

Apparitions

Apparitions of the Virgin have been reported since ancient times, and some have led to new cultuses and shrines, typically associated with cures. These apparitions include those at Guadalupe Hidalgo , Mexico, in 1531, associated with a miraculous painting (Our Lady of Guadalupe); at Paris (Our Lady of the Miraculous Medal) in 1830; at Lourdes, France, in 1858; and at Fatima, Portugal, in 1917. The most well-known apparitions since then have been those at Medjugorje, Bosnia; since they began in the early 1980s they have attracted many pilgrims but have not been officially recognized by the Roman Catholic Church. Two great pilgrim shrines of medieval England were Our Lady of Glastonbury and Our Lady of Walsingham (Norfolk). Our Lady of Częstochowa has been a rallying point of Polish nationalism.

Patroness and Artistic Subject

Mary in her aspect of the Immaculate Conception is the patroness of the United States, and Our Lady of Guadalupe was declared Empress of all the Americas by Pope Pius X. With Lumen Gentium (1964), Pope Paul VI proclaimed Mary as Mother of the Church. In the 1980s, while it was still a part of the USSR, Pope John Paul II dedicated Russia to her. Artistic representations of Mary are innumerable; for differing aspects, see Christian iconography under iconography . She has been the subject of countless works from the time of the pseudepigrapha.

Bibliography

See H. C. Graef, Mary (2 vol., 1963-65); H. A. Oberman, The Virgin Mary in Evangelical Perspective (1971); S. Benko, Protestants, Catholics and Mary (1978); H. Küng, ed., Mary in the Churches (1983); M. O'Connell, ed., Theotokos: A Theological Encyclopedia of the Blessed Virgin Mary (1983).

Author not available, MARY., The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition 2008



The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. Copyright 2008 Columbia University Press

Related newspaper, magazine, and journal articles from HighBeam Research

The Virgin Mary: a paradoxical model for roman catholic immigrant women of the nineteenth century.(Portz-Price-Winning Essay, 2006)(Essay)
Journal of the National Collegiate Honors Council; 3/22/2007; Saylors, Darris Catherine; 15693 words ; INTRODUCTION This paper identifies and discusses several examples of Marian paradoxes to better understand how constructions of Mary as the primary model of feminine religiosity affected Roman Catholic immigrant women. Such paradoxes include Mary's perpetual virginity juxtaposed with earthly Read more
An open letter to Rev. Ludmila Javorova: a priest of the Roman Catholic Church. (Paid Advertisement).
National Catholic Reporter; 5/31/2002; 1832 words ; Ludmila Javorova was ordained a Roman Catholic priest in the late night hours of December 28, 1970 by Bishop Felix Maria Davidek, in the presence of his brother, Leo. Following the rite of ordination, Ludmila celebrated her first Mass--simply, quietly, together with Felix and Leo, Mary, the Mother Read more
Profile: St. Mary of the Angels Roman Catholic Church in Roxbury, Massachusetts
All Things Considered (NPR); 12/23/2004; MELISSA BLOCK, ROBERT SIEGEL; 2166 words ; ... 10:00 PM MELISSA BLOCK, host: From NPR News, this is ALL THINGS CONSIDERED. I'm Melissa ... The people of St. Mary's got the surprise news in a letter from the archbishop delivered ... listening to ALL THINGS CONSIDERED from NPR News. Content and Programming copyright 2004 ... Read more
ROMAN CATHOLIC SOLUTIONS TO THE MARIAN QUESTION IN ANGLICAN-ROMAN CATHOLIC DIALOGUE [*].
Journal of Ecumenical Studies; 3/22/2000; English, Leona M.; 4093 words ; PRECIS The Marian dogmas constitute a barrier to Anglican-Roman Catholic dialogue for reunification. This essay examines six possible solutions to the Impasse, as proposed by Yarnold, Dulles, de Margerie, Congar, Chirico, and Fries and Rahner. The author presents the strengths and weaknesses of Read more
Cornerstone: McAleese: Eames chides Roman Catholic clergy.(Features)
The News Letter (Belfast, Northern Ireland); 12/19/1997; Kennedy, Billy; 447 words ; Church of Ireland Primate Dr Robin Eames has chided Roman Catholic clergy over their trenchant criticism of Eire President Mary McAleese taking communion at a Protestant service. Mrs McAleese broke Roman Catholic church law when she accepted communion at Christ Church Church of Ireland Cathedral in Read more
Dancing in Kinshasa: A special celebration of a Roman Catholic Mass according to le rite zairois 4 September 2005
Anglican and Episcopal History; 3/1/2006; LeMarquand, Grant; 1895 words ; Dancing in Kinshasa: A special celebration of a Roman Catholic Mass according to le rite zairois 4 September 2005 The Islamic invasion of North Africa in the seventh and eighth centuries swept away Latinized Christianity west of Egypt. The conquest was successful not because of the sword of the Read more
Developing a strong Roman Catholic social order in late nineteenth-century Prince Edward Island (1).
Historical Studies; 1/1/2003; MacDonald, Heidi; 7927 words ; The Roman Catholic Church in PEI in the nineteenth century was threatened by ethnic tension, poverty, and anti-Catholicism. Scottish Highlanders, Irish, and Acadians fought for clerical and episcopal control of the Church. In addition, PEI was Canada's most impoverished province and there are Read more
Nicaragua's churches at odds over textbooks.(controversy over campaign to use Roman Catholic textbooks at public schools)(Brief Article)
The Christian Century; 6/18/1997; 558 words ; A campaign to put Roman Catholic textbooks in the hands of students at Nicaragua's state-run schools has aggravated the sensitive relationship between the country's Roman Catholic majority and its growing Protestant minority. The controversy involves a series of textbooks produced by the Catholic Read more
Fathers With Sons.(Roman Catholic Church and Czech Republic's married priests)(Brief Article)
Newsweek International; 5/10/1999; Nagorski, Andrew; 818 words ; Can the Roman Catholic Church accept the Czech Republic's married priests? When Jarmila married Jiri Florian in the Czech city of Brno in January of 1969, she said I do to a TV technician. Two months later, her husband was also a Catholic priest. He'd been ordained in a secret ceremony shortly Read more
Some Roman Catholic women who won't take no for an answer turn to other denominations for ordination.
National Catholic Reporter; 3/26/1993; Vidulich, Dorothy; 996 words ; Turn to other denominations for ordination WASHINGTON - The Roman Catholic Church has said no to the ordination of women, but some Catholic women, many of them former religious, have not taken no for an answer. These women are turning to other Christian denominations that have said yes to such Read more

Related entries from encyclopedias, dictionaries, and thesauruses

Mary Challens
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition see Renault, Mary . Read more
Virgin Mary
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition see Mary . Read more
Mary Wollstonecraft Godwin
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition see Wollstonecraft, Mary . Read more
Stuart, Mary
World Encyclopedia Stuart, Mary See Mary II Read more
Margaret Mary Alacoque
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition see Margaret Mary, Saint . Read more

Related research topics

Online videos

Mary J. Blige - Family Affair: BET Version