“CHOOSING MARY? HOW
CONTRARY!”
In the
Christian tradition, it is now the season of the Resurrection, the celebration
of Jesus of Nazareth being brought back from the grave, emphasizing the idea
that life and love are the final words in the universe, not violence and
death. Whatever one believes about the
historicity of the bodily resurrection of Jesus, it cannot be denied that the
Resurrection was the event that fired the first disciples. While church tradition has over-emphasized
the crucifixion as the central event, it was the Resurrection that brought the
scattered and scared and disillusioned women and men disciples back together to
become the primary witnesses to a whole new way of life. Only later did they go back and reflect on
the crucifixion. Without the
Resurrection, there would be no church and no witnesses.
And, who is
the primary witness? If you are
unfamiliar with the tradition (and even if you are familiar), you may be
surprised to hear that the primary witnesses to the Resurrection are the women
disciples, not the men. And, there is
ONE primary witness: Mary from the town
of Magdala, and she is commonly known as Mary Magdalena. She is the only witness to the Resurrection
mentioned in all 4 Gospels, and in the 20th chapter of John’s
Gospel, there is a powerful encounter between the risen Jesus and Mary from
Magdala. We’ll look at that encounter
more carefully next week, but for today, I want to ask: “What happened to Mary Magdalena?”
Did she
become a bishop? Did she become a leader
of the disciples? Did she become a
revered figure in the church tradition?
The answer is that we don’t know what happened to Mary Magdalena. Though she is THE primary witness to the
event that precipitated the church, she was written out of the history of the
church for a long while. Or, perhaps it
is more accurate to say that she was pushed back to the margins where the
patriarchal society, in which Jesus lived, much preferred her to be. The Gospel writers waste no time on this –
right away in Luke, the “mansplaining” (did that term come from Rebecca
Solnit?) begins. When Mary and the other
women disciples come to the men to tell them about the Resurrection, Luke 24:11
tells us that the men dismiss the women as hysterical and do not believe
them. Later on, it looks like someone
added a verse 12 to try to redeem the men, indicating that Peter goes to the
tomb to check it out. In the earliest
written account of the Resurrection in chapter 15 of Paul’s first Letter to the
Corinthians, the list of witnesses to
the Resurrection omits the women altogether – a quick erasure from the Gospel
accounts, which at least indicate that the women, and especially Mary
Magdalena, were the primary witnesses.
The Gnostic
gospels that did not make it into the Bible put Mary at a much higher place in
the church circle. In “The Gospel of
Mary” she takes leadership and gathers the disciples and helps them to rally
and begin to be the witnesses that they were meant to be. But, the movement to squash the leadership of
women in the church won out. The
egalitarian impetus of Jesus of Nazareth is blunted on many levels, including
the erasure of the witness and discipleship of women. For Mary Magdalena, the harshest blow came in
591 CE when Pope Gregory the Great pronounced that Mary Magdalena was a
reformed prostitute, and this pronouncement stuck. Growing up, I envisioned Mary Magdalena as
the woman of the streets who anoints Jesus with oil and wipes his feet with her
hair in Luke 7, though this woman is not named.
She is named “Mary” in John 12, but there she is clearly the sister of
Martha and Lazarus.
Pope
Gregory’s pronouncement sealed the deal that was already in the making in the
male-dominated society. The powerful
witness of Mary Magdalena was reduced to her body and her sexuality. The recent live televising of “Jesus Christ
Superstar” had Mary play a very important part, but again as reformed
prostitute and as the lover of Jesus, but she is off to the sidelines and is not a central leader in the God
movement. In the best-selling “Da Vinci
Code,” Mary becomes a central figure again, not as a leader of the church but
as the bearer of the Holy Grail, the love child of Jesus and Mary.
Here is the
powerful and revolutionary idea behind those Gospel accounts of the
Resurrection, an idea that can’t be suppressed by the mansplaining. Jesus welcomed women as leaders and
witnesses, and although I am certain that it pained the four Gospel writers to
include the women as the primary witnesses to the Resurrection, the stories
that they had received compelled them to do it.
Or, in the Nibs Stroupe theory, I believe that they were a deliberate
contrary witness to the Pauline tradition, which left the women out
completely. Let me say here that I don’t
think that Paul was as anti-women as he has often been portrayed, but the
tradition that developed in his name certainly was.
The power
of the Resurrection is that it verified that Jesus overcame the domination of
violence and death and welcomed all into the God movement, especially those who
had been marginalized by society. More
on this next week, but for now, it’s worth repeating: “Choosing Mary? How contrary!”
No comments:
Post a Comment