B . MARY IN THE CHRISTIAN TRADITION
Christ and Mary in the Ancient Common Tradition
- In the early Church, reflection on Mary served to interpret
and safeguard the apostolic Tradition centred on Jesus Christ.
Patristic testimony to Mary as God-bearer' (Theotókos)
emerged from reflection on Scripture and the celebration of
Christian feasts, but its development was due chiefly to the
early Christological controversies. In the crucible of these
controversies of the first five centuries, and their resolution
in successive Ecumenical Councils, reflection on Mary's role
in the Incarnation was integral to the articulation of orthodox
faith in Jesus Christ, true God and true man.
- In defence of Christ's true humanity, and against Docetism,
the early Church emphasized Jesus' birth from Mary. He did not
just appear' to be human; he did not descend from heaven
in a heavenly body', nor when he was born did he simply
pass through' his mother. Rather, Mary gave birth to her
son of her own substance. For Ignatius of Antioch (c.110)
and Tertullian (c.225), Jesus is fully human, because
truly born' of Mary. In the words of the Nicaeo-Constantinopolitan
Creed (381), "he was incarnate of the Holy Spirit and the
Virgin Mary, and was made man." The definition of Chalcedon
(451), reaffirming this creed, attests that Christ is "consubstantial
with the Father according to the divinity and consubstantial
with us according to the humanity." The Athanasian Creed
confesses yet more concretely that he is "man, of the substance
of his Mother." This Anglicans and Roman Catholics together
affirm.
- In defence of his true divinity, the early Church emphasized
Mary's virginal conception of Jesus Christ. According to the
Fathers, his conception by the Holy Spirit testifies to Christ's
divine origin and divine identity. The One born of Mary is the
eternal Son of God. Eastern and Western Fathers - such as Justin
(c.150), Irenaeus (c.202), Athanasius (373),
and Ambrose (397) - expounded this New Testament teaching
in terms of Genesis 3 (Mary is the antitype of virgin
Eve') and Isaiah 7:14 (she fulfils the prophet's vision and
gives birth to "God with us"). They appealed to the
virginal conception to defend both the Lord's divinity and Mary's
honour. As the Apostles' Creed confesses: Jesus Christ was "conceived
by the Holy Spirit and born of the Virgin Mary." This Anglicans
and Roman Catholics together affirm.
- Mary's title Theotókos was formally invoked
to safeguard the orthodox doctrine of the unity of Christ's
person. This title had been in use in churches under the influence
of Alexandria at least from the time of the Arian controversy.
Since Jesus Christ is "true God from true God", as
the Council of Nicaea (325) declared, these churches concluded
that his mother, Mary, can rightly be called the God-bearer'.
Churches under the influence of Antioch, however, conscious
of the threat Apollinarianism posed to belief in the full humanity
of Christ, did not immediately adopt this title. The debate
between Cyril of Alexandria (444) and Nestorius (455),
patriarch of Constantinople, who was formed in the Antiochene
school, revealed that the real issue in the question of Mary's
title was the unity of Christ's person. The ensuing Council
of Ephesus (431) used Theotókos (literally God-bearer';
in Latin, Deipara) to affirm the oneness of Christ's
person by identifying Mary as the Mother of God the Word incarnate.6
The rule of faith on this matter takes more precise expression
in the definition of Chalcedon: "One and the same Son
was begotten from the Father before the ages as to the divinity
and in the latter days for us and our salvation was born as
to the humanity from Mary the Virgin Theotókos."
In receiving the Council of Ephesus and the definition of Chalcedon,
Anglicans and Roman Catholics together confess Mary as Theotókos.
The Celebration of Mary in the Ancient Common Traditions
- In the early centuries, communion in Christ included a strong
sense of the living presence of the saints as an integral part
of the spiritual experience of the churches (Hebrews 12:1, 22-24;
Revelation 6:9-11; 7; 8:3-4). Within the cloud of witnesses',
the Lord's mother came to be seen to have a special place. Themes
developed from Scripture and in devotional reflection reveal
a deep awareness of Mary's role in the redemption of humanity.
Such themes include Mary as Eve's counterpart and as a type
of the Church. The response of Christian people, reflecting
on these themes, found devotional expression in both private
and public prayer.
- Exegetes delighted in drawing feminine imagery from the Scriptures
to contemplate the significance both of the Church and Mary.
Fathers as early as Justin Martyr (c.150) and Irenaeus
(c.202), reflecting on texts like Genesis 3 and Luke 1:26-38,
developed, alongside the antithesis of Adam/New Adam, that of
Eve/New Eve. Just as Eve is associated with Adam in bringing
about our defeat, so Mary is associated with her Son in the
conquest of the ancient enemy (cf. Genesis 3:15, vide supra
footnote 4): virgin' Eve's disobedience results in death;
the virgin Mary's obedience opens the way to salvation. The
New Eve shares in the New Adam's victory over sin and death.
- The Fathers presented Mary the Virgin Mother as a model of
holiness for consecrated virgins, and increasingly taught that
she had remained Ever-Virgin'.7
In their reflection, virginity was understood not only as physical
integrity, but as an interior disposition of openness, obedience,
and single-hearted fidelity to Christ which models Christian
discipleship and issues in spiritual fruitfulness.
- In this patristic understanding, Mary's virginity was closely
related to her sanctity. Although some early exegetes thought
that Mary was not wholly without sin,8
Augustine (430) witnessed to contemporary reluctance to
speak of any sin in her.
We must except the holy Virgin Mary, concerning whom I
wish to raise no question when it touches the subject of
sins, out of honour to the Lord; for from him we know what
abundance of grace for overcoming sin in every particular
was conferred on her who had the merit to conceive and bear
him who undoubtedly had no sin. (De natura et gratia
36.42).
Other Fathers from West and East, appealing to the angelic
salutation (Luke 1:28) and Mary's response (Luke 1:38), support
the view that Mary was filled with grace from her origin in
anticipation of her unique vocation as Mother of the Lord.
By the fifth century they hail her as a new creation: blameless,
spotless, "holy in body and soul" (Theodotus of
Ancyra, Homily 6,11: before 446). By the sixth
century, the title panaghia (all-holy') can be
found in the East.
- Following the Christological debates at the councils of Ephesus
and Chalcedon, devotion to Mary flourished. When the patriarch
of Antioch refused Mary the title of Theotókos,
Emperor Leo I (457-474) commanded the patriarch of Constantinople
to insert this title into the eucharistic prayer throughout
the East. By the sixth century, commemoration of Mary as God-bearer'
had become universal in the eucharistic prayers of East and
West (with the exception of the Assyrian Church of the East).
Texts and images celebrating Mary's holiness were multiplied
in liturgical poetry and songs, such as the Akathist,
a hymn probably written soon after Chalcedon and still sung
in the Eastern church. A tradition of praying with and praising
Mary was thus gradually established. This has been associated
since the fourth century, especially in the East, with asking
for her protection.9
- After the Council of Ephesus, churches began to be dedicated
to Mary and feasts in her honour began to be celebrated on particular
days in these churches. Prompted by popular piety and gradually
adopted by local churches, feasts celebrating Mary's conception
(December 8/9), birth (September 8), presentation (November
21), and dormition (August 15) mirrored the liturgical commemorations
of events in the life of the Lord. They drew both on the canonical
Scriptures and also on apocryphal accounts of Mary's early life
and her falling asleep'. A feast of the conception of
Mary can be dated in the East to the late seventh century, and
was introduced into the Western church through southern England
in the early eleventh century. It drew on popular devotion expressed
in the second-century Protoevangelium of James, and paralleled
the dominical feast of the annunciation and the existing feast
of the conception of John the Baptist. The feast of Mary's falling
asleep' dates from the end of the sixth century, but was influenced
by legendary narratives of the end of Mary's life already widely
in circulation. In the West, the most influential of them are
the Transitus Mariae. In the East the feast was known
as the dormition', which implied her death but did not
exclude her being taken into heaven. In the West the term used
was assumption', which emphasized her being taken into
heaven but did not exclude the possibility of her dying. Belief
in her assumption was grounded in the promise of the resurrection
of the dead and the recognition of Mary's dignity as Theotókos
and Ever Virgin', coupled with the conviction that she
who had borne Life should be associated to her Son's victory
over death, and with the glorification of his Body, the Church.
The Growth of Marian Doctrine and Devotion in the Middle
Ages
- The spread of these feasts of Mary gave rise to homilies
in which preachers delved into the Scriptures, searching for
types and motifs to illuminate the Virgin's place in the economy
of salvation. During the High Middle Ages a growing emphasis
on the humanity of Christ was matched by attention to the exemplary
virtues of Mary. Bernard, for example, articulates this emphasis
in his homilies. Meditation on the lives of both Christ and
Mary became increasingly popular, and gave rise to the development
of such devotional practices as the rosary. The paintings, sculptures
and stained glass of the High and Late Middle Ages lent to this
devotion immediacy and colour.
- During these centuries there were some major shifts of emphasis
in theological reflection about Mary. Theologians of the High
Middle Ages developed patristic reflection on Mary as a type'
of the Church, and also as the New Eve, in a way that associated
her ever more closely with Christ in the continuing work of
redemption. The centre of attention of believers shifted from
Mary as representing the faithful Church, and so also redeemed
humanity, to Mary as dispensing Christ's graces to the faithful.
Scholastic theologians in the West developed an increasingly
elaborate body of doctrine about Mary in her own right. Much
of this doctrine grew out of speculation about the holiness
and sanctification of Mary. Questions about this were influenced
not only by the scholastic theology of grace and original sin,
but also by presuppositions concerning procreation and the relation
between soul and body. For example, if she were sanctified in
the womb of her mother, more perfectly even than John the Baptist
and Jeremiah, some theologians thought that the precise moment
of her sanctification had to be determined according to the
current understanding of when the rational soul' was infused
into the body. Theological developments in the Western doctrine
of grace and sin raised other questions: how could Mary be free
of all sin, including original sin, without jeopardising the
role of Christ as universal Saviour? Speculative reflection
led to intense discussions about how Christ's redeeming grace
may have preserved Mary from original sin. The measured theology
of Mary's sanctification found in the Summa Theologiae
of Thomas Aquinas, and the subtle reasoning of Duns Scotus about
Mary, were deployed in extended controversy over whether Mary
was immaculate from the first moment of her conception.
- In the Late Middle Ages, scholastic theology grew increasingly
apart from spirituality. Less and less rooted in scriptural
exegesis, theologians relied on logical probability to establish
their positions, and Nominalists speculated on what could be
done by the absolute power and will of God. Spirituality, no
longer in creative tension with theology, emphasized affectivity
and personal experience. In popular religion, Mary came widely
to be viewed as an intermediary between God and humanity, and
even as a worker of miracles with powers that verged on the
divine. This popular piety in due course influenced the theological
opinions of those who had grown up with it, and who subsequently
elaborated a theological rationale for the florid Marian devotion
of the Late Middle Ages.
From the Reformation to the Present Day
- One powerful impulse for Reformation in the early sixteenth
century was a widespread reaction against devotional practices
which approached Mary as a mediatrix alongside Christ, or sometimes
even in his place. Such exaggerated devotions, in part inspired
by presentations of Christ as inaccessible Judge as well as
Redeemer, were sharply criticized by Erasmus and Thomas More
and decisively rejected by the Reformers. Together with a radical
re-reception of Scripture as the fundamental touchstone of divine
revelation, there was a re-reception by the Reformers of the
belief that Jesus Christ is the only mediator between God and
humanity. This entailed a rejection of real and perceived abuses
surrounding devotion to Mary. It led also to the loss of some
positive aspects of devotion and the diminution of her place
in the life of the Church.
- In this context, the English Reformers continued to receive
the doctrine of the ancient Church concerning Mary. Their positive
teaching about Mary concentrated on her role in the Incarnation:
it is summed up in their acceptance of her as the Theotókos,
because this was seen to be both scriptural and in accord with
ancient common tradition. Following the traditions of the early
Church and other Reformers like Martin Luther, the English Reformers
such as Latimer (Works, 2:105), Cranmer (Works,
2:60; 2:88) and Jewel (Works, 3:440-441) accepted that
Mary was Ever Virgin'. Following Augustine, they showed
a reticence about affirming that Mary was a sinner. Their chief
concern was to emphasize the unique sinlessness of Christ, and
the need of all humankind, including Mary, for a Saviour (cf.
Luke 1:47). Articles IX and XV affirmed the universality of
human sinfulness. They neither affirmed nor denied the possibility
of Mary having been preserved by grace from participation in
this general human condition. It is notable that the Book
of Common Prayer in the Christmas collect and preface refers
to Mary as a pure Virgin'.
- From 1561, the calendar of the Church of England (which was
reproduced in the 1662 Book of Common Prayer) contained
five feasts associated with Mary: Conception of Mary, Nativity
of Mary, Annunciation, Visitation, and Purification/Presentation.
There was, however, no longer a feast of the Assumption (August
15): not only was it understood to lack scriptural warrant,
but was also seen as exalting Mary at the expense of Christ.
Anglican liturgy, as expressed in the successive Books of
Common Prayer (1549, 1552, 1559, 1662) when it mentions
Mary, gives prominence to her role as the pure Virgin'
from whose substance' the Son took human nature (cf. Article
II). In spite of the diminution of devotion to Mary in the sixteenth
century, reverence for her endured in the continued use of the
Magnificat in Evening Prayer, and the unchanged dedication
of ancient churches and Lady Chapels. In the seventeenth century
writers such as Lancelot Andrewes, Jeremy Taylor and Thomas
Ken re-appropriated from patristic tradition a fuller appreciation
of the place of Mary in the prayers of the believer and of the
Church. For example, Andrewes in his Preces Privatae
borrowed from Eastern liturgies when he showed a warmth of Marian
devotion "Commemorating the allholy, immaculate, more than
blessed mother of God and evervirgin Mary." This re-appropriation
can be traced into the next century, and into the Oxford Movement
of the nineteenth century.
- In the Roman Catholic Church, the continued growth of Marian
doctrine and devotion, while moderated by the reforming decrees
of the Council of Trent (1545-63), also suffered the distorting
influence of Protestant - Catholic polemics. To be Roman Catholic
came to be identified by an emphasis on devotion to Mary. The
depth and popularity of Marian spirituality in the nineteenth
and the first half of the twentieth centuries contributed to
the definitions of the dogmas of the Immaculate Conception (1854)
and the Assumption (1950). On the other hand, the pervasiveness
of this spirituality began to give rise to criticism both within
and beyond the Roman Catholic Church and initiated a process
of re-reception. This re-reception was evident in the Second
Vatican Council which, consonant with the contemporary biblical,
patristic, and liturgical renewals, and with concern for ecumenical
sensitivities, chose not to draft a separate document on Mary,
but to integrate doctrine about her into the Constitution on
the Church, Lumen Gentium (1964) - more specifically,
into its final section describing the eschatological pilgrimage
of the Church (Chapter VIII). The Council intended "to
explain carefully both the role of the Blessed Virgin in the
mystery of the Word Incarnate and of the Mystical Body, as well
as the duties of the redeemed human race towards the God-bearer,
mother of Christ and mother of humanity, especially of the faithful"
(art. 54). Lumen Gentium concludes by calling Mary a
sign of hope and comfort for God's pilgrim people (art. 68-69).
The Fathers of the Council consciously sought to resist exaggerations
by returning to patristic emphases and placing Marian doctrine
and devotion in its proper Christological and ecclesial context.
- Soon after the Council, faced by an unanticipated decline
in devotion to Mary, Pope Paul VI published an Apostolic Exhortation,
Marialis Cultus (1974), to remove doubts about the Council's
intentions and to foster appropriate Marian devotion. His review
of the place of Mary in the revised Roman rite showed that she
has not been demoted' by the liturgical renewal, but that
devotion to her is properly located within the Christological
focus of the Church's public prayer. He reflected on Mary as
"a model of the spiritual attitudes with which the Church
celebrates and lives the divine mysteries" (art. 16). She
is the model for the whole Church, but also a "teacher
of the spiritual life for individual Christians" (art.
21). According to Paul VI, the authentic renewal of Marian devotion
must be integrated with the doctrines of God, Christ, and the
Church. Devotion to Mary must be in accordance with the Scriptures
and the liturgy of the Church; it must be sensitive to the concerns
of other Christians and it must affirm the full dignity of women
in public and private life. The Pope also issued cautions to
those who err either by exaggeration or neglect. Finally, he
commended the recitation of the Angelus and the Rosary
as traditional devotions which are compatible with these norms.
In 2002, Pope John Paul II reinforced the Christological focus
of the Rosary by proposing five mysteries of Light' from
the Gospels' account of Christ's public ministry between his
Baptism and Passion. "The Rosary," he states, "though
clearly Marian in character, is at heart a Christocentric prayer"
(Rosarium Virginis Mariae 1).
- Mary has a new prominence in Anglican worship through the
liturgical renewals of the twentieth century. In most Anglican
prayer books, Mary is again mentioned by name in the Eucharistic
prayers. Further, August 15th has come to be widely celebrated
as a principal feast in honour of Mary with Scripture readings,
collect and proper preface. Other feasts associated with Mary
have also been renewed, and liturgical resources offered for
use on these festivals. Given the definitive role of authorized
liturgical texts and practices in Anglican formularies, such
developments are highly significant.
- The above developments show that in recent decades a re-reception
of the place of Mary in corporate worship has been taking place
across the Anglican Communion. At the same time, in Lumen
Gentium (Chapter VIII) and the Exhortation Marialis Cultus
the Roman Catholic Church has attempted to set devotion to Mary
within the context of the teaching of Scripture and the ancient
common tradition. This constitutes, for the Roman Catholic Church,
a re-reception of teaching about Mary. Revision of the calendars
and lectionaries used in our Communions, especially the liturgical
provision associated with feasts of Mary, gives evidence of
a shared process of re-receiving the scriptural testimony to
her place in the faith and life of the Church. Growing ecumenical
exchange has contributed to the process of re-reception in both
Communions.
- The Scriptures lead us together to praise and bless Mary as
the handmaid of the Lord, who was providentially prepared by
divine grace to be the mother of our Redeemer. Her unqualified
assent to the fulfilment of God's saving plan can be seen as
the supreme instance of a believer's Amen' in response
to the Yes' of God. She stands as a model of holiness,
obedience and faith for all Christians. As one who received
the Word in her heart and in her body, and brought it forth
into the world, Mary belongs in the prophetic tradition. We
are agreed in our belief in the Blessed Virgin Mary as Theotókos.
Our two communions are both heirs to a rich tradition which
recognizes Mary as ever virgin, and sees her as the new Eve
and as a type of the Church. We join in praying and praising
with Mary whom all generations have called blessed, in observing
her festivals and according her honour in the communion of the
saints, and are agreed that Mary and the saints pray for the
whole Church (see below in section D). In all of this, we see
Mary as inseparably linked with Christ and the Church. Within
this broad consideration of the role of Mary, we now focus on
the theology of hope and grace.
ENDNOTES
-
The Council
solemnly approved the content of the Second Letter of Cyril
to Nestorius: "It was not that an ordinary man was born
first of the holy Virgin, on whom afterwards the Word descended;
what we say is that: being united with the flesh from the
womb, the Word has undergone birth in the flesh. . . therefore
the Holy Fathers had the courage to call the Holy Virgin Theotókos."
(DS 251)
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The Tome of
Leo, which was decisive for the outcome of the Council of
Chalcedon (451), states that Christ "was conceived by
the Holy Spirit in the womb of the Virgin Mother, who gave
him birth without losing her virginity, as she conceived him
without losing her virginity" (DS 291). Similarly Athanasius
speaks in De Virginitate (Le Muséon 42:
244.248) of "Mary, who
remained a virgin
to the end [as a model for] all to come after her." Cf.
John Chrysostom (407) Homily on Matthew 5,3.
The first Ecumenical Council to use the term Aeiparthenos
(semper virgo) was the Second Council of Constantinople
(553). This designation is already implicit in the classical
Western formulation of Mary's virginitas as ante partum,
in partu, post partum. This tradition appears
consistently in the western Church from Ambrose onward. As
Augustine wrote, "she conceived him as a virgin, she
gave birth as a virgin, she remained a virgin" (Sermo
51.18; cf. Sermo 196.1).
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Thus Irenaeus
criticises her for "excessive haste" at Cana, "seeking
to push her son into performing a miracle before his hour
had come" (Adversus Haereses III.16.7); Origen
speaks of her wavering in faith at the cross, "so
she too would have some sin for which Christ died" (Homilia
in Lucam, 17,6). Suggestions like these are found in the
writings of Tertullian, Ambrose and John Chrysostom.
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Witness the
invocation of Mary in the early text known traditionally as
Sub tuum praesidium:

(Cf. O. Stegemüller, Sub tuum praesidium. Bemerkungen
zur ältesten Überlieferung, in: ZKTh 74 [1952],
pp.76-82 [77]). This text (with two changes) is used to this
day in the Greek liturgical tradition; versions of this prayer
also occur in the Ambrosian, Roman, Byzantine and Coptic liturgies.
A familiar English version is: "We fly to thy protection,
O holy Mother of God; despise not our petitions in our necessities
but deliver us from all dangers, O ever glorious and blessed
Virgin."
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