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For centuries Catholics have wondered about the relationship between Mary Magdalene and Mary the sister of Martha and Lazarus. Many have said that they were the same person. But according to the Vatican, new studies have finally figured this issue out. What do these new studies reveal? And what impact have they had on the Church’s calendar? Jimmy Akin explains.
Transcript:
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Some names are more common than others. Today, Mary is a very common woman’s name, and it was even more common in first century Judaism.
More than one out of every five women were named Mary at the time, and this has led to confusion about some of the Marys mentioned in the Bible.
Like Mary Magdalen and her relationship—or lack of one—to Martha and Lazarus.
Let’s look at that.
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A Change in the Calendar
In 2021, the Holy See announced that a memorial for the Bethany family—Mary, Martha, and Lazarus—was being added to the General Roman Calendar.
For those who may not be aware, the General Roman Calendar is the international liturgical calendar used in the Latin Catholic Church, and it is the basis of the particular calendars used in different countries.
On the other hand, a memorial is a liturgical commemoration ranking below a solemnity and a feast but above an optional memorial.
Given the prominence of the Bethany family in the Gospels—they are mentioned as friends of Jesus in both Luke and John—it may come as a bit of a surprise that they didn’t already have a place on the calendar.
But there’s a reason for that.
Which Mary?
The decree announcing the new memorial explains that the reason why the Bethany family didn’t already have a spot on the calendar is because there had previously been some uncertainty about how three women in the Bible should be identified. The decree says:
The traditional uncertainty of the Latin Church about the identity of Mary—the Magdalene to whom Christ appeared after his resurrection, the sister of Martha, [and] the sinner whose sins the Lord had forgiven—which resulted in the inclusion of Martha alone on 29 July in the Roman Calendar, has been resolved in recent studies and times, as attested by the current Roman Martyrology, which also commemorates Mary and Lazarus on that day.
The three women were thus:
- Mary Magdalene (John 20:1-18)
- Mary the sister of Martha (Luke 10:39, John 11)
- The woman whose sins Jesus forgave (Luke 7:36-50)
In the Latin Catholic Church, there has historically been a question of whether these three figures are actually one person, with some authors holding that they were.
Why Would This Cause a Problem?
The reason this would cause a problem for giving the Bethany family a common slot on the calendar is that Mary Magdalene already had one.
Mary Magdalene is mentioned in all four Gospels as one of the witnesses of Jesus’ resurrection, and her liturgical day is July 22. What’s more, it’s a feast, which outranks a memorial.
So, it would be odd to have a second liturgical day dedicated to Mary, Martha, and Lazarus, since Mary would be appearing on the calendar twice.
As a result, in the past Martha alone had a day on the liturgical calendar, which was July 29. However, in the current edition of the Roman Martyrology—that’s the Latin Church’s official list of saints and martyrs—Mary and Lazarus are also now commemorated on that same day.
That’s in the Roman Martyrology, though, which is not the same thing as the General Roman Calendar. What the new decree did was help the calendar catch up with the martyrology.
Why the Question?
Why has there been a question about the identities of the three women?
Part of the reason is that the sinful woman that Luke mentions wiping Jesus’ feet with her hair in chapter 7 of his Gospel is unnamed (Luke 7:36-50).
However, John says that Mary the sister of Martha and Lazarus wiped Jesus’ feet with her hair (John 11:2), and that could mean that they are the same person.
On the other hand, it may not, because in the very next chapter—when John tells us the story of Mary wiping Jesus’ feet with her hair (John 12:3)—he does not say she was a sinner. Luke also mentions the sinful woman weeping over Jesus’ feet, but John doesn’t mention Mary doing this.
Also, since Luke does mention Mary the sister of Martha and Lazarus—that’s in chapter 10 of his Gospel (Luke 10:39), which comes after chapter 7—you’d think that he’d mention her by name if she was the sinful woman.
Further, Luke presents the hair wiping incident occurring at a very different point in Jesus’ ministry. In Luke, it’s early on—in chapter 7—long before Jesus arrives in Jerusalem for Passion week, while in John, Mary wipes Jesus’ feet with her hair the day before the Triumphal Entry that begins Passion week.
That could be because the Evangelists aren’t required to keep events in a strict chronological order, but it also could be that two different women performed similar actions to honor Jesus.
As a result, this matter is still ambiguous. There is evidence that points both ways.
One Mary or Two?
The identity of the sinful woman has not been the key obstacle to giving the Bethany family a spot on the calendar, though. Instead, it’s been the question of whether Mary Magdalene and Mary the sister of Martha and Lazarus are the same person.
There are, after all, multiple women named “Mary” in the New Testament.
In fact, more than one in five Jewish women in first century Palestine were named Mary. You can see chapter 4 of Richard Bauckham’s outstanding book Jesus and the Eyewitnesses for more on that.
With a name as common as Mary, people in the first century Jewish community needed ways to tell them apart, but they couldn’t do it the way we do, since they didn’t have last names like we do. They needed to use something else.
How They Did It
One of the most common ways of telling one person from another was to use a patronym—that is, to call them by a name that reflected the name of their father.
Patronyms are still used in many countries today, such as Russia and Iceland. For example, let’s suppose that there are a pair of Icelandic children named Jon and Anna, and their father is Stefan. Jon—as Stefan’s son—would then be Jon Stefansson, and Anna—as Stefan’s daughter—would be Anna Stefansdottir.
This is why St. Peter’s birth name is Simon bar-Jona, or “Simon the son of John.” Bar is just the Aramaic word for “son,” and calling him Simon the son of John would distinguish him from other Simons, since most of their fathers wouldn’t also be named John.
But, if you didn’t know someone’s father, you might refer to them by a different relative—say, a brother. Thus, Peter’s brother can be referred to as Andrew the brother of Simon (Mark 1:16).
Uniquely, in Jesus’ case, he is referred to as the son of Mary (Mark 6:3).
In the case of women, you might refer to them by the names of their husbands. Thus, Luke refers to Joanna the wife of Chuza (Luke 8:3) and John refers to Mary the wife of Clopas (John 19:25).
But what do you do if you aren’t acquainted with a person’s relatives?
In that case, they were probably from somewhere else—since you’d know everybody in your own village—and so you could use their place of origin as a substitute.
This is why Jesus is known as Jesus of Nazareth, because outside of Nazareth, people didn’t know his family, and so they used the town in which he grew up. Inside of Nazareth, they wouldn’t have called him this and would have used his family to identify him instead.
This gives us the information we need to figure out the puzzle of the Marys.
Mary the Sister of Martha and Lazarus
Both Luke and John refer to one of the Marys as the sister of Martha, and John adds that she was the sister of Lazarus also.
They thus follow the standard naming conventions of the time.
Modern scholars often refer to them as the Bethany family, because that’s where they lived.
Bethany is a small village just outside Jerusalem, on the southeastern slope of the Mount of Olives.
And this was their stable place of residence. In fact, John introduces Lazarus by referring to him as Lazarus of Bethany (John 11:1), and he follows up by saying Bethany was the village of Mary and her sister Martha (John 11:1).
So, they were all identified with Bethany in Judaea. If you were from somewhere else and knew only one of the siblings, you would have used “of Bethany” as their identifier.
In fact, modern scholars often refer to Mary as Mary of Bethany to avoid the lengthier phrase Mary the sister of Martha and Lazarus.
Mary Magdalene
This means that, when Luke and John refer to another of the Marys as Mary Magdalene, they are referring to a different person.
They already have a way of referring to the Mary who was related to Martha and Lazarus.
They’ve already introduced her to their audience using the sibling-identifier, and so they would be misleading their audience if they suddenly switched the identifier to something else and didn’t mention to their readers that they’re still talking about the same person.
In this case, the identifier—Magdalene—is a place name. Mary Magdalene means Mary of Magdala.
Magdala was a major fishing port on the Sea of Galilee, which is—of course, located up north in Galilee, way far away from Bethany down by Jerusalem.
That tells us several things:
- First, it tells us that Mary Magdalene was a Galilean, being from a city in Galilee.
- Second, it tells us that she had no relatives who were well-known in the Christian community (in particular, she had no husband, which fits with the fact she was free to follow the itinerant prophet Jesus).
- And third, she was a different person than Mary of Bethany—the sister of Martha and Lazarus, who was from a village in Judaea.
Putting It All Together
And so, the puzzle is solved. Despite earlier identifications of Mary Magdalene with Mary of Bethany, they are really two different people.
This has become clear—as the Dicastery for Divine Worship notes—“in recent studies” that have carefully examined the way first century Jewish names worked.
The growing awareness of the fact the two women are distinct resulted, first, in giving the Bethany family a common day in the Roman Martyrology, and later, in giving them a common day on the General Calendar.
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Thank you, and I’ll see you next time
God bless you always!