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Perpetual virginity of Mary

The perpetual virginity of Mary is a Christian doctrine that Mary, the mother of Jesus, was a virgin "before, during and after" the birth of Christ.[2] In Western Christianity, the Catholic Church adheres to the doctrine, as do some Lutherans, Anglicans, Reformed, and other Protestants.[3][4][5][6][7] The Oriental Orthodox Churches also adhere to this doctrine as part of their ongoing tradition,[8] and Eastern Orthodox churches recognize Mary as Aeiparthenos, meaning "ever-virgin".[9] It is one of the four Marian dogmas of the Catholic Church.[10] Most modern nonconformist Protestants reject the doctrine.[11]

The Vladimir Eleusa icon of the Ever Virgin Mary. The Aeiparthenos (Ever Virgin) title is widely used in Orthodox liturgy, and icons show her with three stars, on her shoulders and forehead, symbolising her threefold virginity.[1]

The extant written tradition of the perpetual virginity of Mary first appears in a late 2nd-century text called the Protoevangelium of James.[12] The Second Council of Constantinople in 553 gave her the title "Aeiparthenos", meaning Perpetual Virgin, and at the Lateran Synod of 649 Pope Martin I emphasized the threefold character of the perpetual virginity, before, during, and after the birth of Christ.[13] The Lutheran Smalcald Articles (1537) and the Reformed Second Helvetic Confession (1562) codified the doctrine of perpetual virginity of Mary as well.[14][3]

The doctrine of Mary's perpetual virginity has been challenged on the basis that the New Testament explicitly affirms her virginity only until the birth of Jesus[15] and mentions the brothers (adelphoi) of Jesus.[16][17] This word only very rarely means other than a biological or spiritual sibling, and they may have been: (1) the sons of Mary, the mother of Jesus, and Joseph; (2) sons of the Mary named in Mark 15:40 as "mother of James and Joses", whom Jerome identified as a sister of Mary, the mother of Jesus; or (3) sons of Joseph by a former marriage.[18] Further scriptural difficulties were added by Luke 2:7, which calls Jesus the "first-born" son of Mary,[19] and Matthew 1:25, which adds that Joseph "did not know her until she had brought forth her firstborn son."[20][a]

Origin and history edit

Virginitas in partu: 1st century edit

The Odes of Solomon have been interpreted as implying that Mary was a virgin even during childbirth as well as stating that Mary did not have pain during childbirth.[21] Similar statements exist in the Ascension of Isaiah.[22][23]

2nd century edit

 
Clement of Alexandria (150–215 AD) was an early proponent of the perpetual virginity of Mary.[24]

The virgin birth of Jesus is found in the Gospel of Matthew and possibly in Luke, but it seems to have little theological importance before the middle of the 2nd century.[25] The 2nd century Church fathers Irenaeus and Justin Martyr, though mentioning the virgin birth, nowhere affirmed explicitly the view that Mary was a perpetual virgin.[26] This idea, however, appears in at least three second-century works: the Protoevangelium of James,[12] the Gospel of Peter[27][28] and the Infancy Gospel of Thomas.[29] All of these early sources independently assert that the so-called "brothers of the Lord" were children of Joseph's first marriage.[29] According to Protestant scholar Richard Bauckham, these works "show no signs of literary relationship"[29] and probably "evidence of a well-established tradition in (probably early) second-century Syrian Christianity that Jesus' brothers and sisters were children of Joseph by a previous marriage".[29] According to Richard Bauckham, Ignatius of Antioch also believed in the doctrine of Mary's virginity in partu.[29]

The Gospel of James states that Mary remained a life-long virgin, because Joseph was an old man who married her without physical desire, and the brothers of Jesus mentioned in the canonical gospels are explained as Joseph's sons by an earlier marriage.[30] The Protoevangelium seems to have been used to create the stories of Mary which are found in the Quran,[31] but while Muslims agree with Christians that Mary was a virgin at the moment of the conception of Jesus, the idea of her perpetual virginity thereafter is contrary to the Islamic ideal of women as wives and mothers.[32] The Second Apocalypse of James portrays James, the Brother of the Lord, not as a child of Joseph but of a certain "Theudas", a relative of the Lord.[33]

Hegesippus's writings are not clear on this subject, with some authors arguing that he defended the doctrine,[34] while others arguing that he disputed the perpetual virginity of Mary.[35]

The Ebionites denied the virgin birth and Mary's perpetual virginity.[36][37]

Early uncertainty: 3rd century edit

In the 3rd century, Hippolytus of Rome held that Mary was "ever-virgin",[38] while Clement of Alexandria, writing soon after the Protoevangelium appeared, appealed to its incident of a midwife who examined Mary immediately after the birth ("after giving birth, she was examined by a midwife, who found her to be a virgin") and asserted that this was to be found in the Gospels ("These things are attested to by the Scriptures of the Lord"), though he was referring to an apocryphal Gospel as a fact. The 3rd century scholar Origen used the Protoevangelium's explanation of the brothers to uphold the perpetual virginity of Mary ("There is no child of Mary except Jesus, according to those who think correctly about her").[24] Origen also mentioned that the gospel of Peter affirmed the perpetual virginity of Mary, saying that the "brothers" of Jesus were from a previous marriage of Joseph.[27][28]

Tertullian, who came between Clement and Origen, denied Mary's virginity in partu to refute the docetist idea that the Son of God could not have assumed a human body ("although she was a virgin when she conceived, she was a wife when she brought forth her son").[39] Tertullian, however, is not entirely clear on the issue of Mary's virginity post partum, with some scholars denying his traditional association with the Helvidian position.[40][41][42]

Helvidius also argued that Victorinus believed that Mary had other children;[43] Jerome later claimed that Helvidius was misinterpreting Victorinus.[44] Epiphanius invented a name "Antidicomarians" for a group of people who denied the perpetual virginity of Mary, which Epiphanius attacked.[45] Their same views were also mentioned earlier by Origen, although he too rejected them as heretical.[46] They were active from the 3rd to the 5th century.[47]

According to Epiphanius the Antidicomarians claimed that Apollinaris of Laodicea or his disciples denied the perpetual virginity of Mary, though Epiphanius doubted the claim.[48]

Early Christian theologians such as Hippolytus[49] (170–235), Eusebius (260/265–339/340) and Epiphanius (c. 310/320–403) defended the perpetual virginity of Mary.

Establishment of orthodoxy: 4th century edit

By the early 4th century the spread of monasticism had promoted celibacy as the ideal state,[50] and a moral hierarchy was established with marriage occupying the third rank below life-long virginity and widowhood.[51] Eastern theologians generally accepted Mary as Aeiparthenos, but many in the Western church were less convinced.[52] The theologian Helvidius objected to the devaluation of marriage inherent in this view and argued that the two states, of virginity and marriage, were equal.[53] His contemporary Jerome, realising that this would lead to the Mother of God occupying a lower place in heaven than virgins and widows, defended her perpetual virginity in his immensely influential Against Helvidius, issued c.383.[54]

 
Jerome defended the perpetual virginity of Mary against Helvidius.[55]

In the 380s and 390s the monk Jovinian denied Mary's virginity in partu (virgin during childbirth), writing that if Jesus did not undergo a normal human birth, then his body was something other than a truly human one.[56] As reported by Augustine, Jovinian "denied that the virginity of Mary, which existed when she conceived, remained while she gave birth." Augustine goes on to say that the reason for Jovinian's denial of Mary's virginity in partu was that the doctrine was too close to the Manichean view that Christ was simply a phantom.[57] According to Ambrose, Jovinian maintained that Mary had conceived as a virgin, but she had not given birth as a virgin.[56] Jerome wrote against Jovinian but failed to mention this aspect of his teaching, and most commentators believe that he did not find it offensive.[56] Jovinian also found two monks in Milan, Sarmatio and Barbatian, who held similar views as Jovinian.[58]

The only important Christian intellectual to defend Mary's virginity in partu was Ambrose, Archbishop of Milan, who was the chief target of the charge of Manicheism.[57] In 391, he wrote Concerning Virginity[59] whose full title was On the Education of the Virgin and the Perpetual Virginity of Mary.[60] For Ambrose, both the physical birth of Jesus by Mary and the baptismal birthing of Christians by the church had to be totally virginal, even in partu, in order to cancel the stain of original sin, of which the pains of labor are the physical sign.[61] It was due to Ambrose that virginitas in partu came to be included consistently in the thinking of subsequent theologians.[62] Bonosus of Sardica also denied the perpetual virginity of Mary, for which he was declared a heretic. His followers would survive for many centuries, especially among the Goths.[63][64][65] Additionally, the perpetual virginity of Mary was denied by some Arians.[36]

Jovinian was condemned as a heretic at a Synod of Milan under Ambrose's presidency in 390 and Mary's perpetual virginity was established as the only orthodox view.[13] Further developments were to follow when the Second Council of Constantinople in 553 formally gave her the title "Aeiparthenos", and at the Lateran Synod of 649 Pope Martin I emphasised the threefold character of the perpetual virginity, before, during, and after the birth of Christ.[13]

Athanasius of Alexandria (d.393) declared Mary Aeiparthenos, "ever-virgin", and the liturgy of James the brother of Jesus likewise required a declaration of Mary as ever-virgin.[66] This view was defended by Augustine, Hilary of Poitiers, Didymus the Blind, Cyril of Alexandria among others.[67][68][69]

The Apostles' Creed taught the doctrine of virginitas in partu.[70]

Middle Ages edit

In the Middle Ages the perpetual virginity of Mary was commonly accepted,[71] however the Paulicians denied her perpetual virginity, even saying that Christ denied her to be blessed.[72][73]

Protestant Reformation edit

The Protestant Reformation saw a rejection of the special moral status of lifelong celibacy. As a result, marriage and parenthood were extolled, and Mary and Joseph were seen as a normal married couple.[74] It also affirmed the Bible alone as the fundamental source of authority regarding God's word (sola scriptura).[75] The reformers noted that while scripture records the virgin birth, it makes no mention of Mary's perpetual virginity following the birth of Christ.[76] Mary's perpetual virginity was upheld by Martin Luther (who names her ever-virgin in the Smalcald Articles, a Lutheran confession of faith written in 1537),[14] Huldrych Zwingli, Thomas Cranmer, Wollebius, Bullinger, John Wycliffe and later Protestant leaders including John Wesley, the co-founder of Methodism.[77][11][78][79] Osiander denied the perpetual virginity of Mary, for which Melanchthon was scornful.[80]

John Calvin's view was more ambiguous, believing that knowing what happened to Mary after the birth of Jesus is impossible.[78] However John Calvin argued that Matthew 1:25, used by Helvidius to attack the perpetual virginity of Mary does not teach that Mary had other children.[81] Other Calvinists affirmed Mary's perpetual virginity, including within the Second Helvetic Confession—stating that Mary was the "ever virgin Mary"—and in the notes of the Geneva Bible.[82][3] Theodore Beza, a prominent early Calvinist, included the perpetual virginity of Mary in a list of agreements between Calvinism and the Catholic Church.[83] Some reformers upheld the doctrine to counter more radical reformers who questioned the divinity of Christ; Mary's perpetual virginity guaranteed the Incarnation of Christ despite the challenges to its scriptural foundations.[84] Modern Protestants have largely rejected the perpetual virginity of Mary on the basis of sola scriptura, and it has rarely appeared explicitly in confessions or doctrinal statements,[85] though the perpetual virginity of Mary is still a common belief in Anglicanism and Lutheranism.[86]

Among the Anabaptists, Hubmaier never abandoned his belief in the perpetual virginity of Mary and continued to esteem Mary as theotokos ("mother of God"). These two doctrinal stances are addressed individually in Articles Nine and Ten, respectively, of Hubmaier's work, Apologia.[87]

Doctrine edit

 
Image of Mary depicting her nursing the Infant Jesus. 3rd century, Catacomb of Priscilla, Rome.

The Second Council of Constantinople recognized Mary as Aeiparthenos, meaning "ever-virgin".[9] It remains axiomatic for the Eastern Orthodox Church that she remained virginal throughout her Earthly life, and Orthodoxy therefore understands the New Testament references to the brothers and sisters of Jesus as signifying his kin, but not the biological children of his mother.[88]

The Latin Church, known more commonly today as the Catholic Church, shared the Council of Constantinople with the theologians of the Greek or Orthodox communion, and therefore shares with them the title Aeiparthenos as accorded to Mary. The Catholic Church has gone further than the Orthodox in making the Perpetual Virginity one of the four Marian dogmas, meaning that it is held to be a truth divinely revealed, the denial of which is heresy.[10] It declares her virginity before, during and after the birth of Jesus,[89] or in the definition formulated by Pope Martin I at the Lateran Council of 649:[90]

The blessed ever-virginal and immaculate Mary conceived, without seed, by the Holy Spirit, and without loss of integrity brought him forth, and after his birth preserved her virginity inviolate.

Thomas Aquinas admitted that reason could not prove this, but argued that it must be accepted because it was "fitting",[91] for as Jesus was the only-begotten son of God, so he should also be the only-begotten son of Mary, as a second and purely human conception would disrespect the sacred state of her holy womb.[92] Symbolically, the perpetual virginity of Mary signifies a new creation and a fresh start in salvation history.[93] It has been stated and argued repeatedly, most recently by the Second Vatican Council:[94]

This union of the mother with the Son in the work of salvation is made manifest from the time of Christ's virginal conception [...] then also at the birth of Our Lord, who did not diminish his mother's virginal integrity but sanctified it...

— Lumen Gentium, No.57

Arguments and evidence edit

 
The Church Fathers in an 11th-century depiction from Kiev

A problem facing theologians wishing to maintain Mary's life-long virginity is that the Pauline epistles, the four gospels, and the Acts of the Apostles, all mention the brothers (adelphoi) of Jesus, with Mark and Matthew recording their names and Mark adding unnamed sisters.[16][95][b] The Gospel of James, followed a century later by Epiphanius, explained the adelphoi as Joseph's children by an earlier marriage,[96] which is still the view of the Eastern Orthodox Christian churches.[97] Jerome, believing that Joseph, like Mary, must be a life-long virgin,[98] argued that these adelphoi were the sons of "Mary, the mother of James and Joses" (Mark 15:40), who he identified with the wife of Clopas and sister of the virgin Mary (John 19:25),[97] which remains popular in the Western church. A modern proposal considers these adelphoi sons of "Mary, the mother of James and Joses" (not here identified with the Virgin Mary's sister), and Clopas, who according to Hegesippus was Joseph's brother.[97]

Further scriptural difficulties were added by Luke 2:7, which calls Jesus the "first-born" son of Mary,[19] and Matthew 1:25, which adds that Joseph "did not know her until she had brought forth her firstborn son."[20][c] Helvidius argued that first-born implies later births, and that the word "until" left open the way to sexual relations after the birth; Jerome, replying that even an only son will be a first-born and that "until" did not have the meaning Helvidius construed for it, painted a repulsive word-portrait of Joseph having intercourse with a blood-stained and exhausted Mary immediately after she has given birth—the implication, in his view, of Helvidius's arguments.[54] Opinions on the quality of Jerome's rebuttal range from the view that it was masterful and well-argued to thin, rhetorical and sometimes tasteless.[13]

Two other 4th century Fathers, Gregory of Nyssa, following "a certain apocryphal account", and Augustine, advanced a further argument by reading Luke 1:34[99] as a vow of perpetual virginity on Mary's part; this idea, first introduced in the Protoevangelium of James, has little scholarly support today,[100] but it and the arguments advanced by Jerome and Ambrose were put forward by Pope John Paul II in his catechesis of August 28, 1996, as the four facts supporting the Catholic Church's ongoing faith in Mary's perpetual virginity.[101]

It has been argued from John 19, where Jesus entrusts Mary to the disciple John instead of his brothers, to support the view that Jesus had no brothers, however Protestants have generally argued in two ways against this passage, one by claiming that the brothers of Jesus were unbelievers or that they were not present during the crucifixion.[102]

Some have argued that Mary and Joseph could not have had a normal marriage if Mary remained a perpetual virgin; however, it has been argued by some Catholics that there is evidence that celibacy within marriage was already practiced by the Qumran community and other Jews at that time.[103]

Catholic priest and New Testament scholar John P. Meier argues that although the preponderance of scriptural evidence indicates that Jesus had siblings, the evidence is not conclusive enough to disprove the perpetual virginity of Mary.[104]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ The phrase "did not know her" is a biblical euphemism for sexual relations (see Genesis 4:1). The text neither confirms nor denies the perpetual virginity of Mary.[20]
  2. ^ Mark 6:3 names James, Joses, Judas, Simon; Matthew 13:55 has Joseph for Joses, the latter being an abbreviated form of the former, and reverses the order of the last two; Mark 6:3 and Matthew 12:46 refer to unnamed sisters; Luke, John and Acts all mention brothers also. See Bauckham (2015) in bibliography, pages 6–9.
  3. ^ The phrase "did not know her" is a biblical euphemism for sexual relations (see Genesis 4:1). The text neither confirms nor denies the perpetual virginity of Mary.[20]

References edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ Hesemann 2016, p. unpaginated.
  2. ^ Bromiley 1995, p. 269.
  3. ^ a b c "THE SECOND HELVETIC CONFESSION". www.ccel.org. Retrieved 2021-12-21.
  4. ^ Alexander, Joseph Addison (1863). The Gospel According to Mark. C. Scribner.
  5. ^ The American Lutheran, Volume 49. American Lutheran Publicity Bureau. 1966. p. 16. While the perpetual virginity of Mary is held as a pious opinion by many Lutheran confessors, it is not regarded as binding teaching of the Scriptures.
  6. ^ The New Encyclopaedia Britannica, Volume 11. Encyclopaedia Britannica. 1983. p. 562. ISBN 978-0-85229-400-0. Partly because of these biblical problems, the doctrine of the perpetual virginity of Mary has not been supported as unanimously as has the doctrine of the virginal conception or title mother of God. It achieved dogmatic status, however, at the Council of Chalcedon in 451 and is, therefore, binding upon Eastern Orthodox and Roman Catholic believers; in addition, it is maintained by many Anglican, some Lutheran, and a few other Protestant theologians.
  7. ^ Losch 2008, p. 283.
  8. ^ "The Perpetual Virginity of St. Mary". ninesaintsethiopianorthodoxmonastery.org. Retrieved 2024-02-05.
  9. ^ a b Fairbairn 2002, p. 100.
  10. ^ a b Collinge 2012, p. 133.
  11. ^ a b Campbell 1996, p. 150.
  12. ^ a b Lohse 1966, p. 200.
  13. ^ a b c d Polcar 2016, p. 186.
  14. ^ a b Gill 2004, p. 1254.
  15. ^ Matthew 1:25
  16. ^ a b Maunder 2019, p. 28.
  17. ^ Parmentier 1999, p. 550.
  18. ^ Cross & Livingstone 2005, p. 237-238.
  19. ^ a b Pelikan 2014, p. 160.
  20. ^ a b c d Harrington 1991, p. 36 fn.25.
  21. ^ Shoemaker 2016, p. 44.
  22. ^ Caruana, Salvino. ""born of the Virgin Mary ... " According to St. Ignatius of Antioch, St. Justin Martyr and St. Irenaeus of Lyons" (PDF). um.edu.mt. The two inferences in Ode 19, namely, the one to the non-suffering aspect, and the other to the absence of a midwife, seem to have been also a common note in other apocryphal pieces of literature. They are also found in The Ascension of Isaiah and in The Acts of Peter. It could also be a reference to the fact that during their exile years in Egypt, Jewish women were known to be very quick and strong at childbirth. It is said that they did so in next to no time. Egyptian midwives continually complained to the Pharaoh that they did not succeed in making it fast enough to check whether the newly-born Jewish child was a male or a female, see: Ex 1,19.
  23. ^ Shoemaker 2016, p. 43.
  24. ^ a b Wirth 2016, p. 167-168.
  25. ^ Hunter 1993, p. 61.
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  27. ^ a b Homiletic Review: An International Magazine of Religion, Theology and Philosophy. Religious Newspaper Agency. 1893.
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  56. ^ a b c Hunter 1993, p. 56-57.
  57. ^ a b Hunter 1993, p. 57.
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  98. ^ Kelly 1975, p. 106.
  99. ^ Luke 1:34
  100. ^ Brown 1978, p. 278–279.
  101. ^ Calkins 2008, p. 308–310.
  102. ^ Prothro 2019, pp. 84–85.
  103. ^ Prothro 2019, p. 82.
  104. ^ Meier, John (January 1992). "The Brothers and Sisters of Jesus In Ecumenical Perspective". Catholic Biblical Quarterly. 54 (1): 26. JSTOR 43720810. Retrieved 18 June 2023.

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perpetual, virginity, mary, virginity, mary, redirects, here, doctrine, that, mary, virgin, when, jesus, born, necessarily, perpetually, virgin, virgin, birth, jesus, perpetual, virginity, mary, christian, doctrine, that, mary, mother, jesus, virgin, before, d. Virginity of Mary redirects here For the doctrine that Mary was a virgin when Jesus was born but was not necessarily perpetually a virgin see Virgin birth of Jesus The perpetual virginity of Mary is a Christian doctrine that Mary the mother of Jesus was a virgin before during and after the birth of Christ 2 In Western Christianity the Catholic Church adheres to the doctrine as do some Lutherans Anglicans Reformed and other Protestants 3 4 5 6 7 The Oriental Orthodox Churches also adhere to this doctrine as part of their ongoing tradition 8 and Eastern Orthodox churches recognize Mary as Aeiparthenos meaning ever virgin 9 It is one of the four Marian dogmas of the Catholic Church 10 Most modern nonconformist Protestants reject the doctrine 11 The Vladimir Eleusa icon of the Ever Virgin Mary The Aeiparthenos Ever Virgin title is widely used in Orthodox liturgy and icons show her with three stars on her shoulders and forehead symbolising her threefold virginity 1 The extant written tradition of the perpetual virginity of Mary first appears in a late 2nd century text called the Protoevangelium of James 12 The Second Council of Constantinople in 553 gave her the title Aeiparthenos meaning Perpetual Virgin and at the Lateran Synod of 649 Pope Martin I emphasized the threefold character of the perpetual virginity before during and after the birth of Christ 13 The Lutheran Smalcald Articles 1537 and the Reformed Second Helvetic Confession 1562 codified the doctrine of perpetual virginity of Mary as well 14 3 The doctrine of Mary s perpetual virginity has been challenged on the basis that the New Testament explicitly affirms her virginity only until the birth of Jesus 15 and mentions the brothers adelphoi of Jesus 16 17 This word only very rarely means other than a biological or spiritual sibling and they may have been 1 the sons of Mary the mother of Jesus and Joseph 2 sons of the Mary named in Mark 15 40 as mother of James and Joses whom Jerome identified as a sister of Mary the mother of Jesus or 3 sons of Joseph by a former marriage 18 Further scriptural difficulties were added by Luke 2 7 which calls Jesus the first born son of Mary 19 and Matthew 1 25 which adds that Joseph did not know her until she had brought forth her firstborn son 20 a Contents 1 Origin and history 1 1 Virginitas in partu 1st century 1 2 2nd century 1 3 Early uncertainty 3rd century 1 4 Establishment of orthodoxy 4th century 1 5 Middle Ages 1 6 Protestant Reformation 2 Doctrine 3 Arguments and evidence 4 See also 5 Notes 6 References 6 1 Citations 6 2 BibliographyOrigin and history editVirginitas in partu 1st century edit The Odes of Solomon have been interpreted as implying that Mary was a virgin even during childbirth as well as stating that Mary did not have pain during childbirth 21 Similar statements exist in the Ascension of Isaiah 22 23 2nd century edit nbsp Clement of Alexandria 150 215 AD was an early proponent of the perpetual virginity of Mary 24 The virgin birth of Jesus is found in the Gospel of Matthew and possibly in Luke but it seems to have little theological importance before the middle of the 2nd century 25 The 2nd century Church fathers Irenaeus and Justin Martyr though mentioning the virgin birth nowhere affirmed explicitly the view that Mary was a perpetual virgin 26 This idea however appears in at least three second century works the Protoevangelium of James 12 the Gospel of Peter 27 28 and the Infancy Gospel of Thomas 29 All of these early sources independently assert that the so called brothers of the Lord were children of Joseph s first marriage 29 According to Protestant scholar Richard Bauckham these works show no signs of literary relationship 29 and probably evidence of a well established tradition in probably early second century Syrian Christianity that Jesus brothers and sisters were children of Joseph by a previous marriage 29 According to Richard Bauckham Ignatius of Antioch also believed in the doctrine of Mary s virginity in partu 29 The Gospel of James states that Mary remained a life long virgin because Joseph was an old man who married her without physical desire and the brothers of Jesus mentioned in the canonical gospels are explained as Joseph s sons by an earlier marriage 30 The Protoevangelium seems to have been used to create the stories of Mary which are found in the Quran 31 but while Muslims agree with Christians that Mary was a virgin at the moment of the conception of Jesus the idea of her perpetual virginity thereafter is contrary to the Islamic ideal of women as wives and mothers 32 The Second Apocalypse of James portrays James the Brother of the Lord not as a child of Joseph but of a certain Theudas a relative of the Lord 33 Hegesippus s writings are not clear on this subject with some authors arguing that he defended the doctrine 34 while others arguing that he disputed the perpetual virginity of Mary 35 The Ebionites denied the virgin birth and Mary s perpetual virginity 36 37 Early uncertainty 3rd century edit In the 3rd century Hippolytus of Rome held that Mary was ever virgin 38 while Clement of Alexandria writing soon after the Protoevangelium appeared appealed to its incident of a midwife who examined Mary immediately after the birth after giving birth she was examined by a midwife who found her to be a virgin and asserted that this was to be found in the Gospels These things are attested to by the Scriptures of the Lord though he was referring to an apocryphal Gospel as a fact The 3rd century scholar Origen used the Protoevangelium s explanation of the brothers to uphold the perpetual virginity of Mary There is no child of Mary except Jesus according to those who think correctly about her 24 Origen also mentioned that the gospel of Peter affirmed the perpetual virginity of Mary saying that the brothers of Jesus were from a previous marriage of Joseph 27 28 Tertullian who came between Clement and Origen denied Mary s virginity in partu to refute the docetist idea that the Son of God could not have assumed a human body although she was a virgin when she conceived she was a wife when she brought forth her son 39 Tertullian however is not entirely clear on the issue of Mary s virginity post partum with some scholars denying his traditional association with the Helvidian position 40 41 42 Helvidius also argued that Victorinus believed that Mary had other children 43 Jerome later claimed that Helvidius was misinterpreting Victorinus 44 Epiphanius invented a name Antidicomarians for a group of people who denied the perpetual virginity of Mary which Epiphanius attacked 45 Their same views were also mentioned earlier by Origen although he too rejected them as heretical 46 They were active from the 3rd to the 5th century 47 According to Epiphanius the Antidicomarians claimed that Apollinaris of Laodicea or his disciples denied the perpetual virginity of Mary though Epiphanius doubted the claim 48 Early Christian theologians such as Hippolytus 49 170 235 Eusebius 260 265 339 340 and Epiphanius c 310 320 403 defended the perpetual virginity of Mary Establishment of orthodoxy 4th century edit By the early 4th century the spread of monasticism had promoted celibacy as the ideal state 50 and a moral hierarchy was established with marriage occupying the third rank below life long virginity and widowhood 51 Eastern theologians generally accepted Mary as Aeiparthenos but many in the Western church were less convinced 52 The theologian Helvidius objected to the devaluation of marriage inherent in this view and argued that the two states of virginity and marriage were equal 53 His contemporary Jerome realising that this would lead to the Mother of God occupying a lower place in heaven than virgins and widows defended her perpetual virginity in his immensely influential Against Helvidius issued c 383 54 nbsp Jerome defended the perpetual virginity of Mary against Helvidius 55 In the 380s and 390s the monk Jovinian denied Mary s virginity in partu virgin during childbirth writing that if Jesus did not undergo a normal human birth then his body was something other than a truly human one 56 As reported by Augustine Jovinian denied that the virginity of Mary which existed when she conceived remained while she gave birth Augustine goes on to say that the reason for Jovinian s denial of Mary s virginity in partu was that the doctrine was too close to the Manichean view that Christ was simply a phantom 57 According to Ambrose Jovinian maintained that Mary had conceived as a virgin but she had not given birth as a virgin 56 Jerome wrote against Jovinian but failed to mention this aspect of his teaching and most commentators believe that he did not find it offensive 56 Jovinian also found two monks in Milan Sarmatio and Barbatian who held similar views as Jovinian 58 The only important Christian intellectual to defend Mary s virginity in partu was Ambrose Archbishop of Milan who was the chief target of the charge of Manicheism 57 In 391 he wrote Concerning Virginity 59 whose full title was On the Education of the Virgin and the Perpetual Virginity of Mary 60 For Ambrose both the physical birth of Jesus by Mary and the baptismal birthing of Christians by the church had to be totally virginal even in partu in order to cancel the stain of original sin of which the pains of labor are the physical sign 61 It was due to Ambrose that virginitas in partu came to be included consistently in the thinking of subsequent theologians 62 Bonosus of Sardica also denied the perpetual virginity of Mary for which he was declared a heretic His followers would survive for many centuries especially among the Goths 63 64 65 Additionally the perpetual virginity of Mary was denied by some Arians 36 Jovinian was condemned as a heretic at a Synod of Milan under Ambrose s presidency in 390 and Mary s perpetual virginity was established as the only orthodox view 13 Further developments were to follow when the Second Council of Constantinople in 553 formally gave her the title Aeiparthenos and at the Lateran Synod of 649 Pope Martin I emphasised the threefold character of the perpetual virginity before during and after the birth of Christ 13 Athanasius of Alexandria d 393 declared Mary Aeiparthenos ever virgin and the liturgy of James the brother of Jesus likewise required a declaration of Mary as ever virgin 66 This view was defended by Augustine Hilary of Poitiers Didymus the Blind Cyril of Alexandria among others 67 68 69 The Apostles Creed taught the doctrine of virginitas in partu 70 Middle Ages edit In the Middle Ages the perpetual virginity of Mary was commonly accepted 71 however the Paulicians denied her perpetual virginity even saying that Christ denied her to be blessed 72 73 Protestant Reformation edit The Protestant Reformation saw a rejection of the special moral status of lifelong celibacy As a result marriage and parenthood were extolled and Mary and Joseph were seen as a normal married couple 74 It also affirmed the Bible alone as the fundamental source of authority regarding God s word sola scriptura 75 The reformers noted that while scripture records the virgin birth it makes no mention of Mary s perpetual virginity following the birth of Christ 76 Mary s perpetual virginity was upheld by Martin Luther who names her ever virgin in the Smalcald Articles a Lutheran confession of faith written in 1537 14 Huldrych Zwingli Thomas Cranmer Wollebius Bullinger John Wycliffe and later Protestant leaders including John Wesley the co founder of Methodism 77 11 78 79 Osiander denied the perpetual virginity of Mary for which Melanchthon was scornful 80 John Calvin s view was more ambiguous believing that knowing what happened to Mary after the birth of Jesus is impossible 78 However John Calvin argued that Matthew 1 25 used by Helvidius to attack the perpetual virginity of Mary does not teach that Mary had other children 81 Other Calvinists affirmed Mary s perpetual virginity including within the Second Helvetic Confession stating that Mary was the ever virgin Mary and in the notes of the Geneva Bible 82 3 Theodore Beza a prominent early Calvinist included the perpetual virginity of Mary in a list of agreements between Calvinism and the Catholic Church 83 Some reformers upheld the doctrine to counter more radical reformers who questioned the divinity of Christ Mary s perpetual virginity guaranteed the Incarnation of Christ despite the challenges to its scriptural foundations 84 Modern Protestants have largely rejected the perpetual virginity of Mary on the basis of sola scriptura and it has rarely appeared explicitly in confessions or doctrinal statements 85 though the perpetual virginity of Mary is still a common belief in Anglicanism and Lutheranism 86 Among the Anabaptists Hubmaier never abandoned his belief in the perpetual virginity of Mary and continued to esteem Mary as theotokos mother of God These two doctrinal stances are addressed individually in Articles Nine and Ten respectively of Hubmaier s work Apologia 87 Doctrine edit nbsp Image of Mary depicting her nursing the Infant Jesus 3rd century Catacomb of Priscilla Rome The Second Council of Constantinople recognized Mary as Aeiparthenos meaning ever virgin 9 It remains axiomatic for the Eastern Orthodox Church that she remained virginal throughout her Earthly life and Orthodoxy therefore understands the New Testament references to the brothers and sisters of Jesus as signifying his kin but not the biological children of his mother 88 The Latin Church known more commonly today as the Catholic Church shared the Council of Constantinople with the theologians of the Greek or Orthodox communion and therefore shares with them the title Aeiparthenos as accorded to Mary The Catholic Church has gone further than the Orthodox in making the Perpetual Virginity one of the four Marian dogmas meaning that it is held to be a truth divinely revealed the denial of which is heresy 10 It declares her virginity before during and after the birth of Jesus 89 or in the definition formulated by Pope Martin I at the Lateran Council of 649 90 The blessed ever virginal and immaculate Mary conceived without seed by the Holy Spirit and without loss of integrity brought him forth and after his birth preserved her virginity inviolate Thomas Aquinas admitted that reason could not prove this but argued that it must be accepted because it was fitting 91 for as Jesus was the only begotten son of God so he should also be the only begotten son of Mary as a second and purely human conception would disrespect the sacred state of her holy womb 92 Symbolically the perpetual virginity of Mary signifies a new creation and a fresh start in salvation history 93 It has been stated and argued repeatedly most recently by the Second Vatican Council 94 This union of the mother with the Son in the work of salvation is made manifest from the time of Christ s virginal conception then also at the birth of Our Lord who did not diminish his mother s virginal integrity but sanctified it Lumen Gentium No 57Arguments and evidence edit nbsp The Church Fathers in an 11th century depiction from Kiev A problem facing theologians wishing to maintain Mary s life long virginity is that the Pauline epistles the four gospels and the Acts of the Apostles all mention the brothers adelphoi of Jesus with Mark and Matthew recording their names and Mark adding unnamed sisters 16 95 b The Gospel of James followed a century later by Epiphanius explained the adelphoi as Joseph s children by an earlier marriage 96 which is still the view of the Eastern Orthodox Christian churches 97 Jerome believing that Joseph like Mary must be a life long virgin 98 argued that these adelphoi were the sons of Mary the mother of James and Joses Mark 15 40 who he identified with the wife of Clopas and sister of the virgin Mary John 19 25 97 which remains popular in the Western church A modern proposal considers these adelphoi sons of Mary the mother of James and Joses not here identified with the Virgin Mary s sister and Clopas who according to Hegesippus was Joseph s brother 97 Further scriptural difficulties were added by Luke 2 7 which calls Jesus the first born son of Mary 19 and Matthew 1 25 which adds that Joseph did not know her until she had brought forth her firstborn son 20 c Helvidius argued that first born implies later births and that the word until left open the way to sexual relations after the birth Jerome replying that even an only son will be a first born and that until did not have the meaning Helvidius construed for it painted a repulsive word portrait of Joseph having intercourse with a blood stained and exhausted Mary immediately after she has given birth the implication in his view of Helvidius s arguments 54 Opinions on the quality of Jerome s rebuttal range from the view that it was masterful and well argued to thin rhetorical and sometimes tasteless 13 Two other 4th century Fathers Gregory of Nyssa following a certain apocryphal account and Augustine advanced a further argument by reading Luke 1 34 99 as a vow of perpetual virginity on Mary s part this idea first introduced in the Protoevangelium of James has little scholarly support today 100 but it and the arguments advanced by Jerome and Ambrose were put forward by Pope John Paul II in his catechesis of August 28 1996 as the four facts supporting the Catholic Church s ongoing faith in Mary s perpetual virginity 101 It has been argued from John 19 where Jesus entrusts Mary to the disciple John instead of his brothers to support the view that Jesus had no brothers however Protestants have generally argued in two ways against this passage one by claiming that the brothers of Jesus were unbelievers or that they were not present during the crucifixion 102 Some have argued that Mary and Joseph could not have had a normal marriage if Mary remained a perpetual virgin however it has been argued by some Catholics that there is evidence that celibacy within marriage was already practiced by the Qumran community and other Jews at that time 103 Catholic priest and New Testament scholar John P Meier argues that although the preponderance of scriptural evidence indicates that Jesus had siblings the evidence is not conclusive enough to disprove the perpetual virginity of Mary 104 See also editAnglican Marian theology Antidicomarians Assumption of Mary Catholic Mariology Immaculate Conception Lutheran Mariology New Eve Panachranta icon Virgin birth of JesusNotes edit The phrase did not know her is a biblical euphemism for sexual relations see Genesis 4 1 The text neither confirms nor denies the perpetual virginity of Mary 20 Mark 6 3 names James Joses Judas Simon Matthew 13 55 has Joseph for Joses the latter being an abbreviated form of the former and reverses the order of the last two Mark 6 3 and Matthew 12 46 refer to unnamed sisters Luke John and Acts all mention brothers also See Bauckham 2015 in bibliography pages 6 9 The phrase did not know her is a biblical euphemism for sexual relations see Genesis 4 1 The text neither confirms nor denies the perpetual virginity of Mary 20 References editCitations edit Hesemann 2016 p unpaginated Bromiley 1995 p 269 a b c THE SECOND HELVETIC CONFESSION www ccel org Retrieved 2021 12 21 Alexander Joseph Addison 1863 The Gospel According to Mark C Scribner The American Lutheran Volume 49 American Lutheran Publicity Bureau 1966 p 16 While the perpetual virginity of Mary is held as a pious opinion by many Lutheran confessors it is not regarded as binding teaching of the Scriptures The New Encyclopaedia Britannica Volume 11 Encyclopaedia Britannica 1983 p 562 ISBN 978 0 85229 400 0 Partly because of these biblical problems the doctrine of the perpetual virginity of Mary has not been supported as unanimously as has the doctrine of the virginal conception or title mother of God It achieved dogmatic status however at the Council of Chalcedon in 451 and is therefore binding upon Eastern Orthodox and Roman Catholic believers in addition it is maintained by many Anglican some Lutheran and a few other Protestant theologians Losch 2008 p 283 The Perpetual Virginity of St Mary ninesaintsethiopianorthodoxmonastery org Retrieved 2024 02 05 a b Fairbairn 2002 p 100 a b Collinge 2012 p 133 a b Campbell 1996 p 150 a b Lohse 1966 p 200 a b c d Polcar 2016 p 186 a b Gill 2004 p 1254 Matthew 1 25 a b Maunder 2019 p 28 Parmentier 1999 p 550 Cross amp Livingstone 2005 p 237 238 a b Pelikan 2014 p 160 a b c d Harrington 1991 p 36 fn 25 Shoemaker 2016 p 44 Caruana Salvino born of the Virgin Mary According to St Ignatius of Antioch St Justin Martyr and St Irenaeus of Lyons PDF um edu mt The two inferences in Ode 19 namely the one to the non suffering aspect and the other to the absence of a midwife seem to have been also a common note in other apocryphal pieces of literature They are also found in The Ascension of Isaiah and in The Acts of Peter It could also be a reference to the fact that during their exile years in Egypt Jewish women were known to be very quick and strong at childbirth It is said that they did so in next to no time Egyptian midwives continually complained to the Pharaoh that they did not succeed in making it fast enough to check whether the newly born Jewish child was a male or a female see Ex 1 19 Shoemaker 2016 p 43 a b Wirth 2016 p 167 168 Hunter 1993 p 61 Hunter David G 2007 01 26 Marriage Celibacy and Heresy in Ancient Christianity The Jovinianist Controversy OUP Oxford ISBN 978 0 19 153553 6 a b Homiletic Review An International Magazine of Religion Theology and Philosophy Religious Newspaper Agency 1893 a b Philip Schaff ANF09 The Gospel of Peter The Diatessaron of Tatian The Apocalypse of Peter the Vision of Paul The Apocalypse of the Virgin and Sedrach The Testament of Abraham The Acts of Xanthippe and Polyxena The Narrative of Zosimus The Apology of Aristid Christian Classics Ethereal Library www ccel org Retrieved 2022 06 16 a b c d e Bauckham Richard 1994 The Brothers and Sisters of Jesus An Epiphanian Response to John P Meier The Catholic Biblical Quarterly 56 4 686 700 ISSN 0008 7912 JSTOR 43721789 Hurtado 2005 p 448 Bell 2012 p 110 George Tvrtkovic 2018 p unpaginated 2nd Apocalypse of James www earlychristianwritings com Retrieved 2024 01 29 Prothro 2019 CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA Devotion to the Blessed Virgin Mary www newadvent org Retrieved 2023 01 10 a b Miravalle 2006 p 61 The London Review Alexander Heylin 1860 Marchev Radostin Belief in the perpetual virginity of Mary in the first four centuries and its implications for Orthodox Protestant dialogue Wirth 2016 p 167 Pedrozo Jose M 1999 The Brothers of Jesus and his Mother s Virginity The Thomist A Speculative Quarterly Review 63 1 83 104 doi 10 1353 tho 1999 0044 ISSN 2473 3725 S2CID 171114843 McHugh John 1975 The mother of Jesus in the New Testament Internet Archive Garden City N Y Doubleday ISBN 978 0 385 04748 7 Blinzler Josef 1967 Die Bruder und Schwestern Jesu Internet Archive Stuttgart Verlag Katholisches Bibelwerk Philip Schaff History of the Christian Church Volume III Nicene and Post Nicene Christianity A D 311 600 Christian Classics Ethereal Library www ccel org Retrieved 2022 02 10 Tenney Merrill C 2010 08 10 The Zondervan Encyclopedia of the Bible Volume 1 Revised Full Color Edition Zondervan Academic ISBN 978 0 310 87696 0 Stephen J Shoemaker Epiphanius of Salamis the Kollyridians and the Early Dormition Narratives The Cult of the Virgin in the Fourth Century Journal of Early Christian Studies Vol 16 No 3 2008 pp 371 401 doi 10 1353 earl 0 0185 Origen 1996 Lienhard Joseph T ed Homilies on Luke The Fathers of the Church Series Vol 94 Catholic University of America Press pp 29 30 ISBN 9780813200941 William H Brackney Historical Dictionary of Radical Christianity Scarecrow Press 2012 ISBN 978 0 8108 7179 3 p 31 Williams Frank The Panarion of Epiphanius of Salamis Books II and III p 616 As though they had a grudge against the Virgin and desired to cheapen her reputation certain Antidicomarians inspired by some envy or error and intending to sully men s minds have dared to say that St Mary had relations with a man after Christ s birth I mean with Joseph himself And as I have already mentioned it is said that the claim has been made by the venerable Apollinarius himself or some of his disciples Indeed I doubt it but I have to speak about those who are saying this of Rome Hippolytus Against Beron and Helix Fragment VIII Retrieved 18 February 2021 Hunter 2008 p 412 Hunter 2008 p 412 413 Nathan 2018 p 230 Hunter 1999 p 423 424 a b Polcar 2016 p 185 CHURCH FATHERS The Perpetual Virginity of Mary Jerome www newadvent org Retrieved 2022 07 21 a b c Hunter 1993 p 56 57 a b Hunter 1993 p 57 Philip Schaff History of the Christian Church Volume III Nicene and Post Nicene Christianity A D 311 600 Christian Classics Ethereal Library www ccel org Retrieved 2022 06 18 He then betook himself to Milan where the two monks Sarmatio and Barbatian held forth views like his own but he was treated there in the same fashion by the bishop Ambrose who held a council against him From this time he and his party disappear from history and before the year 406 he died in exile 394 Concerning Virginity L Immacolata Concezione di Maria in sant Ambrogio in Italian 7 December 2020 Hunter 1993 p 59 Rosenberg 2018 p unpaginated Nelson Thomas 2001 03 21 Nelson s Dictionary of Christianity The Authoritative Resource on the Christian World Thomas Nelson ISBN 978 1 4185 3981 8 Bonosus and the Bonosians www ccel org Retrieved 2022 02 11 CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA Bonosus Nathan 2018 p 229 Rosenberg 2018 p 199 Keech Dominic 2012 10 18 The Anti Pelagian Christology of Augustine of Hippo 396 430 Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 163929 6 What the Early Church Believed The Perpetual Virginity of Mary Catholic Answers Retrieved 2022 06 18 Mary Biography Bible References Significance amp Miracles Britannica www britannica com Retrieved 2022 06 05 Dzon Mary 2017 03 09 The Quest for the Christ Child in the Later Middle Ages University of Pennsylvania Press ISBN 978 0 8122 4884 5 Garsoian Nina G 2011 05 02 The Paulician heresy a study of the origin and development of Paulicianism in Armenia and the Eastern Procinces of the Byzantine empire Walter de Gruyter ISBN 978 3 11 134452 2 Conybeare F C The key of truth a manual of the Paulician church of Armenia Oxford Clarendon Press They denied her perpetual virginity and taught that Christ expressly denied her to be blessed Miller McLemore 2002 p 100 101 Miller McLemore 2002 p 100 Pelikan 1971 p 339 Bloesch Donald G 2005 12 02 Jesus Christ Savior and Lord InterVarsity Press ISBN 978 0 8308 2754 1 a b Litfin Bryan 2015 01 16 After Acts Exploring the Lives and Legends of the Apostles Moody Publishers ISBN 978 0 8024 9206 7 Divozzo R 2019 06 12 Mary for Protestants A Catholic s Reflection on the Meaning of Mary the Mother of God Wipf and Stock Publishers ISBN 978 1 5326 7585 0 Jews Judaism and the Reformation in Sixteenth Century Germany BRILL 2006 02 01 ISBN 978 90 474 0885 7 Mulder Jack Jr July 2015 What Does It Mean to Be Catholic Wm B Eerdmans Publishing ISBN 978 0 8028 7266 1 McKim Donald K Wright David F 1992 01 01 Encyclopedia of the Reformed Faith Westminster John Knox Press ISBN 978 0 664 21882 9 Dyrness William A 2004 06 10 Reformed Theology and Visual Culture The Protestant Imagination from Calvin to Edwards Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 54073 5 MacCulloch 2016 p 51 52 64 Campbell 1996 p 47 150 Longenecker Dwight Gustafson David 2003 Mary A Catholic Evangelical Debate Gracewing Publishing ISBN 978 0 85244 582 2 Klager Andrew Ingestion and Gestation Peacemaking the Lord s Supper and the Theotokos in the Mennonite Anabaptist and Eastern Orthodox Traditions Journal of Ecumenical Studies 47 no 3 Summer 2012 452 McGuckin 2010 p unpaginated Greene McCreight 2005 p 485 Miravalle 2006 p 56 Dodds 2004 p 94 Miravalle 2006 p 61 62 Fahlbusch 1999 p 404 Miravalle 2006 p 59 Bauckham 2015 p 6 8 Nicklas 2011 p 2100 a b c Cross amp Livingstone 2005 p 238 Kelly 1975 p 106 Luke 1 34 Brown 1978 p 278 279 Calkins 2008 p 308 310 Prothro 2019 pp 84 85 Prothro 2019 p 82 Meier John January 1992 The Brothers and Sisters of Jesus In Ecumenical Perspective Catholic Biblical Quarterly 54 1 26 JSTOR 43720810 Retrieved 18 June 2023 Bibliography edit Bauckham Richard 2015 Jude and the Relatives of Jesus in the Early Church Bloomsbury ISBN 9781474230476 Bell Richard 2012 The Origin of Islam in Its Christian Environment Routledge ISBN 9781136260674 Blomberg Craig 2006 From Pentecost to Patmos An Introduction to Acts Through Revelation B amp H Publishing ISBN 9780805432480 Boisclair Regina A 2007 Virginity of Mary Biblical Theology In Espin Orlando O Nickoloff James B eds An Introductory Dictionary of Theology and Religious Studies Liturgical Press ISBN 9780814658567 Booton Diane E 2004 Variations on a Limbourg Theme In DuBruck Edelgard E Gusick Barbara I eds Fifteenth Century Studies Vol 29 Camden House ISBN 9781571132963 Boring M Eugene 2006 Mark A Commentary Presbyterian Publishing ISBN 9780664221072 Boring M Eugene Craddock Fred B 2009 The People s New Testament Commentary Westminster John Knox ISBN 9780664235925 Bromiley Geoffrey W 1995 The International Standard Bible Encyclopedia Eerdmans ISBN 9780802837851 Brown Raymond Edward 1978 Mary in the New Testament Paulist Press ISBN 9780809121687 Bruner Frederick 2004 Matthew 1 12 Eerdmans ISBN 9780802811189 Burkett Delbert 2019 An Introduction to the New Testament and the Origins of Christianity Cambridge University Press ISBN 9781107172784 Calkins Arthur Burton Msgr 2008 Our Lady s Perpetual Virginity In Miravalle Mark I ed Mariology A Guide for Priests Deacons Seminarians and Consecrated Persons Seat of Wisdom Books ISBN 9781579183554 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Campbell Ted 1996 Christian Confessions A Historical Introduction Westminster John Knox Press ISBN 9780664256500 Collinge William J 2012 Historical Dictionary of Catholicism Scarecrow Press ISBN 9780810879799 Cross Frank Leslie Livingstone Elizabeth A 2005 Brethren of the Lord The Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church Oxford University Press ISBN 9780192802903 Davids Peter H 2000 Brothers of the Lord In Freedman David Noel Myers Allen C eds Eerdmans Dictionary of the Bible Eerdmans ISBN 9789053565032 Dodds Michael J 2004 The Teaching of Thomas Aquinas on the Mysteries of the Life of Christ In Weinandy Thomas Gerard Keating Daniel Yocum John eds Aquinas on Doctrine A Critical Introduction A amp C Black ISBN 9780567084118 Fairbairn Donald 2002 Eastern Orthodoxy Through Western Eyes Westminster John Knox ISBN 9780664224974 Fahlbusch Erwin 1999 Mariology In Fahlbusch Erwin Bromiley Geoffrey William eds The Encyclopedia of Christianity Volume 3 Eerdmans ISBN 9780802824158 Fredriksen Paula 2008 From Jesus to Christ The Origins of the New Testament Images of Jesus Yale University Press ISBN 978 0300164107 George Tvrtkovic Rita 2018 Christians Muslims and Mary A History Paulist Press ISBN 9781587686764 Gill Sean 2004 Mary In Hillerbrand Hans J ed Encyclopedia of Protestantism Routledge ISBN 9781135960285 Greene McCreight Kathryn 2005 Mary In Vanhoozer Kevin J ed Dictionary for Theological Interpretation of the Bible Baker Academic ISBN 9780801026942 Harrington Daniel J 1991 The Gospel of Matthew Liturgical Press ISBN 9780814658031 Hesemann Michael 2016 Mary of Nazareth History Archaeology Legends Ignatius Press ISBN 9781681497372 Hunt Emily J 2003 Christianity in the Second Century The Case of Tatian Routledge ISBN 9781134409891 Hunter David G 2008 Marriage early Christian In Benedetto Robert Duke James O eds The New Westminster Dictionary of Church History The early medieval and Reformation eras Westminster John Knox Press ISBN 9780664224165 Hunter David G 1999 Helvidius In Fitzgerald Allan D ed Augustine Through the Ages Eerdmans ISBN 9780802838438 Hunter David G Spring 1993 Helvidius Jovinian and the Virginity of Mary in Late Fourth Century Rome Journal of Early Christian Studies 1 1 Johns Hopkins University Press 47 71 doi 10 1353 earl 0 0147 S2CID 170719507 Retrieved 2016 08 30 Hurtado Larry 2005 Lord Jesus Christ Devotion to Jesus in Earliest Christianity Eerdmans ISBN 9780802831675 Hurtado Larry 2011 Mark Baker Books ISBN 9781441236586 Isaak Jon M 2011 New Testament Theology Extending the Table Wipf and Stock Publishers ISBN 9781556352935 Kelly John Norman Dividson 1975 Jerome His Life Writings and Controversies Harper amp Row ISBN 9780715607381 Lincoln Andrew 2013 Born of a Virgin Eerdmans ISBN 978 0802869258 Lohse Bernhard 1966 A Short History of Christian Doctrine Fortress Press ISBN 9781451404234 Losch Richard 2008 All the People in the Bible Eerdmans ISBN 9780802824547 MacCulloch Diarmaid 2004 Reformation Europe s House Divided 1490 1700 Penguin UK ISBN 9780141926605 MacCulloch Diarmaid 2016 All Things Made New The Reformation and Its Legacy Oxford University Press ISBN 9780190616816 Maunder Chris 2019 Mary and the Gospel Narratives In Maunder Chris ed The Oxford Handbook of Mary Oxford University Press ISBN 9780198792550 McGuckin John Anthony 2010 The Orthodox Church An Introduction to Its History Doctrine and Spiritual Culture Wiley ISBN 9781444393835 Migliore Daniel L 2002 Woman of Faith In Gaventa Beverly Roberts Rigby Cynthia L eds Blessed One Protestant Perspectives on Mary Westminster John Knox Press ISBN 9780664224387 Miravalle Mark I 2006 Introduction to Mary The Heart of Marian Doctrine and Devotion Queenship Publishing ISBN 978 1 882972 06 7 Miller McLemore Bonnie J 2002 Pondering All These Things In Gaventa Beverly Roberts Rigby Cynthia L eds Blessed One Protestant Perspectives on Mary Westminster John Knox Press ISBN 9780664224387 Nathan Geoffrey 2018 The Jovinianist Controversy and Mary Aeiparthenos Questioning Mary s Virginity and the Question of Motherhood Saeculum 68 2 225 236 doi 10 7788 saec 2018 68 2 225 JSTOR 27638435 S2CID 201446177 Nicklas Tobias 2011 Traditions About Jesus in Apocryphal Gospels In Holmen Tom Porter Stanley E eds Handbook for the Study of the Historical Jesus BRILL ISBN 978 9004163720 Parmentier Martin F G 1999 Mary In Van Der Toorn Karel Becking Bob Van der Horst Pieter Willem eds Dictionary of Deities and Demons in the Bible Eerdmans ISBN 9780802824912 Pelikan Jaroslav 1971 The Christian Tradition A History of the Development of Doctrine Vol 4 Reformation of Church and Dogma University of Chicago Press ISBN 9780226653778 Pelikan Jaroslav 2014 The Melody of Theology Wipf and Stock ISBN 9781625646453 Polcar Philip 2016 Developments in the Doctrine of Mary s Perpetual Virginity in Antiquity 2nd 7th centuries AD In Curta Florin Holt Andrew eds Great Events in Religion An Encyclopedia of Pivotal Events in Religious History vol 1 ABC CLIO ISBN 9781610695664 Pomplun Trent 2008 Mary In Buckley James J Bauerschmidt Frederick C Pomplun Trent eds The Blackwell Companion to Catholicism John Wiley amp Sons ISBN 9780470751336 Prothro James B 2019 Semper Virgo A Biblical Review of a Debated Dogma Pro Ecclesia A Journal of Catholic and Evangelical Theology 28 1 78 97 doi 10 1177 1063851219829935 ISSN 1063 8512 S2CID 171539085 Rahner Karl 1975 Encyclopedia of Theology A Concise Sacramentum Mundi A amp C Black ISBN 9780860120063 Rampton Martha 2008 Mary In Smith Bonnie G ed The Oxford Encyclopedia of Women in World History Oxford University Press p 191 ISBN 978 0 19 514890 9 Rausch Thomas P 2016 Systematic Theology A Roman Catholic Approach Liturgical Press ISBN 9780814683453 Reddish Mitchell 2011 An Introduction to The Gospels Abingdon Press ISBN 9781426750083 Rosenberg Michael 2018 Signs of Virginity Testing Virgins and Making Men in Late Antiquity Oxford University Press ISBN 9780190845919 Salisbury Joyce E 2004 Jerome Saint In Kleinhenz Christopher ed Medieval Italy An Encyclopedia Routledge ISBN 9781135948801 Schumaker John F 1992 Religion and Mental Health Oxford University Press ISBN 9780195361490 Shoemaker Stephen J 2016 Mary in Early Christian Faith and Devotion Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 21953 1 Stowasser Barbara Freyer 1996 Women in the Qur an Traditions and Interpretation Oxford University Press ISBN 9780199761838 Tilley Maureen A 1995 One Woman s Body Repression and Expression in the Passio Perpetuae In Phan Peter C ed Ethnicity Nationality and Religious Experience University Press of America ISBN 9780819195241 Vuong Lily C 2019 The Protevangelium of James Wipf and Stock Publishers ISBN 9781532656170 Wiesner Hanks Merry 2005 Christianity and Sexuality in the Early Modern World Regulating Desire Reforming Practice Routledge ISBN 9781134761210 Wheeler Reed David 2017 Regulating Sex in the Roman Empire Ideology the Bible and the Early Christians Yale University Press ISBN 9780300231311 Wirth Douglas 2016 Shivering Babe Glorious Lord The Nativity Stories in Christian Tradition WestBow Press ISBN 9781512738711 Wright David F 1992 Mary In McKim Donald K Wright David F eds Encyclopedia of the Reformed Faith Westminster John Knox Press ISBN 9780664218829 Zervos George T 2019 The Protevangelium of James Greek Text English Translation Critical Introduction Vol 1 Bloomsbury Publishing ISBN 9780567689757 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Perpetual virginity of Mary amp oldid 1223069568, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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