Pints With Aquinas - 74: Was Mary a virgin her entire life?
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Welcome to Pints with Aquinas, episode 74. I'm Matt Fradd.
If you could sit down over a pint of beer with St. Thomas Aquinas and ask him any one question, what would it be?
In today's episode, we'll ask him, is it here at Pints with Aquinas, the show where you
and I pull up a barstool next to the angelic doctor to discuss theology and philosophy.
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Today, we'll be talking about
the perpetual virginity of Mary. I'd like to read directly from the Summa Theologiae and then
respond to questions that people might have concerning it. Now, we'll be reading from the
third part of the Summa Theologiae, question 28 and article 3. The question is, did she remain a virgin after his birth?
Seems pretty appropriate, doesn't it? Let me read his primary answer. And I want to just
preface this by saying, Aquinas is painfully nuanced. He doesn't speak hyperbolically ever.
doesn't speak hyperbolically ever, right? He uses words extremely carefully in order to convey the truth. And yet, when we read this answer, it's quite surprising just how forceful he is.
And I think you'll notice that if you're a regular listener to Pints with Aquinas,
or if you read Aquinas regularly. Here's what he says regarding the question.
Without any hesitation, we must abhor the error of Helvidius who dared to assert that Christ's
mother after his birth was carnally known by Joseph and bore other children. For in the first place, this is
derogatory to Christ's perfection. For as he is in his Godhead, the only begotten of the father,
being thus his son in every respect perfect, so it was becoming that he should be the only
begotten son of his mother as being her perfect offspring. Secondly, this error is an insult to
the Holy Ghost, whose shrine was the virginal womb, wherein he had formed the flesh of Christ.
Wherefore, it was unbecoming that it should be desecrated by intercourse with a man.
desecrated by intercourse with a man. Thirdly, it is derogatory to the dignity and holiness of God's mother. For thus she would seem to be most ungrateful were she not content with such a son
and were she of her own accord by carnal intercourse to forfeit that virginity which had been miraculously
preserved in her. Fourthly, it would be tantamount to an imputation
of extreme presumption in Joseph to assume that he attempted to violate her whom the angel's
revelation he knew to have conceived by the Holy Ghost. We must therefore simply assert that the mother of God, as she was a virgin in conceiving him and a virgin in giving him birth, did she remain a virgin ever afterwards.
How is that, brothers and sisters, for some strong language?
We must abhor the error, right?
He says it's derogatory to Christ's perfection. It's an insult to the
Holy Ghost. It's derogatory to the dignity of the holiness of God's mother. Now, you might be
listening today and might be thinking, I have no idea what he's talking about. I don't see why it's
derogatory at all. I don't see why we have to abhor this supposed error. Well, stick with Aquinas, okay, and hear him out because
just because you and I don't immediately understand something, just because something
doesn't immediately resonate with us, doesn't mean it's not true. Sometimes the wise thing to do
is to listen to people much wiser than us and give them the benefit of the doubt before making a decision.
I also want to add, before looking at some of these questions people might have,
that it shouldn't be an impediment to holding this belief to say, I'm a Protestant, because
the Protestant reformers also agreed with Aquinas that Mary was a perpetual virgin. Let me just read a couple of
quotations. I could read a lot more, but Martin Luther, for example, says this in Works of Luther
Volume 11. Well, it doesn't matter what pages, if you really don't believe me, just email me. But
he says, it is an article of faith that Mary is the mother of the Lord and still a
virgin. Christ, we believe, came forth from a womb left perfectly intact. John Calvin, in his sermon
on Matthew, published in 1562, said, there have been certain folk who have wished to suggest from
this passage, Matthew 1.25, that the Virgin Mary had other children
than the Son of God, and that Joseph had then dwelt with her later. But what folly this is!
For the gospel writer did not wish to record what happened afterwards, he simply wished to make
clear Joseph's obedience, and to show also that Joseph had been well and truly assured that it
was God who had sent his angel to Mary. Skipping down here a
little bit, he says, regarding this idea of Christ being the firstborn, he says, this is not because
there was a second or third, but because the gospel writer is paying regard to the precedence.
We could quote from Ulrich Zwingli and other Protestant reformers, but I just want to throw
that out there. Like, you can be a faithful Protestant and believe, as the early church did,
as the Protestant reformers did, that Mary remained a virgin. So, let's look at some of
these questions that people might have regarding it. I think the first question people usually have
is, why is it in the Gospels it talks about Jesus' brothers?
And this might not be news to some of you, but to some of you it will be, and that's that the
first thing to understand is that this term brother, in Greek, adelphoi, has a broader meaning
than uterine brothers. It can mean biological brother, but it can also be an extended relative or even a spiritual brother.
Take Genesis 13.8, for example. Here, the word brother is being used to describe the relationship
between Abraham and Lot, who weren't biological brothers, but uncle and nephew. Check it out here,
13.8 in Genesis. So, Abraham said to Lot Lot Let's not have any quarreling between you and me
Or between your herdsmen and mine
For we are brothers
Okay
Now because of the Bible's broad semantic range of brother
We can rest assured, right
That though St. Paul writes
Quote
Jesus appeared to more than 500 brothers at the same time,
end quote, it's fairly certain, right? We can say that we don't have to infer that Jesus gave birth
to 500 plus children. So, that's a bit of a joke, but that's just a way to kind of demonstrate that point about, yeah, the word brother. Secondly, and this
is just a very minor note, but these brothers, you'll notice, are never once called the children
of Mary, although Jesus himself is. So, nowhere in Scripture does it say that anybody else is the
child of Mary. It does say Jesus has brothers, but that's it. Thirdly, there were other women
named Mary. Okay. So, think of James and Joseph, sometimes called Joses. These were actually called
Jesus's brothers. If you read in Mark chapter 6 verse 3, in fact, why don't we quickly do that?
3. In fact, why don't we quickly do that? It says, isn't this the carpenter? Isn't this Mary's son and the brother of James, Joseph, Judas, and Simon? How do we respond to that? Well, again,
there were many different Marys. And so, even though it says there in Mark 6, 3 that James
and Joseph were his brothers, we know from when we compare it to
another account in the Gospels that these were indeed the sons of Mary, but sons of another Mary.
Let's see here. After St. Matthew's account of the crucifixion and death of Christ, Matthew writes
this, quote, there were also many women there looking on from afar who had followed Jesus from Galilee ministering to him, among who were Mary Magdalene and Mary the mother of James and Joseph and the mother of the sons of Zebedee.
of the sons of Zebedee. And now, of course, we know that that Mary, who is the mother of James and Joseph, isn't Mary, the mother of Jesus, since Mary, the mother of Jesus, is at the foot of the
cross. Another objection is this idea in Matthew 1.25, where it states that Joseph had no relations
with Mary until she bore a son. Now, I don't really need to explain this a bunch because John Calvin
just did it. You'll remember I quoted him a moment ago where he responded to this. But the Greek
word until, which is haos, doesn't imply that Mary had marital relations with Joseph after the birth
of Christ. You want another example in which this isn't the case? Check out 2 Samuel 6.23. That's my
favorite example. We read that Micah, the daughter of Saul, or Michal, trying anyway to not make it
sound like Michael, had no children until the day of her death, right? She had no children until,
and yet we read that and we realize that doesn't mean, okay, well, then after her death, that means she had to be having children. Is that correct?
No, no, it's not. If you're interested in similar examples, other than the one I just quoted from
2 Samuel, check out Hebrews 1.13 and 1 Timothy 4.13. Now, what else might somebody say? Someone might say, well, how can you say Joseph and Mary
were married if they didn't consummate their marriage? Okay, if they didn't have sex, how is
it a true marriage? This stems from an error that I've actually encountered in many Catholics who
say that you are not technically married until you have sexual intercourse.
And this just isn't true, right? At the end of my wedding, you know, the priest announced that we
had become husband and wife, and so we were. Okay. So, when you consummate your marriage,
you don't make your marriage valid. When you consummate your marriage, you make it indissoluble. Okay.
So, Joseph and Mary's marriage was a real marriage, even if it was never consummated.
Now, in regard to it not being natural, when someone says, well, it's just not a natural
marriage, you know, the prophet Isaiah said that God's ways are not like our ways. And I've heard
Jason Everett say, when the second person
of the blessed Trinity is in your wife's womb, you can expect to have a different sort of marriage
than most folks. Fair point, I think. Another question people might have is regards to Mary's
said perpetual virginity and the fact that she had made a vow of virginity, which is one of the
earliest beliefs in the church, going back to the Proto-Evangel vow of virginity, which is one of the earliest beliefs in the
church, going back to the Proto-Evangelium of James, which we'll explain in a minute.
But yeah, why was she betrothed to Joseph if she made a vow of virginity? Well, I think,
first of all, one way to see that she may have made a vow of virginity, which, by the way,
wasn't a common thing in the first century, but it did exist.
And I'll again, speak about that in a minute. But I mean, think about the response she gives
to the angel in the chapter, in the gospel of Luke chapter one, you know, the angel appears to her,
tells her that she's going to be giving birth to a son. And what does she say? This woman who
is betrothed to Joseph. I mean, it would seem pretty
obvious, don't you think? If you were, I mean, engagement and betrothal aren't the same thing,
but to use a modern analogy, suppose you're engaged. You're a woman out there, you're
listening to this, you're engaged, and an angel appears to you and says you're going to give birth
to a son and whatever. You probably wouldn't say what Mary said, which is,
how will this be since I know not man? Or how will this be since I am a virgin? However you
want to rephrase it. So, that's, I think, one indication, certainly not a knockdown argument,
but I think one indication to the belief that Mary was a perpetual virgin and that she took
a vow of virginity.
So, back to this idea of the Proto-Evangelium of James. This is a document written around AD 120.
All right. Now, certainly not canonical, not a part of Holy Scripture, and yet is going to contain some truths, even if it is intermixed with error. Now, in this document, it says that Mary was
a consecrated virgin. And as such, when she reached puberty, her monthly cycle would render
her ceremonial unclean and thus unable to dwell in the temple without defiling it. And that's
under Mosaic law. So, she was entrusted to a male guardian. However, since it was forbidden for a man to live
with a woman he was not married or related to, the virgin would be wed to the guardian and they
would have no marital relations. Now, if you're very skeptical of this doctrine, you might be
thinking, come on, that just sounds like something somebody made up in, you know, 500 years ago to justify this perpetual virginity doctrine. Well, again, it's not. It's right there
in the Proto-Evangelium of James around the year AD 120. And even though it's not canonical,
it's certainly something I think that we shouldn't just dismiss.
All right, what I want to do now is look at several quotations from the earliest Christians,
the early church fathers,
and then we'll wrap things up for the day. But before we get to that, a short break.
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Okay. Welcome back to Pints with Aquinas. As you know, on Pints with Aquinas, I love to
quote the early church. And the reason I like to quote the early church is to show
that the one holy Catholic and apostolic church teaches today, even if in a more elaborated form,
what was believed in the early church. And so, I'd like to share with you a few quotations from some of the earliest
Christians who were known for their orthodoxy and prominence in the church and what they had
to say about the perpetual virginity of Mary. You remember that I quoted the Proto-Evangelium of
James? Well, this is something that was even quoted back in the early church. Here's a quote from Origen, who in his commentary on Matthew around 248,
248, he said this, the book, the Proto-Evangelium of James records that the brothers of Jesus were
sons of Joseph by a former wife whom he married before Mary. Now, those who say so wish to
preserve the honor of Mary and virginity to the end, so that body of hers,
which was appointed to minister to the word, might not know intercourse with a man after the
Holy Spirit came into her and the power from on high overshadowed her. And I think it in harmony
with reason that Jesus was the first fruit among men of the purity which consists in perpetual Let me read a couple more.
Here's one from Jerome.
This is from his work against Helvidius, who you remember Thomas Aquinas mentioned in the Summa.
This is a work by Jerome actually called Against Helvidius, The Perpetual Virginity of Mary.
And this is back around the year 380, 383.
He says, we believe that God was born of a virgin because we read it.
We do not believe that Mary was married after she brought forth her son because we do not read it.
You, Helvidius, say that Mary did not remain a
virgin. As for myself, I claim that Joseph himself was a virgin through Mary so that a virgin son
might be born of a virginal wedlock. Let's read one final one from St. Augustine. This is from
his work, Holy Virginity, around the year 401. He says, in being born of a virgin who chose to remain a virgin even before
she knew who was to be born of her. So, there you go. You've got Augustine there talking about this
apparent vow of virginity that Mary supposedly took. He says, Christ wanted to approve virginity rather than to impose it. And he wanted virginity to be of free choice, even in that woman in whom he took upon himself
the form of a slave.
Look, so much more can be said, but as we wrap up here today, let me offer some closing
thoughts.
Number one, it wasn't strictly necessary that Mary even be a virgin prior to the incarnation
of Christ, all right?
Jesus Christ could have been born of a prostitute. So, don't hear me saying that it was necessary
that Mary be a virgin in order to conceive and give birth to Jesus. Secondly, this isn't a
condemnation on sex. And, you know, forgive me, but I think that our reaction to this doctrine
of the perpetual virginity of Mary, namely, well, what are you saying?
Sex is bad. Are you saying sex is bad?
It's almost like we've with the pendulum has swung.
Right. And we've gone from perhaps Christians who had some suspicious sort of view about sex and sexual desire, or at least come from stock that thought that.
sexual desire, or at least come from stock that thought that. And now we're so eager to celebrate the goodness of sex that the idea of virginity seems like an affront to the goodness of sex.
But that's not at all the case. We shouldn't look at this in an either or sort of way.
You know, think about, I think it's in 2 Samuel chapter 6. I'm not reading that. I'm going off
memory. So, don't hate me if I got that
wrong. But you remember when the Ark of the Covenant began to sort of rock and Uzzah put
forth his hand just to stabilize the Ark of the Covenant and what happened? God struck him dead.
That's interesting because you might read that and think that seems very unkind, God. But why? Well, because
the Holy of Holies was the most sacred thing on the planet. It contained three things. We know
this from the book of Hebrews. It contained manna, the bread that was given to the Israelites as they
passed through the desert. It contained the rod of Aaron that was a sign of
priestly authority, and it contained the tablet to the covenant, the Ten Commandments.
Now, Mary is the new Ark of the Covenant because within her womb, as Aquinas referred to it,
the shrine of the Blessed Virgin Mary,
she has not the word of God in stone, the word of God in flesh, not a sign of the high priesthood,
but the high priest himself, and not manna that was given to the Israelites, but the bread of life.
So, if it were true that Uzzah couldn't even touch the Ark of the Covenant,
then it shouldn't be thoroughly surprising, or we should at least be open to the idea that Joseph should not have had sexual relations with
Mary, who was the new Ark of the Covenant. That does it for this week. Thank you very much,
all of you, again, for your support and your love and for listening to Pines with Aquinas
week after week. I really do hope that these episodes are a blessing to you Who's gonna survive?
Who's gonna survive?
Who's gonna survive?