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NEXO ISLAMICO CON LA BIBLIA: THE ABSENT HAGIOGRAPHY: INVESTIGATING MARY MAGDALENE S DISAPPEARANCE IN ISLAM
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From: BARILOCHENSE6999  (Original message) Sent: 22/07/2024 01:19

The Absent Hagiography: Investigating Mary Magdalene’s Disappearance in Islam (Part One)

Mary is a Many-Splendored Thing

Mary_magdalene_caravaggioMary Magdalene is an anomaly in Christian hagiography for her varied, and sometimes contradictory roles. The earliest texts elevate her to the status of the Companion of God, the mouthpiece of the Gnostics, Apostola Apostolorum (the apostle of the apostles), the New Eve, and the Sweet Friend of God. She is named in the Bible and is one of the most frequently depicted saints in Catholic history. After an analysis of numerous texts devoted to her, Mary Thompson points to Magdalene’s centrality to Christianity stating, she “appears repeatedly with the chosen disciples; she is given the leading role in the dialogs; she is singled out as a primary disciple; she is, more than once, in direct conflict with Peter from which conflict she emerges as the stronger.”[1] Her relics have been dispersed across Europe, and monasteries dedicated to her name have shaped pilgrimage routes and trade networks. Artistic depictions of her lead to her rise as the favourite female saint of the Middle Ages, and her role as an intercessor lead the famous poets of Europe to call on her for forgiveness. Her name has persisted in modern literature such as comic books, novels and films where her mythology has been used to garner popular success and raise questions about the Church’s treatment of women in history. An enormous corpus of work has been dedicated to Mary Magdalene over the centuries – volumes of hagiographical texts, poetry and plays that could fill library shelves, and paintings and sculptures that could fill museums. And yet, a simple glance into the realm of Islam and Mary Magdalene vanishes. Jesus assumes a very prominent role, as does his mother, the Virgin Mary; however, his companion, his apostle, his happy penitent friend is gone. There is not a single mention of Mary Magdalene in any of Sunni Islam’s accepted literature and this leaves me with a nagging question about why. Given how much of orthodox Islam continues from mainstream Christianity, the influence of which is well-documented at the time of Muhammad’s revelation, how can there be no evidence whatsoever of Mary Magdalene’s existence from the Muslim perspective? The work of this paper is to answer this question. In order to understand her absence, I must first look to the Islamic construction of Jesus as a man and a prophet. Her absence also hinges on Islamic orthodox interpretations of the crucifixion, the resurrection, attitudes towards ascetic practices, attitudes towards repentance and salvation, and the problem of intercession. Throughout this article, I will uncover her many and varied roles in Christianity, weighing their relevancy in Islam. Ultimately, I will be left to question her very existence along with the historical sources which are used in Christianity to justify it.

Before beginning, a note about methodology is in order. Due to the fact that I am dealing with the absence of a religious figure in a cross-religious comparison, the construction of the dossier of this saint is tricky, to say the least. On one hand, I will be looking at the Christian dossier to determine her many roles. The purpose of this is to assess which roles are in contradiction with orthodox Islamic principles and might explain the lack of crossover. For these purposes, I will be relying mainly on accepted scriptural texts from Christianity and Islam: namely, the New International Version of the New Testament, an acceptable (and heavily scrutinized) English translation of the meaning of the Holy Qur’an, authenticated historical sources from the life of the Prophet Muhammad, and tafsir or Qur’anic exegesis from celebrated, mainstream Islamic scholars. In doing this, however, I am not seeking to determine what can be said to be true about Mary Magdalene. As such, my analysis is not preoccupied with historical verification of this individual (at least not at first), but rather centers on what about her elevation in Christianity is either problematic or not relevant in Islam to warrant not a single mention in 1400 years.

Jesus, Prophet of Islam

Considering that Mary Magdalene’s close proximity to Jesus is largely what warrants her edification and sainthood in Christianity, his construction in Islam demands closer observation to understand her absence. Jesus is mentioned fifty-nine times in the Qur’an, significantly more than Muhammad who is mentioned only five times.[2] Through these references, a clearer picture of Jesus in Islam comes to the fore with additional hadith to supplement it. The purpose of this paper is not to debate Islamic understandings of Jesus, for which there is much discourse. Instead, I will briefly recreate the image espoused by mainstream, Sunni Islam – the sect I am primarily concerned with.

In the Qur’an, Jesus is removed of all divinity[3] and claims of being the son of God[4]. Indeed, he is stripped down to his humanity: a mere messenger in a long line of messengers[5] imploring people to worship one God alone. Jesus is considered, by Muslims, to be a prophet of God,[6] the word of God[7], and the Messiah.[8] It should be noted that while Muslims respect and love Jesus, he is not regarded as a singular unique event in history. Rather, he is perceived to have been sent at his particular time for his people with the same message as those that came before him: strict monotheism.[9] Many of his miracles are maintained in Qur’anic scripture and some even differ from those found in the Christian tradition, such as his abilities to walk on water and speak immediately after birth, respectively.[10]

The hadith (sayings and witnessing of the life of Prophet Muhammad) are another area of Islamic literature that offer us greater insight into the Muslim understanding of Jesus. For the purposes of this paper, only hadith that have been scientifically and historically verified to be rigorously authentic will be used. These are found mainly in the vast collected volumes of Imams Bukhari, Muslim, Abu Dawud, Tirmidhi, An-Nisa’I and Ibn Majah, and were gathered together between 150 and 275 years following the death of Prophet Muhammad (or between 750 and 875 years after the ascension of Jesus). The compendium of these authenticated resources are the second of two religious texts accepted by Sunni Muslims – the first being the Qur’an. In the Qur’an itself, Muslims are commanded to recognize the authority of these hadith and the messages they transmit.[11]

According to these sources, prophecies are relayed about Jesus’ return to earth as a sign of the End of Days and in order to defeat the dajjal (antichrist).[12] During this return, it is stated repeatedly that Jesus will “break the cross, kill swine, and abolish jizya (taxes)”[13] As well, his proximity to the Prophet Muhammad is noted continuously: “I am most close to Jesus, son of Mary, among the whole of mankind in this worldly life and the next life.”[14] Jesus is furthered described as being “a man of medium height, reddish fair, wearing two light yellow garments, looking as if drops were falling down from his head though it will not be wet.”[15] Insofar as both the Qur’an and the authenticated hadith are used as the foundations for Sunni Islam, I can safely conclude that there is absolutely zero mention of Jesus’ divinity or of him being anything more than a mere Prophet of God and both sources go far to refute these claims as blasphemy – anything else would be contradictory to the foundations of Islamic monotheism.

This construction of Jesus as only a prophet is crucial to our understanding of Mary Magdalene’s absence in Islam. In the Christian tradition, there has been much debate and speculation about the nature of her relationship to Jesus – particularly as to whether or not it was sexual or marital. This issue has come to the fore recently as popular cultural texts have been produced in the last decade that use The Dead Sea Scrolls, The Pistis Sophia, and The Gospel of Mary as evidence that Magdalene was the lover of Christ and this was one of the main reasons for the suppression of these Gnostic texts.[16] Whether or not this is true is not my purpose. Rather, if we understand that one of the first (and most controversial) roles of Magdalene- at least for the Gnostics- was as the Companion of the Saviourit will become easier to understand why this did not carry over to Islam.

maryIn the aforementioned Gnostic texts, Magdalene is referred to as either Mary Magdalene or Maria the Magdalene and her roles as “disciple, visionary, mediatrix and messenger of esoteric revelations” are illuminated.[17] She is further described as “the woman who knew All”, “the chief interlocutrix of the Saviour”, “the inheritor of Light” and the most important of the three women “who were always with the Lord.”[18] In the Gospel of Mary, a unique authority is assigned to Magdalene because of her closeness with Christ – something that is acknowledged when Peter says: “Sister, we know that the Saviour loved you more than the rest of the women.”[19] When Magdalene is depicted explaining an inner vision she has had (a privilege not conferred on the other disciples), a confrontation occurs in which Magdalene’s authority is questioned. Remarkably, she is defended by Levi who states, “Surely the Saviour knows her very well. That is why he loved her more than us [to give her these visions alone].”[20]

Finally, Magdalene is also referred to as Jesus’ “companion” – a role that necessarily precedes all others that followed. What kind of companionship was this though? Most of the historical scholarship on this issue centers around the terminology used, particularly the Greek term koinonos, which Susan Haskins feels is imperfectly translated as companion because it neglects the implied subtext of partner, consort or a woman with whom a man has had sexual intercourse.[21] In the Gospel of Phillip, the sexual nature of their relationship is made clearer and offered as a reason for her special status with Christ:

But Christ loved her more than all the disciples and used to kiss her often on the mouth. The rest of the disciples were offended by it and expressed disapproval. They said to him, “Why do you love her more than all of us?” The Saviour answered and said to them, “Why do I not love you like her?[22]

This particular passage is considered a major point of contention among scholars with some interpreting it literally and others metaphorically. When taken metaphorically the ‘kiss’ represents spiritual nourishment and Jesus reflects the disciples question to them by reversing it.[23] When the passage is completed, it becomes clear that Jesus sets Magdalene apart because she is the only one in the presence of the Light of Jesus who is not blind to it: “When a blind man and one who sees are both together in the darkness, they are no different from one another. When the light comes, then he who sees will see the light, and he who is blind will remain in the darkness.”[24] Regardless of the scholarly interpretation of the kiss as erotic or otherwise, there is a distinguishing of Magdalene among her peers that cannot be denied. In the Pistis Sophia, another jealous rivalry takes place between Magdalene and the disciples, ending with her telling Jesus about her worries regarding Peter “because he wont to threaten me, and he hateth our sex.”[25] Several interpretations of this level of companionship are possible. Perhaps the most provocative of these is that “Peter’s antagonism towards Mary Magdalene may reflect the historical ambivalence of the leaders of the orthodox community towards the participation of women in the Church” and so might reflect a political tension between Gnostics (who saw Magdalene as their mouthpiece) and the early church (which was represented by Peter).[26]

The reasons for the suppression of these texts by the mainstream Church are numerous, particularly the controversial nature of a sexual or marital relationships with Magdalene and the role of powerful women at the time of revelation. The issue of a marital relationship for Christ has been an ongoing debate among Christians since at least the third century after his death. As recently as November 9, 2014, the Daily Mail reported a new book that had interests in this subject matter called The Lost Gospel by Simcha Jacobovici and Barrie Wilson. They claim to have unearthed new evidence which describes not only Christ’s marriage to Mary Magdalene but the existence of two of his sons as well. Based on the content of a vellum manuscript dating from 570AD, the writers claim that is actually a copy of the lost fifth gospel of the New Testament that describes the scenario above. It was, however, written in code that was deciphered by the writers to reveal its controversial findings: “it tells of Jesus’ marriage through the story of the Old Testament character Joseph and his wife Aseneth.”[27] If this sounds familiar, it should. Another famous novel, The Da Vinci Code by Dan Brown, is centered around the same theme of proving Jesus’ marriage to Mary Magdalene and the existence of Christ’s progeny on earth today. The book and film have grossed Brown over $100 million in profits. The controversial nature of this ongoing debate shows its central importance as an issue for the Church. Numerous “modern theologians have suggested that he may[…]have been married, as a rabbi of his age in orthodox Judaism is more than likely to have been.”[28] This lends itself well to theories of marriage to Magdalene, “particularly given his rabbinical background… [where] a woman could only become a disciple if her master or husband were a rabbi.”[29] Either way, the Church simply does not have the ability to reconcile their dogma on the divinity of Christ with the possibility of his earthly marriage and the idea of divinity engaging in human sexual behavior.

For Muslims, this is not an issue because Christ is not divine. As a man, first and foremost, Islamic doctrine not only takes no issue with his marriage or permissible sexual activity, it expects and encourages it. According to Hadith 3096 as recorded by Imam At-Tirmidhi, Anas ibn Malik narrated that the Messenger of Allah said, “When a man marries he has fulfilled half of the ‘deen’ (religion); so let him fear Allah regarding the remaining half.”[30] Marriage is a cornerstone of faith in Islam because it prevents zina or unlawful sexual intercourse between two adults. It is considered one of the major kabaa’ir sins after shirk (associating other things in worship with Allah – the only unforgivable sin in Islam) and murder.[31] Elsewhere, the Qur’an states, “And come not near to unlawful sexual intercourse (Zina). Verily, it is a faahishah (anything that transgresses its limits-a great sin) and an evil way (that leads one to Hell unless Allah forgives him).”[32] Marriage in Islam is not only a preventative prohibition of evil in recognizing the natural inclinations of men and women to desire intercourse (as they were created) but also signifies God’s power and glory. The Qur’an says, “From His signs is that He has created for you spouses from yourselves so that you may get peace [and tranquility] through them; and He placed between you love and mercy. In these are signs for the people who reflect.”[33] This is not a concept unique to Islam though, but was also present in Judaism – the idea of expecting a man, particularly a preaching Rabbi as Jesus was, to remain celibate was not only unusual but signaled his incompleteness.

In this understanding, there would be no issue with the marriage of Jesus to Mary Magdalene or whomever else he proposed. The Qur’an acknowledges that prophets are in need of marriage like any other man – “And certainly We sent messengers before you and gave them wives and children, and it is not in (the power of) an messenger to bring a sign except by Allah’s permission; for every term there is an appointment”[34]– but makes no mention of whether or not Jesus did. While most Islamic scholars agree that this might indicate that Jesus did not marry (making him an anomaly among messengers), the absence of mention for his potential wife is not unusual. In fact, of twenty-six named prophets in the Qur’an, only twelve of them have wives that are either named or noted in a significant way.

In all instances where a wife of a prophet is named, it is only with a particular didactic purpose behind it. Hawwa (Eve), wife of Adam, is named for obvious purposes regarding the fall from the Garden – a story I will cover in the coming sections. In recognized scholarly tafsir (exegesis of the Qur’an), Ibn Kathir tells the stories of Ayub’s (Job) wife as being susceptible to the whisperings of the devil and the role of Dawud’s (David) wife in warning him of Saul’s jealousy. Ibrahim (Abraham) has two wives that are not named in the Qur’an but whose roles are cited elsewhere as being central to Islam. His first wife, Sarah, was barren for a long time before giving birth to Isaac (the father of the Israelites) at an extremely old age. The annunciation of this miracle child is found in Surah Hud of the Qur’an, verses 69-72. Hajar, Ibrahim’s second wife, bore him a son named Isma’il (Ishmael) thirteen years prior. Isma’il is not only the father of the Arabs from which Muhammad eventually came, but in Islam, he was the son to be sacrificed by Ibrahim (not Isaac) and his protection is the reason that Muslims celebrate ‘Eid-ul-Adha annually. When Ibrahim brought Hajar and Isma’il to the desert near Mecca, the story of her running between two hills in search of water and eventually finding the miracle Zamzam spring is recorded in Surah Ibrahim of the Holy Qur’an. It is an integral part of the Hajj pilgrimage. Both women, Hajar and Sarah, served as exemplars of patience in faith. Isma’il would eventually marry a woman from the Jurhum people who had settled near the Zamzam, but would divorce her and remarry another woman from the same tribe when his father, Ibrahim, was rebuked by her and she lacked hospitality.[35] Many times, such as this, a wife of a prophet is mentioned in order to show the lineage of prophets among one another. Such is also the case of Ishaq (Isaac), brother of Isma’il and son of Sarah and Ibrahim. He would go on to marry Rebekah, the mother of Al Eis and, another prophet, Yaqub (Jacob).

In the case of the wife of Lut (Lot), her mention in the Qur’an is purely as a warning for believers when her destruction, along with their towns (commonly believed to be Sodom and Gomorrah, though unnamed in the Qur’an), came as a result of her transgression. Twice the Qur’an states her fate:

O Lut ! Verily, we are the Messengers from your Lord! They shall not reach you! So travel with your family in a part of the night, and let not any of you look back, but your wife (will remain behind), verily, the punishment which will afflict them, will afflict her. Indeed, morning is their appointed time. Is not the morning near?”[36] [and] “So we saved him and his family, all except an old woman (his wife) among those who remained behind.[37]



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From: BARILOCHENSE6999 Sent: 22/07/2024 01:20

st-mary-magdaleneNuh’s wife is mentioned in a similar fashion, for didactic purposes regarding disbelief. Her name is believed to have been Umzrah bint Barakil (or Wahilah) and she refused Nuh’s message of Islam throughout his lifetime of preaching. The Qur’an notes the two women together:

“Allah has struck a similitude for those who disbelieve – the wife of Nuh and the wife of Lut. They were under two of our righteous servants, but they betrayed them, so that they (their husbands) availed them nothing whatsoever against Allah; so it was said (to them) enter the fire along with the enterers.”[38]

 The wives of Sulaiman (Solomon) are mentioned numerous times in the Sahih hadith collections, particularly those of Imam Bukhari who recorded that Abu Huraira narrated the following story:

(The Prophet) Solomon son of (the Prophet) David said, “Tonight I will go round (i.e. have sexual relations with) one hundred women (my wives) everyone of whom will deliver a male child who will fight in Allah’s Cause.” On that an Angel said to him, “Say: ‘If Allah will.’ ” But Solomon did not say it and forgot to say it. Then he had sexual relations with them but none of them delivered any child except one who delivered a half person. The Prophet said, “If Solomon had said: ‘If Allah will,’ Allah would have fulfilled his (above) desire and that saying would have made him more hopeful.[39]

The trope of patience during barrenness is a common theme among prophets and is one of the main reasons for mentioning their wives. The same is true of Zakariya (Zechariah) – married to al-Yashbi’ who was from the family of Prophet Harun (Aaron).

Finally, Luqman’s marriage is not explicitly mentioned but is implied by his encouraging of his son to pray.[40] It is in the last example perhaps that the utility of naming wives becomes most clear in Islam. If there is no didactic purpose to their story, then they are simply not mentioned, even if their existence is implied. In this case, it is certainly possible that Jesus was married to someone – even Mary Magdalene- without that person being named or mentioned at all.

What needs to be made clear though is that this is not unique to wives or even women. It should be noted that there are many other prophets recognized to have existed in Islam but without being named explicitly in the Qur’an. It states not only that there was never a nation without a messenger, but that there are other messengers that God does not mention or name in the Qur’an.[41] That all prophets were not fully named but people might expect all wives to be named is unrealistic. Furthermore it does not point to misogyny in early Islam either as we saw in the early disputes of the Church. The Gnostic texts that have been looked at so far were written at a time when the Church was growing in its institutionalization, eventually “evolving into a three-tiered organization with a hierarchy of male bishops, priests and deacons.”[42] Though some women enjoyed prominent positions in the structure of the Church only a few generations after Christ, these would quickly be abandoned by the second century. African Church Father Tertullian is quoted as writing, “It is not permitted for a woman to speak in the church, nor is it permitted for her to teach, to baptize, nor to offer [the eucharist], nor to claim for herself a share in any masculine function.”[43] As Haskins has pointed out, this echoes the general sentiments of Paul, particularly throughout letters to Timothy I.[44]

The status of women in early Islam is incomparable to those in the early Church. In examining only the role of the Prophet Muhammad’s wives, it becomes clear that they were central to the propagation and understanding of the faith. His first wife – with whom he remained uncharacteristically monogamous for 25 years before her death- was a business woman who hired him and, when impressed with his prowess as a merchant, asked for his hand in marriage despite being fifteen years older than him. She was the first convert to Islam after he raced down the mountain shouting Zamilooni! Zamilooni! (Cover me! Cover me!) from abject fear of his revelation. Muhammad was so startled by prophethood and so feared that he had become possessed or gone mad that he contemplated suicide. Arguably, without the consolation and guidance of Khadija, the message of Islam might have been lost.

Additionally, the first shaheed (martyr) of Islam, Summayah, was female, and women also comprised the mujuhadeen (holy warriors) including Nusaibah. The Qur’an and hadith repeatedly exalt the status of women and mothers in particular.[45] In fact, one of the reasons there are so many authentic hadith available is because of the presence of numerous female muhaddithin (traditionists or transmitters). While women are mainly riwayah (narrators) rather than shahadin (witnesses or testifiers), the difference is very subtle and their influence in early Islam cannot be overstated. Perhaps one of the most influential Muslim women in the early history of Islam was the favourite wife of Muhammad, A’ishah bint Abu Bakr. She was not only responsible for transmitting an enormous number of hadith (at least 2000), she is considered one of the greatest of four hadith narrators including Abu Hurairah, Abdullah Ibn Omar, and Anas Ibn Malik. Her influence was so great that she served as the advisor for her father, Abu Bakr – the first Righteous Caliph- and his successor, Umar Ibn Al-Khattab. In Sahih Tirmidhi, Abu Musa narrated that not only was there not a single person more eloquent than Aisha, but also that “Whenever there was any hadith that was difficult [to understand] for us (the Companions of the Messenger of Allah), we asked Aisha we always found that she had knowledge about that hadith.” [46]

If the religious voices of Islam’s early women were not suppressed and the wives of Prophets (and indeed prophets themselves) were only mentioned with religiously didactic purposes in mind, where does this leave us with regards to Mary Magdalene? If she was, in some way, the consort of Jesus, was she simply unimportant enough to not warrant a mention as few others had in the Qur’an and hadith? Almost before I finish writing that sentence, I can hear the Christian (albeit conflicted) outcry. Was Mary Magdalene not at the crucifixion? Does this not point to her significance, if it does not point to some other status of significance in early Christianity? Therein is the second role of Magdalene that holds little weight in Islam and will be explored in the next section.

For Part Two of this article, click here. For Part Three, click here.

[1] Thomas, Mary R. Mary of Magdala: Apostle and Leader. Paulist Press: New York. 1995. Pp. 102.

[2] Muhammad is mentioned in verses 3:144, 33:40, 47:2, 48:29 and as Ahmed in 61:6) Jesus is called by his Arabic name ‘Isa, or Al-Masih, or Ibn Maryam.

[3] Qur’an 5 :17, 5 :72, 5 :116-118, 9 :30, 9 :31

[4] Qur’an, 19 :88, 19 :92, 23 :50

[5] Qur’an 2 :136, 3 :49, 3 :84, 4 :163, 4 :171, 5 :46, 5 :75, 6 :85, 19 :30, 19 :33, 33 :7, 42 :13, 61 :6            

[6] See note 4.

[7] In the ayat 19 :21 (the annuciation), Maryam receives news that she will give birth to Jesus even though she is a virgin. When she asks how this is possible, the angel replies that God has said that it is easy for Him. He needs only to say “Be” and he is. This is what is meant by being the word of God.

[8] Qur’an 3 :45, 5 :72-77, Qur’an 43 :61

[9] Qur’an 5 :46

[10] Qur’an 5 :110

[11] Qur’an 3 :32, 3 :132, 4 :59, 4 :64, to name a few

[12] Sahih Bukhari Volume 3, Book 34, Number 425, Sahih Bukhari Volume 3, Book 43, Number 656, Volume 4, Book 55, Number 657: Volume 4, Book 55, Number 658:

[13] Ibid.

[14] Sahih Bukhari Volume 4, Book 55, Number 651: Volume 4, Book 55, Number 652:, Sahih Muslim Book 030, Number 5834:, Book 030, Number 5835:, Book 030, Number 5836: Sunan Abu Dawud Book 37, Number 4310:

[15] Sunan Abu Dawud Book 37, Number 4310

[16] Brown, Dan. The Da Vinci Code. Doubleday: New York. 2003.; Jacobovici, Simcha. The Lost Gospel: Decoding the Ancient Text that Reveals Jesus’ Marriage to Mary the Magdalene. Harper Collins: Canada. 2014.

[17] Haskins 37

[18] Ibid 38

[19] Ibid 38, original quote from Gospel of Mary p.472

[20] Ibid 39 original quote from Gospel of Mary p.473-4

[21] Ibid 40

[22] Ibid 40 original quote Gospel of Phillip

[23] Hooper, Richard. The Crucifixion of Mary Magdalene: The Historical Tradition of the First Apostle and the Ancient Church’s Campaign to Suppress It. Sanctuary Publications: Sedona. 2005. p 118

[24] Gospel of Phillip

[25] Pistis Sophia

[26] Haskins, Susan. Mary Magdalen: Myth and Metaphor. Harper Collins: Hammersmith, London. 1993. p 42

[27] Kuruvilla, Carol. “Jesus Married Mary Magdalene And Had Kids, Controversial Researcher Simcha Jacobovici Claims.” The Huffington Post. November 12, 2014. Accessed December 16, 2014. http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/11/12/mary-magdalene-jesus-wife_n_6146170.html.

Mount, Harry. “Is This Proof Jesus Married and Had Two Sons? Ancient Manuscript Said to Be ‘lost Gospel’ with a Sensational Twist .” Mail Online. November 10, 2014. Accessed December 16, 2014. http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2827310/Jesus-married-prostitute-Mary-Magdalene-two-children-lost-gospel-reveals.html.

 

[28] Haskins p 82

[29] Ibid p 84

[30] At-Tirmidhi, 3096.

[31] Qur’an 25 :68-70

[32] Qur’an 17 :32

[33] Qur’an 30 :21

[34] Qur’an 13 :38

[35] The History of al-Tabari, Volume II: Prophets and Patriarchs, William M. Brinner, Trans.; State University of New York: Albany. 1987. P. 77.

[36] Qur’an, 11:81

[37] Qur’an 26:170-171

[38] Qur’an 66:10

[39] Sahih Bukhari Volume 7, Book 62, Number 169

[40] Qur’an 31 :12-19.

[41] Qur’an 4 :163-164, 23 :44, 35 :24,

[42] Haskins p. 53

[43] Ibid

[44] Ibid.

[45] Qur’an 46 :15. A man came to the Prophet and said, ‘O Messenger of God! Who among the people is the most worthy of my good companionship? The Prophet said: Your mother. The man said, ‘Then who?’ The Prophet said: Then your mother. The man further asked, ‘Then who?’ The Prophet said: Then your mother. The man asked again, ‘Then who?’ The Prophet said: Then your father. (Sahih Bukhari, Muslim). It is narrated by Asma bint Abu Bakr that during the treaty of Hudaibiyah, her mother, who was then pagan, came to see her from Makkah. Asma informed the Messenger of Allah of her arrival and also that she needed help. He said: Be good to your mother (Sahih Bukhari, Muslim).

[46] At-Tirmidhi. Chapters on Excellences, under ‘Virtues of Aisha’.

[47] The Second Treatise of Great Seth, Roger A. Bullard and Joseph A. Gibbons trans. The Nag Hammadi Library. http://gnosis.org/naghamm/2seth.html

[48] The Apocalypse of Peter, Roger A. Bullard and Joseph A. Gibbons trans. The Nag Hammadi Library. http://gnosis.org/naghamm/apopet.html

[49] Qur’an 4 :157-159.

[50] Spengler. “Scandal Exposes Islam’s Weakness.” Asia Times Online :: Asian News, Business and Economy. November 18, 2008. Accessed December 16, 2014. http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Front_Page/JK18Aa01.html.

 

[51] John 19 :25-27

[52] Hooper, Richard. The Crucifixion of Mary Magdalene: The Historical Tradition of the First Apostle and the Ancient Church’s Campaign to Suppress It. Sanctuary Publications: Sedona. 2005. P217.

[53] Mark 15 :40, Matthew 27 :56

[54] Matthew 26 :6-13 and Mark 14 :3-8.

[55] Matthew 28 :1, Mark 16 :1, Luke 24 :10, John 20 :1

[56] Al-Nasa’i,  6:489

 

[57] Qur’an 4 :159

[58] Qur’an 43 :61

https://thedrawingboardcanada.com/2015/03/02/the-absent-hagiography-investigating-mary-magdalenes-disappearance-in-islam-part-one/

Reply  Message 3 of 7 on the subject 
From: BARILOCHENSE6999 Sent: 22/07/2024 01:24
islamic view on #marymagdalene & 12 #discples of #jesus #islamicpost... |  TikTok
Women in Islam - Call Of Love

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Da Vinci Code and Muslims – in the Light of the Quran and Bible | in  Urdu/Hindi - YouTube

Reply  Message 5 of 7 on the subject 
From: BARILOCHENSE6999 Sent: 01/08/2024 03:36
 (photo: Via Wikimedia Commons)

In the year AD 250,  seven young Christian men fled the persecution of the Roman Emperor Decius, taking shelter in a cave outside the city of Ephesus. There in the cave, the men prayed and eventually fell asleep; and Decius, seeing that they had refused to abandon their Christian faith and embrace his pagan beliefs, ordered that the mouth of the cave be sealed with the men still inside.

Decius died just a year later; and during the years that followed, Christianity found gradual acceptance in the Roman Empire. By the time of the Emperor Theodosius II (AD 408-450), Christianity had become the official state religion.

One day, the story goes, the landowner decided to open the mouth of the cave, in order to use it as a cattle pen. He opened it and found the men inside—still sleeping. As light streamed into the cave for the first time in nearly two hundred years, the men awoke. Confused, they at first believed that they'd been sleeping just one night. But when one of the men left the cave in search of food, he found that Christianity was no longer a persecuted religion in Ephesus. In fact, most people now shared his belief in Jesus Christ, and there were crosses openly displayed atop buildings in the town.

The townspeople, surprised by this group of young strangers who still carried coins from the ancient Decius era, told Marinus, the bishop, about them. Marinus interviewed the sleepers, and all recounted the same story of seeking refuge in the cave. Then, singing praises to God, the men died.

 

* * * * * * *

The legend of the Seven Sleepers has been told in many cultures, with some small variations, and has been depicted in art throughout the centuries.

  • On the Eastern Orthodox and Byzantine Rite calendar, the Seven Holy Youths (Holy Sleepers) are remembered each August 4, and their names are listed:  Maximilian, Jamblicus, Martinian, John, Dionysius, Exacustodian (Constantine), and Antoninus.
  • In Islam, the Muslim Qur'an (Surah 18, verse 9-26) recounts a similar story—although in the Muslim version, the men had a dog who accompanied them to the cave, and who stood guard at the door for the entire time they were asleep. Muslims refer to the men as “People of the Cave.” Muhammad explains the story to his followers and is thus granted the status of being a prophet.
  • In The Golden Legend, a popular book of the late Middle Ages, the writer adds  a new detail: that their resurrection occurred in the year 378, during the reign of Theodosius.
  • In the Roman Martyrology, the Seven Sleepers are mentioned on July 27, as follows: “Commemoration of the seven Holy Sleepers of Ephesus, who, it is recounted, after undergoing martyrdom, rest in peace, awaiting the day of resurrection.” 

On the slopes of Mount Pion, near the ancient city of Ephesus, a popular pilgrimage site is an early Christian catacomb over which a 5th century church had been constructed. When the catacomb was first excavated in 1927-28, archeologists found inscriptions dedicated to the Seven Sleepers on the walls of the church and in the graves. And during the Crusades, victorious troops transported bones from the graves, identified as relics from the Seven Sleepers, back with them to Marseilles in a large stone coffin.

The Seven Sleepers have found their way into literature: in the poety of John Donne, in a 1530s play by John Heywood, in a poem by Goethe, in Washington Irving's “Rip Van Winkle,” in H.G. Wells' “The Sleeper Awakes,” and many other works.

 

The Seven Sleepers are sometimes compared to Rip Van Winkle; but no—the story is really dramatically different. In the case of Washington Irving's legendary character from the time of the Revolutionary War, most analysts seem to regard Rip as a man who was wasting his life away, letting the world pass him by while he merely existed in a bad marriage, without attempting to right what was wrong in his daily life. In sharp contrast, the Seven Sleepers were brave and righteous men who had turned their hearts and minds to God; and their heavenly Creator protected them from the fury of a pagan king, holding their lives in suspended animation for nearly two hundred years.

But is the story true? I don't know, but does that really matter?

The takeaway for the Christian reader is that God will always protect us, that we may face opponents but we need not fear, for God is with us.


Reply  Message 6 of 7 on the subject 
From: BARILOCHENSE6999 Sent: 01/08/2024 03:37
The Seven Sleepers, Martyrs (27 July): Butler's Lives of the Saints

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From: BARILOCHENSE6999 Sent: 04/08/2024 20:40

Templum Domini

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Knights Templar Seal of the Crusader period, showing the Dome of the Rock on the reverse.[1]The Temple of Solomon was anachronistically depicted as the Dome of the Rock in Western iconography well into the early modern period (here in a print by Salvatore & Giandomenico Marescandoli of Lucca, 1600)

The Templum Domini[2][3] (Vulgate translation of Hebrewהֵיכָל יְהֹוָה "Temple of the Lord") was the name attributed by the Crusaders to the Dome of the Rock in Jerusalem.[4] It became an important symbol of Jerusalem, depicted on coins minted under the Catholic Christian Kingdom of Jerusalem.

History

[edit]

The Dome of the Rock was erected in the late 7th century under the 5th Umayyad Caliph Abd al-Malik ibn Marwan at the site of the former Jewish Second Temple (or possibly added to an existing Byzantine building dating to the reign of Heraclius, 610–641).[5] After the capture of Jerusalem in the First Crusade (1099), the Dome of the Rock was given into the care of Augustinian Canons Regular. At first, the rock around which the shrine had been built was left uncovered and the canons placed an altar on it.[6] Later the rock was covered with white marble and an altar choir constructed upon it, a work that likely was completed only in 1140.[7] In 1138 the Templum Domini was raised to the status of an abbey and on 1 April 1141, the church was dedicated solemnly by papal legate Alberic of Ostia, possibly to St. Mary.[8]

The adjacent Al-Aqsa Mosque was called Templum Solomonis ("Temple of Solomon") by the Crusaders. It first became a royal palace. The image of the Dome, as representing the "Temple of Solomon", became an important iconographic element in the Kingdom of Jerusalem. The royal seals of the Kings of Jerusalem depicted the city symbolically by combining the Tower of David, the Church of the Holy Sepulchre, the Dome of the Rock and the city walls.[citation needed]

After the completion of the purpose-built royal palace near the Jaffa Gate and to the south of the Tower of David,[9] the King of Jerusalem gave the building to the Catholic monastic-military order, the Knights Templar, who maintained it as their headquarters. The Dome was indicated on the reverse of the seals of the Grand Masters of the Knights Templar (such as Everard des Barres and Renaud de Vichiers), and it is possibly the architectural model for round Templar churches across Europe.[10]

Although the adjacent Dome of the Ascension was constructed as a baptistry during the Crusader period, it has since remained in the hands of Islamic authorities as part of the larger complex of the Dome of the Rock. It turned back into a mosque after the crusaders[11][12]

See also

[edit]


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