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Tomb54
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So I would also not consider Tertullium 1 or 2 nd century since he was 3rd century mainly but as you can see it really does not say that these brethren are Mary’s children either and in fact it points more to near relatives. Of course just as the Bible was in flux in the early Church as the church was being led to all Truths several ECF did not get other things right also. Examples there was a sect that actually took the honoring of Mary too far which the church also had to correct as a heresy. But this does show even in the early church Mary was given much honor and call Virgin or ever Virgin. Even Tertullian calls her Virgin and if she had Children afterwards how could she still be a virgin? Many in the early first 2 cenurties like Iraneus call her the Virgin Mary and again how can she be called Virgin Mary if she was no longer a Virgin?you are not reading my post carefully enough…I said earliest church fathers…meaning the ones we find in first two centuries AD (I wouldn’t classify the Protoevangelium of James an ECF)
Here is Tertullian’s position wrt the PV of Mary:
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- To what purpose could they have tempted Him by naming His mother and His brethren? If it was to ascertain whether He had been born or not–when was a question raised on this point, which they must resolve by tempting Him in this way? … Even if it had been necessary that He should thus be tried in the investigation of His birth, surely any other proof would have better answered the trial than that to be obtained from mentioning those relatives which it was quite possible for Him, in spite of His true nativity, not at that moment to have had. For tell me now, does a mother live on contemporaneously with her sons in every case? Have all sons brothers born for them? …… If, therefore, He made them “His mother and His brethren” who were not so, how could He deny them these relationships who really had them? Surely only on the condition of their deserts, and not by any disavowal of His near relatives*; teaching them by His own actual example, that “whosoever preferred father or mother or brethren to the Word of God, was not a disciple worthy of Him.” Besides, His admission of His mother and His brethren was the more express, from the fact of His unwillingness to acknowledge them. That He adopted others only confirmed those in their relationship to Him whom He refused because of their offence, and for whom He substituted the others, not as being truer relatives, but worthier ones. Finally, it was no great matter if He did prefer to kindred (that) faith which it did not possess. Against Marcion IV .19
I will concede that some ecfs thought Joseph might have had other children by a previous marriage but I will also say they then must have been full grown when Jesus was born because you here no mention of them in any of Jesus early life as Mary and Joseph took Jesus places.
Fathers of the Church
Church Fathers from at least the fourth century spoke of Mary as having remained a virgin throughout her life:
Athanasius (Alexandria, 293-373);
Epiphanius (Palestine, 315?-403);
Jerome (Stridon, present day Yugoslavia, 345?-419);
Augustine (Numidia, now Algeria, 354-430);
Cyril (Alexandria, 376-444);