A good article. I just happen to be reading “Did Jesus Exist?” by Bart Ehrman (2012). Bart calls himself “an agnostic with atheistic leanings” but I have always found his books to be clear, fair, and illumin.
In any case, on pp. 146-48 he addresses the question of Jesus’s “brothers” and the Catholic point of view. He points out that in 1 Corinthians Paul talks about the “brothers of the Lord” as separate from himself or Peter–so most likely “brothers” of Jesus in the literal sense, even if that sense is “relative.” In Galatians Paul talks about Peter, then about “James, the brother of the Lord,” again showing that “brother” is not used here in the sense that “we are all brothers in Christ” or something like that.
But Bart claims that the Catholic view of “brothers” dates back to the 4th c. doctrine of Mary’s perpetual virginity, not just being a virgin at the time of Jesus’s conception. Ehrman relates that view to the idea that sex was somehow “sinful,” and since Mary couldn’t sin, she couldn’t have sex. But he goes on to say that there’s no textual backing for this interpretation, or even a backing in tradition.
Ehrman goes on to say that the first interpretation of the Catholic church was that the “brothers” of Jesus were Joseph’s sons from a previous marriage–Jesus’s step-brothers. Thus Joseph is shown as an “old” man in paintings of the Holy Family while Mary is always a young woman.
Then Ehrman says that this view began to be displaced by a view espoused by Jerome: that Joseph as well as Mary practiced celibacy (Ehrman thinks that since Jerome was an ascetic, he figured Joseph would have been, too). So Jerome makes the “brothers” into cousins. Ehrman objects that Greek has two separate words: one for “brother” and one for “cousin,” and the New Testament always uses the word for “brother” not “cousin.”
Any thoughts?
Yes, the brothers of the Lord mentioned in scripture does not necessarily mean real siblings of Jesus. Hebrew and Aramaic do not have a word for cousin and so brother or sister in the New Testament can mean a blood relation of some kind such as cousin or kinsman. It does not necessarily mean a sibling brother or sister.
For example, in Mark 6:3 it says “Is he not the carpenter, the son of Mary, and the brother of James and Joses [variant Joseph or Joset] and Judas and Simon? And are not his sisters here with us?” In Matt. 27:26, at the crucifixion of Jesus, there is a Mary there who is the mother of James and Joseph and this Mary is certainly not the Blessed Virgin Mary. Mark 15:40 also has a Mary who was the mother of James the younger and Joset. Luke 24:10 also has a Mary, the mother of James. John 19:25, has a Mary the wife of Clopas and this Clopas could be the father of James and Joseph. From the gospels then, the James and Joses of Mark 6:3, appear to be the sons of a Mary who is not the Blessed Virgin Mary; yet they are called the brothers of the Lord.
The Blessed Virgin Mary, as this name implies, is a perpetual virgin and this is an article of faith for catholics and a dogma of the Catholic Church. Our Blessed Lady had no other son than that of Jesus, the Son of God, who was conceived by the Holy Spirit. As I mentioned in a previous post, St Joseph was most likely a young man when he married Mary, and this will become clearer below. The idea that St Joseph was a widow and had children before his marriage to our Blessed Lady, if we really think about it, doesn’t really make any sense. Joseph was called by God from all eternity to be the husband of Mary and foster father of Jesus, the Man-God. Should we think that God couldn’t find a virginal young man to be the husband of the virginal Mary, the Mother of God? Since the time of Adam and Eve, young virginal couples have been marrying. The Holy Family is the perfect family and the model for all families. It simply does not make much sense that God would choose a husband for Mary from all eternity who was previously married and was not a virgin. To be the husband of Mary is obviously a special calling and God prepared Joseph with special gifts of grace to fulfill this vocation and to be the father of the Holy Family.
St John Paul II in a general audience, August 21, 1996, gave a catechesis on Mary’s and Joseph’s Lived Gift of Virginity. Here he talks about the virginal love that Mary and Joseph had for each other. Joseph was a virgin like our Lady. Link to homily:
ewtn.com/library/papaldoc/jp2bvm30.htm
St John Paul II talks about the virginity of both Mary and Joseph again in the Apostolic Exhortation REDEMPTORIS CUSTOS, ON THE PERSON AND MISSION OF
SAINT JOSEPH IN THE LIFE OF CHRIST AND OF THE CHURCH. And he quotes a text from the Liturgy of the Church itself, he says: In the Liturgy, Mary is celebrated as “united to Joseph, the just man, by a bond of marital and virginal love.” (footnote is too: Collectio Missarum de Beata Maria Virgine, 1, “Sancta Maria de Nazareth,” Praefatio.). St Mary of Nazareth or Our Lady of Nazareth is an approved Mass that can be said in the Church. Link to Redemptoris Custos:
w2.vatican.va/content/john-paul-ii/en/apost_exhortations/documents/hf_jp-ii_exh_15081989_redemptoris-custos.html
From the two above sources from St Pope John Paul II and from the Liturgy of the Church itself, it appears that the doctrine or teaching of the virginity of St Joseph is not just pious speculation, but the teaching and doctrine of the Church. John Paul II does not appear to talk about the virginity of St Joseph as if he is just speculating or that this is just pious opinion. The text from the Liturgy of the Mass of Our Lady of Nazareth that St John Paul II quotes is a part of the living Sacred Tradition of the Church.