bengal_fan:
yes it does help a little. but all other matrydoms were recorded. Jesus’ ascension was plainly recorded. why not the same with Mary’s assumption?
You may notice that in the Holy Scriptures Our Lady seems to take a back seat, considering the sorts of things written of Her after the first few centuries. That seems to be quite realistic to me, since when you have a choice to write about the Incarnation, God Himself, coming to earth and all He did, the greatest of His Mother seems to be out-shined, and rightfully so, since Christ is God, and Our Lady, even though free from sin, is not God.
After the first few centuries, and much of the teachings and reflections upon Christ, His Passion, the Incarnation, the Blessed Trinity, etc. had been hashed-out, the teachings on the Blessed Virgin seemed to be fitting to address next.
Now, as far as it being accurately and clearly recorded in the Bible (or anywhere for that matter), just read the last verse of St. John’s Gospel (xxi. 25): “But there are also many other things which Jesus did; which, if they were written every one, the world itself, I think, would not be able to contain the books that should be written.”
If Christ did and said such a great number of things, there is no possible way all of it could be recorded, even some of the most basic teachings, neither in merely the Bible nor in the first three centuries. If that is the case, why would it be any different for the Blessed Virgin, especially considering what I said above: how the doctrines and details around the life of Christ are the first matter of buisness, so to speak, for the early Church.