Mary devotion is biblical. It begins with the
Magi bowing to worship Mary with Child in the manger scene. The beginnings of public acknowledgement and devotion to the Mother of Jesus is present from apostolic times in the living Tradition of the early Church.
**First of all it was the shepherds that went to the manger and the Magi were not at the manger…geesh! I rest my case!
Matthew 2:9 After hearing the king, they went their way; and the star, which they had seen in the east, went on before them until it came and stood over the
place where the Child was**. 10 When they saw the star, they rejoiced exceedingly with great joy. 11 After **coming into the house they saw the Child **with Mary His mother; and they fell to the ground
and worshiped Him.
A house; not a manger. Worshiped Him; not her.
The first historic indications of the existing veneration of Mary carried on from the Apostolic Church is manifested in the Roman catacombs. As early as the end of the first century to the first half of the second century, Mary is depicted in frescos in the Roman catacombs
both with and without her divine Son. Mary is depicted as a model of virginity with her Son; at the Annunciation; at the adoration of the Magi; and as the orans, the “praying one,” the woman of prayer
A very significant fresco found in the catacombs of St. Agnes depicts Mary situated between St. Peter and St. Paul with her arms outstretched to both. This fresco reflects, in the language of Christian frescoes, the earliest symbol of Mary as “Mother of the Church.”
It is also clear from the number of representations of the Blessed Virgin and their locations in the catacombs that the Mother of Jesus was also recognized for her maternal intercession of protection and defense. Her image was present on tombs, as well as on the large central vaults of the catacombs. Clearly, the early Christians dwelling in the catacombs prayed to Mary as intercessor to her Son for special protection and for motherly assistance. As early as the first century to the first half of the second century, Mary’s role as Spiritual Mother was recognized and her protective intercession was invoked. (2)
St. Irenaeus of Lyon (d.202), great defender of Christian orthodoxy and arguably the first true Mariologist, establishes Mary as the New Eve who participates with Jesus Christ in the work of salvation, becoming through her obedience the “cause of salvation for herself and the whole human race”:
Just as Eve, wife of Adam, yet still a virgin, became by her disobedience the cause of death for herself and the whole human race, so Mary, too, espoused yet a Virgin, became by her obedience the cause of salvation for herself and the whole human race… And so it was that the knot of Eve’s disobedience was loosed by Mary’s obedience. For what the virgin Eve bound fast by her refusal to believe, this the Virgin Mary unbound by her belief. (4)
More here:
Mother of All Peoples
The evidence is all here for early Church veneration/worship of Mary for anyone who cares to know about it. It is only after the Protestant Revolution that Mary leaves the biblical account becomes someone to be feared rather than venerated. I say to those who fear the Mother of Jesus (and Jesus being God makes her “Mother of God”) why must you slither in calumny in denigrating Catholic veneration / worship of Mary? Do you feel threatened by her? If so, your fear puts you in common league with the serpent’s fear and it would appear to be the very same enmity God placed between her offspring and the devil’s. Satan has been dreading the coming crush of her offspring’s heel on his head for millennium. Those that hold stubborn to bad thoughts for Marian veneration are just bone headed – if not also making themselves a conspicuous target for the coming crush of all evil and heresies.
Genesis 3:15 And I will put enmity Between you and the woman, And between your seed and her seed; He shall crush you on the head, And you shall bruise him on the heel."
James