http://cdn2-b.examiner.com/sites/de...e_content_width/hash/40/84/COOL-STORY-BRO.jpg While that all sounds very scholarly and is a well-constructed post, I am having a bit of difficulty seeing where the analogy connects with the Church’s Tradition about the perpetual virginity of Mary. Is the analogy something like, Ezra forced stuff that wasn’t true onto the older Israelites and passed it off as holy, and the early Church just did the same thing?
But why would they even invent the whole perpetual virginity thing so early? And why wasn’t it disproven quickly? Think about it this way:
Jesus had a family that included cousins and uncles and aunts. (You guys say he had full brothers too, but consider this–) Not all of them died in persecutions, and so His family members had descendants that made it into the third and fourth centuries, when the Tradition of Mary’s perpetual virginity was already established. (And people kept their family lineages in mind back then, so they had this data.) If He had full brothers, therefore, why didn’t their descendants speak up? Why didn’t they say, Hey, why the heck are you guys saying she was a perpetual virgin, when I’m her descendant? We find no people who said such things – before the end of the fourth century the doctrine of Mary’s perpetual virginity was already established.
In addition to that, why would the bishops of the early Church make up such a thing? They weren’t big on making up doctrines. Their writings all speak about how important it is to hold to the doctrines of the Apostles and add nothing – but they included Mary’s perpetual virginity among the original doctrines they had received. Either they were liars, or they were lunatics, or they were telling the truth. Which do you believe, or do you think there is another option?