Musings of an Old Curmudgeon
The musings and meandering thoughts of a crotchety old man as he observes life in the world and in a small, rural town in South East Nebraska. I hope to help people get to Heaven by sharing prayers, meditations, the lives of the Saints, and news of Church happenings. My Pledge: Nulla dies sine linea ~ Not a day without a line.
06 April 2026
Summa Contra Gentiles Book I: God Is Not the Formal or Abstract Being of All Things
The Life of His Majesty the King Christian IX of Denmark ~ (1818–1906)
More Than 'Apostle to the Apostles': Magdalene's Other Easter Virtues
Mary Magdalene is often known as the Apostle to the Apostles, because she was the one who brought the news of the Empty Tomb to the Apostles.
From Aleteia
By Tom Hoopes
Mary Magdalene is the saint most often mentioned in the Easter Gospels, but there's more to her story than we sometimes consider.Apart from Jesus and St. Peter, Mary Magdalene is the saint most often mentioned in the Easter Gospels. Don’t miss the other ways she is a model for Christians in the Easter accounts.
First: Mary Magdalene models the beatitudes and works of mercy.
Mary Magdalene was a faithful Jew who carefully observed the Saturday Sabbath day of rest that began when the sun went down on Friday, right after Jesus was buried, and lasted until dawn on Sunday.
But the Gospel of John tells us that, “On the first day of the week, Mary of Magdala came to the tomb early in the morning, while it was still dark.” That means she left her home in time to serve Jesus at the earliest possible moment she legally could. And the service she planned to do, anointing the body of Jesus, is of the essence of Christianity.
Service to the dead is both a corporal and spiritual work of mercy, and Jesus had said “Blessed are they who mourn.”
Second: Mary Magdalene covered a lot of ground on Easter morning.
Think of how many steps Mary put in at Easter: She walked in the dark to the tomb in the first place, with other women, and when she found the Tomb empty, the Gospel of John says “she ran” to tell the Peter and John.
Where did she run? After Peter and John inspected the tomb, John reports that “the disciples went back to their homes,” plural (in most translations).
So on her mad dash to tell these two Apostles, she had two stops — then she later made another.
Third: She prays through her faith problems.
As I point out in my “This Sunday” column, just seeing the burial cloths was enough for Peter and John to believe. But it wasn’t enough for Magdalene.
They left satisfied, “But Mary stood weeping outside the tomb.” The angels mentioned in all accounts of the Resurrection ask her, “Woman, why are you weeping?” and she says, “Because they have taken away my Lord, and I do not know where they have laid him.”
Then she turns around. I love what St. John Chrysostom says about that:
“Methinks that while she was speaking, Christ suddenly appearing behind her, struck the angels with awe; and that they having beheld their Ruler, showed immediately by their bearing, their look, their movements, that they saw the Lord.”
Angels don’t have bodies, but you can picture these figures suddenly coming to attention, like soldiers who see the sergeant approaching in a drill line — or, better, like pilgrims seeing the monstrance approaching in a procession.
Fourth: Mary makes a big mistake but gets the biggest things right.
When she turns and sees Jesus, though, she doesn’t recognize him. Anyone who has met someone in an unexpected context can understand why. But she mistakes him for a gardener.
That is significant, because in Holy Week, Jesus fulfills God’s desire to restore Eden, the first Garden, inhabited by Adam, the first gardener — and here is the New Adam establishing a new Eden, and he looks like a gardener. He is the Divine Sower, and he looks like a human sower; he is the Son of the Vineyard owner, and he looks like a vinedresser.
But then, Mary boldly tells this man, “Sir, if you have carried him away, tell me where you have laid him, and I will take him away.”
The theologian Father Bruce Vawter said, “Mary speaks the language of love, not even considering whether what she offers to do would be possible for her.”
Fifth: Mary reveals the Good Shepherd.
It’s when Jesus speaks her name — “Mary” — that she finally recognizes him and embraces him. This is a beautiful callback to earlier in the Gospel of John, when Jesus calls himself the Good Shepherd, who “calls his own sheep by name.”
As he puts it there, “My sheep hear my voice, and I know them, and they follow me.” When he calls your name, you both know who he is and you know who you are a little more, too.
Mary is so convinced now, Jesus has to say “Stop holding on to me, for I have not yet ascended to the Father.”
She becomes a model for us of the moment we will hear him call our name, at the end of our life, and it will be time to hold on to him, forever.
