Verified Claim · Mariology
Mary was assumed body and soul into heavenly glory at the end of her earthly life. This is the culmination of all the Marian doctrines — the necessary consequence of her divine maternity, her Immaculate Conception, and her unique cooperation in the work of Redemption.
The Assumption of Mary — that at the end of her earthly life, the Blessed Virgin was taken body and soul into heavenly glory — was solemnly defined by Pope Pius XII on 1 November 1950 in the Apostolic Constitution Munificentissimus Deus. This dogmatic definition is not the creation of a new doctrine. It is the solemn proclamation of what the Church has always believed, celebrated in her liturgy, and expressed in her prayer.
The theological foundations of the Assumption are inseparable from the other Marian doctrines. Because Mary is the Mother of God (Theotokos — defined at Ephesus, 431), because she was conceived without original sin (Immaculate Conception — defined by Pius IX, 1854), and because the corruption of the body is a consequence of sin — it follows with theological necessity that the body of the Immaculate Mother of God was not subject to the ordinary dissolution of death. As Pius XII states in Munificentissimus Deus: since it was within the power of Christ to preserve his Mother from the corruption of the tomb, we must believe that he really acted in this way.
The New Eve theology, articulated from the second century onward by Justin Martyr, Irenaeus, and the Fathers, provides the earliest foundation. As the New Adam rose from the dead and ascended into glory, so the New Eve — who shared uniquely in his redemptive work — shares uniquely in his glorification. This is not inference but the consistent reading of the Fathers as cited by Pius XII himself.
The historical evidence for the belief is strongest from the fifth century onward, with an explosion of dormition texts following the Council of Ephesus. The silence of the earlier centuries is itself significant: no city ever claimed the body of Mary, no relic of her body was ever venerated, no tomb was ever pointed to as hers — unlike every other major saint and martyr of the early Church. This is the argument from silence that Pius XII himself invokes: the belief that she was taken up is the most natural explanation for the complete absence of any bodily relic.
8 dateable primary sources spanning AD 185–1950. Tap any dot to expand.
The corruption of the body after death is the penalty of original sin. Romans 6:23: the wages of sin is death. If Mary was conceived without original sin — which the Church defined as dogma in 1854 — then the ordinary penalty of sin does not apply to her body. The body that was never subject to the original disorder of sin is not subject to the ordinary dissolution of death. This is not a pious sentiment. It is a logical entailment. The Immaculate Conception and the Assumption are not two separate doctrines — they are two aspects of the same truth. Pius XII states it directly: since it was within the power of Christ to preserve his Mother from the corruption of the tomb, we must believe that he really acted in this way.
From the second century onward, the Fathers described Mary as the New Eve. As Eve was the mother of the old humanity in its fallen condition, Mary is the Mother of the new humanity in its redeemed condition. As the New Adam — Christ — rose from the dead and ascended into glory, the New Eve shares in that triumph. Irenaeus in the second century, the basis of the entire tradition, states: the knot of Eve's disobedience was loosed by the obedience of Mary. What was lost through Eve — bodily integrity, exemption from corruption, union with God — is restored in Mary in its fullness. The Assumption is the completion of the New Eve theology. It is not an addition to the patristic tradition. It is its conclusion.
The early Church venerated the relics of the saints with intense devotion. Cities competed for relics. Major pilgrimage routes developed around them. Every major apostle and martyr left relics that were venerated. Yet in the entire history of early Christianity, no city — not Jerusalem, not Ephesus (where Mary lived), not Rome — ever claimed to possess her body, any bone, any fragment. No tomb was ever pointed to as hers. No pilgrim record mentions visiting her grave. Epiphanius of Salamis, writing in AD 377, explicitly states that no one knows where she died or whether she was buried. This silence is not accidental. It is the most natural consequence of a tradition that her body was taken up. You cannot venerate what is not there.
The ancient principle of Catholic theology is lex orandi, lex credendi — the law of prayer is the law of belief. What the Church prays expresses what the Church believes. The Dormition feast was celebrated throughout the Eastern Church from at least the sixth century. By the seventh century, Pope Sergius I had established it in Rome. For over thirteen centuries before the dogmatic definition, the universal Church — East and West — celebrated August 15 as the feast of Mary's Dormition and Assumption. The liturgy does not celebrate hypotheses. It celebrates realities. Thirteen centuries of universal liturgical celebration is the strongest possible evidence that this was the universal faith of the undivided Church.
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