Should We Consider Mary The First Apostle? -- By: Bradley G. Green

Journal: Eikon
Volume: EIKON 06:1 (Spring 2024)
Article: Should We Consider Mary The First Apostle?
Author: Bradley G. Green


Should We Consider Mary The First Apostle?

Bradley G. Green

Bradley G. Green is Professor of Theological Studies at Union University (Jackson, TN) and Professor of Philosophy and Theology at The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary (Louisville, KY).

One of the glorious and beautiful truths of — and legacies of — biblical Christianity is Christianity’s effect in history of ameliorating the various sufferings seen in the world. as Tom Holland has recounted in his one-volume church history, Dominion, Holland was somewhat surprised at how Christianity changed the world into which it arrived. Christianity led to the amelioration of much of the suffering and brutality of the ancient world. A beautiful and serendipitous discovery indeed by Holland. And Christians should rejoice at how Christianity—from its earliest moments — encouraged (indeed commanded Christians to treat woman with love, especially as seen in the husband-wife relationship, where husbands are to love their wives as Christ loved the church, and gave himself for her (Ephesians 5:25). So, we should not be surprised to see in the pages of the New Testament women right there alongside men in numerous passages.

McNutt’s and Peeler’s Christianity Today essay, “The First Apostle,” was intriguing to read.1 When I was asked to write a response to the essay, I was happy to do so. The more I have read the essay in writing a response, I have had to work at the best way to respond. I should say, Jennifer Powell McNutt is a friend, while I don’t believe I know Amy Beverage Peeler. The difficulty of writing a response is for two related reasons: (1) I think there are actually two essays (or theses) here; (2) I think there is something of an equivocation or ambiguity in how the word “apostle” is being used. The “Mary” being considered here is Mary Magdalene, and not Mary the mother of Jesus, or any of the other myriad “Marys” in the New Testament.

Here is what I take to be the essays/theses to be:

  • Mary Magdalene is a blessed woman, had the honor of being close to Jesus and to being one of the first persons to see the risen Jesus, was told by Jesus to share the news of his resurrection/ascending, and was able share the good news of the resurrection of Jesus.
  • Mary Magdalene should be considered the “first apostle.”

Few (no?) Christians would quibble about the thesis “a.” If one reads the four gospels, Mary Magdalene appears at a number of places — including at the death of Jesus, as well as coming to the tomb and be...

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