THE GOSPEL OF THE NATIVITY OF MARY
CHAP. 1.--The blessed and glorious ever-virgin Mary, sprung from the royal stock and
family of David, born in the city of Nazareth, was brought up at Jerusalem in the temple
of the Lord. Her father was named Joachim, and her mother Anna. Her father's house was
from Galilee and the city of Nazareth, but her mother's family from Bethlehem. Their life
was guileless and right before the Lord, and irreproachable and pious before men. For they
divided all their substance into three parts. One part they spent upon the temple and the
temple servants; another they distributed to strangers and the poor; the third they
reserved, for themselves and the necessities of their family. Thus, dear to God, kind to
men, for about twenty years they lived in their own house, a chaste married life, without
having any children. Nevertheless they vowed that, should the Lord happen to give them
offspring, they would deliver it to the service of the Lord; on which account also they
used to visit the temple of the Lord at each of the feasts during the year.
CHAP. 2.--And it came to pass that the festival of the dedication[1] was at hand;
wherefore also Joachim went up to Jerusalem with some men of his own tribe. Now at that
time Issachar[2] was high priest there. And when he saw Joachim with his offering among
his other fellow- citizens, he despised him, and spurned his gifts, asking why he, who had
no offspring, presumed to stand among those who had; saying that his gifts could not by
any means be acceptable to God, since He had deemed him unworthy of off-spring: for the
Scripture said, Cursed is every one who has not begot a male or a female in Israel.[3] He
said, therefore, that he ought first to be freed from this curse by the begetting of
children; and then, and then only, that be should come into the presence of the Lord with
his offerings. And Joachim, covered with shame from this reproach that was thrown in his
teeth, retired to the shepherds, who were in their pastures with their flocks; nor would
he return home, test perchance he might be branded with the same reproach by those of his
own tribe, who were there at the time, and had heard this from the priest.
CHAP. 3.--Now, when he had been there for some time, on a certain day when he was
alone, an angel of the Lord stood by him in a great light. And when he was disturbed at
his appearance, the angel who had appeared to him restrained his fear, saying: Fear not,
Joachim, nor be disturbed by my appearance; for I am the angel of the Lord, sent by Him to
thee to tell thee that thy prayers have been heard, and that thy charitable deeds have
gone up into His presence.[4] For He hath seen thy shame, and hath heard the reproach of
unfruitfulness which has been unjustly brought against thee. For God is the avenger of
sin, not of nature: and, therefore, when He shuts up the womb of any one, He does so that
He may miraculously open it again; so that that which is born may be acknowledged to be
not of lust, but of the gift of God. For was it not the case that the first mother of your
nation--Sarah--was barren up to her eightieth year?[5] And, nevertheless, in extreme old
age she brought forth Isaac, to whom the promise was renewed of the blessing of all
nations. Rachel also, so favoured of the Lord, and so beloved by holy Jacob, was long
barren; and yet she brought forth Joseph, who was not only the lord of Egypt, but the
deliverer of many nations who were ready to perish of hunger. Who among the judges was
either stronger than Samson, or more holy than Samuel? And yet the mothers of both were
barren. If, therefore, the reasonableness of my words does not persuade thee, believe in
fact that conceptions very late in life, and births in the case of women that have been
barren, are usually attended with something wonderful. Accordingly thy wife Anna will
bring forth a daughter to thee, and thou shall call her name Mary: she shall be, as you
have vowed, consecrated to the Lord from her infancy, and she shall be filled with the
Holy Spirit, even from her mother's womb. She shall neither eat nor drink any unclean
thing, nor shall she spend her life among the crowds of the people without, but in the
temple of the Lord, that it may not be possible either to say, or so much as to suspect,
any evil concerning her. Therefore, when she has grown up, just as she herself shall be
miraculously born of a barren woman, so in an incomparable manner she, a virgin, shall
bring forth the Son of the Most High, who shall be called Jesus, and who, according to the
etymology of His name, shall be the Saviour of all nations. And this shall be the sign to
thee of those things which I announce: When thou shalt come to the Golden gate in
Jerusalem, thou shalt there meet Anna thy wife, who, lately anxious from the delay of thy
return, will then rejoice at the sight of thee. Having thus spoken, the angel departed
from him.
CHAP. 4--Thereafter he appeared to Anna his wife, saying: Fear not, Anna, nor think
that it is a phantom which thou seest. For I am that angel who has presented your prayers
and alms before God; and now have I been sent to you to announce to you that thou shalt
bring forth a daughter, who shall be called Mary, and who shall be blessed above all
women. She, full of the favour of the Lord even from her birth, shall remain three years
in her father's house until she be weaned. Thereafter, being delivered to the service of
the Lord, she shall not depart from the temple until she reach the years of discretion.
There, in fine, serving God day and night in fastings and prayers, she shall abstain from
every unclean thing; she shall never know man, but alone, without example, immaculate,
uncorrupted, without intercourse with man, she, a virgin, shall bring forth a son; she,
His hand-maiden, shall bring forth the Lord--both in grace, and in name, and in work, the
Saviour of the world. Wherefore arise, and go up to Jerusalem; and when thou shalt come to
the gate which, because it is plated with gold, is called Golden, there, for a sign, thou
shalt meet thy husband, for whose safety thou hast been anxious. And when these things
shall have so happened, know that what I announce shall without doubt be fulfilled.
CHAP. 5.--Therefore, as the angel had commanded, both of them setting out from the
place where they were, went up to Jerusalem; and when they had come to the place pointed
out by the angel's prophecy, there they met each other. Then, rejoicing at seeing each
other, and secure in the certainty of the promised offspring, they gave the thanks due to
the Lord, who exalteth the humble. And so, having worshipped the Lord, they returned home,
and awaited in certainty and in gladness the divine promise. Anna therefore conceived, and
brought forth a daughter; and according to the command of the angel, her parents called
her name Mary.
CHAP. 6.--And when the circle of three years had rolled round, and the time of her
weaning was fulfilled, they brought the virgin to the temple of the Lord with offerings.
Now there were round the temple, according to the fifteen Psalms of Degrees,[1] fifteen
steps going up; for, on account of the temple having been built on a mountain, the altar
of burnt-offering, which stood outside, could not be reached except by steps. On one of
these, then, her parents placed the little girl, the blessed virgin Mary. And when they
were putting off the clothes which they had worn on the journey, and were putting on, as
was usual, others that were neater and cleaner, the virgin of the Lord went up all the
steps, one after the other, without the help of any one leading her or lifting her, in
such a manner that, in this respect at least, you would think that she had already
attained full age. For already the Lord in the infancy of His virgin wrought a great
thing, and by the indication of this miracle foreshowed how great she was to be.
Therefore, a sacrifice having been offered according to the custom of the law, and their
vow being perfected, they left the virgin within the enclosures of the temple, there to be
educated with the other virgins, and themselves returned home.
CHAP. 7.--But the virgin of the Lord advanced in age and in virtues; and though, in the
words of the Psalmist, her father and mother had forsaken her, the Lord took her up.[2]
For daily was she visited by angels, daily did she enjoy a divine vision, which preserved
her from all evil, and made her to abound in all good. And so she reached her fourteenth
year; and not only were the wicked unable to charge her with anything worthy of reproach,
but all the good, who knew her life and conversation, judged her to be worthy of
admiration. Then the high priest publicly announced that the virgins who were publicly
settled in the temple, and had reached this time of life, should return home and get
married, according to the custom of the nation and the ripeness of their years. The others
readily obeyed this command; but Mary alone, the virgin of the Lord, answered that she
could not do this, saying both that her parents had devoted her to the service of the
Lord, and that, moreover, she herself had made to the Lord a vow of virginity, which she
would never violate by any intercourse with man. And the high priest, being placed in
great perplexity of mind, seeing that neither did he think that the vow should be broken
contrary to the Scripture, which says, Vow and pay,[1] nor did he dare to introduce a
custom unknown to the nation, gave order that at the festival, which was at hand, all the
chief persons from Jerusalem and the neighbourhood should be present, in order that from
their advice he might know what was to be done in so doubtful a case. And when this took
place, they resolved unanimously that the Lord should be consulted upon this matter. And
when they all bowed themselves in prayer, the high priest went to consult God in the usual
way. Nor had they long to wait: in the hearing of all a voice issued from the oracle and
from the mercy-seat, that, according to the prophecy of Isaiah, a man should be sought out
to whom the virgin ought to be entrusted and espoused. For it is clear that Isaiah says: A
rod shall come forth from the root of Jesse, and a flower shall ascend from his root; and
the Spirit of the Lord shall rest upon him, the spirit of wisdom and understanding, the
spirit of counsel and strength, the spirit of wisdom and piety; and he shall be filled
with the spirit of the fear of the Lord.[2] According to this prophecy, therefore, he
predicted that all of the house and family of David that were unmarried and fit for
marriage should bring there rods to the altar; and that he whose rod after it was brought
should produce a flower, and upon the end of whose rod the Spirit of the Lord should
settle in the form of a dove, was the man to whom the virgin ought to be entrusted and
espoused.
CHAP. 8.--Now there was among the rest Joseph, of the house and family of David, a man
of great age: and when all brought there rods, according to the order, he alone withheld
his. Wherefore, when nothing in conformity with the divine voice appeared, the high priest
thought it necessary to consult God a second time; and He answered, that of those who had
been designated, he alone to whom the virgin ought to be espoused had not brought his rod.
Joseph, therefore, was found out. For when he had brought his rod, and the dove came from
heaven; and settled upon the top of it, it clearly appeared to all that he was the man to
whom the virgin should be espoused. Therefore, the usual ceremonies of betrothal having
been gone through, he went back to the city of Bethlehem to put his house in order, and to
procure things necessary for the marriage. But Mary, the virgin of the Lord, with seven
other virgins of her own age, and who had been weaned at the same time, whom she had
received from the priest, returned to the house of her parents in Galilee.
CHAP. 9.--And in those days, that is, at the time of her first coming into Galilee, the
angel Gabriel was sent to her by God, to announce to her the conception of the Lord, and
to explain to her the manner and order of the conception. Accordingly, going in, he filled
the chamber where she was with a great light; and most courteously saluting her, he said:
Hail, Mary! O virgin highly favoured by the Lord, virgin full of grace, the Lord is with
thee; blessed art thou above all women, blessed above all men that have been hitherto
born.[3] And the virgin, who was already well acquainted with angelic faces, and was not
unused to the light from heaven, was neither terrified by the vision of the angel, nor
astonished at the greatness of the light, but only perplexed by his words; and she began
to consider of what nature a salutation so unusual could be, or what it could portend, or
what end it could have. And the angel, divinely inspired, taking up this thought, says:
Fear not, Mary, as if anything contrary to thy chastity were hid under this salutation.
For in choosing chastity, thou hast found favour with the Lord; and therefore thou, a
virgin, shalt conceive without sin, and shalt bring forth a son. He shall be great,
because He shall rule from sea to sea, and from the river even to the ends of the
earth;[4] and He shall be called the Son of the Most High, because He who is born on earth
in humiliation, reigns in heaven in exaltation; and the Lord God will give Him the throne
of His father David, and He shall reign in the house of Jacob for ever, and of His kingdom
there shall be no end;[5] forasmuch as He is King of kings and Lord of lords,[6] and His
throne is from everlasting to everlasting. The virgin did not doubt these words of the
angel; but wishing to know the manner of it, she answered: How can that come to pass? For
while, according to my vow, I never know man, how can I bring forth without the addition
of man's seed? To this the angel says: Think not, Mary, that thou shalt conceive in the
manner of mankind: for without any intercourse with man, thou, a virgin, wilt conceive;
thou, a virgin, wilt bring forth; thou, a virgin, wilt nurse: for the Holy Spirit shall
come upon thee, and the power of the Most High shall overshadow thee,[7] without any of
the heats of lust; and therefore that which shall be born of thee shall alone be holy,
because it alone, being conceived and born without sin, shall be called the Son of God.
Then Mary stretched forth her hands, and raised her eyes to heaven, and said: Behold the
hand-maiden of the Lord, for I am not worthy of the name of lady; let it be to me
according to thy word.
It will be long, and perhaps to some even tedious, if we insert in this little work
every thing which we read of as having preceded or followed the Lord's nativity:
wherefore, omitting those things which have been more fully written in the Gospel, let us
come to those which are held to be less worthy of being narrated.
CHAP. 10.--Joseph therefore came from Judaea into Galilee, intending to marry the
virgin who had been betrothed to him; for already three months had elapsed, and it was the
beginning of the fourth since she had been betrothed to him. In the meantime, it was
evident from her shape that she was pregnant, nor could she conceal this from Joseph. For
in consequence of his being betrothed to her, coming to her more freely and speaking to
her more familiarly, he found out that she was with child. He began then to be in great
doubt and perplexity, because he did not know what was best for him to do. For, being a
just man, he was not willing to expose her; nor, being a pious man, to injure her fair
fame by a suspicion of fornication. He came to the conclusion, therefore, privately to
dissolve their contract, and to send her away secretly. And while he thought on these
things, behold, an angel of the Lord appeared to him in his sleep, saying: Joseph, thou
son of David, fear not; that is, do not have any suspicion of fornication in the virgin,
or think any evil of her; and fear not to take her as thy wife: for that which is begotten
in her, and which now vexes thy soul, is the work not of man, but of the Holy Spirit. For
she alone of all virgins shall bring forth the Son of God, and thou shalt call His name
Jesus, that is, Saviour; for He shall save His people from their sins. Therefore Joseph,
according to the command of the angel, took the virgin as his wife; nevertheless he knew
her not, but took care of her, and kept her in chastity.[1] And now the ninth month from
her conception was at hand, when Joseph, taking with him his wife along with what things
he needed, went to Bethlehem, the city from which he came. And it came to pass, while they
were there, that her days were fulfilled that she should bring forth; and she brought
forth her first-born son, as the holy evangelists have shown, our Lord Jesus Christ, who
with the Father and the Son[2] and the Holy Ghost lives and reigns God from everlasting to
everlasting.