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August 15
Celebrated every year on August 15, the Feast of the Assumption of the
Blessed Virgin Mary commemorates the death of Mary and her bodily
assumption into Heaven, before her body could begin to decay--a
foretaste of our own bodily resurrection at the end of time. Because it
signifies the Blessed Virgin's passing into eternal life, it is the most
important of all Marian feasts and a Holy Day of Obligation.
Quick Facts:
Readings: Revelation 11:19a, 12:1-6a, 10ab; Psalm 45:10, 11, 12, 16; 1 Corinthians 15:20-27; Luke 1:39-56 (full text here)
Other Names for the Feast: The Solemnity of the
Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary; The Assumption of Mary Into
Heaven; The Dormition of the Theotokos; The Falling Asleep of the
Blessed Virgin Mary
History of the Assumption:
The Feast
of the Assumption is a very old feast of the Church, celebrated
universally by the sixth century. The feast was originally celebrated in
the East, where it is known as the Feast of the Dormition,
a word which means "the falling asleep." The earliest printed reference
to the belief that Mary's body was assumed into Heaven dates from the
fourth century, in a document entitled "The Falling Asleep of the Holy
Mother of God." The document is written in the voice of the Apostle
John, to whom Christ on the Cross had entrusted the care of His mother,
and recounts the death, laying in the tomb, and assumption of the
Blessed Virgin. Tradition variously places Mary's death at Jerusalem or
at Ephesus, where John was living.
The Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary into Heaven at the end of
her earthly life is a defined dogma of the Catholic Church. On November
1, 1950, Pope Pius XII, exercising papal infallibility, declared in Munificentissimus Deus
that it is a dogma of the Church "that the Immaculate Mother of God,
the ever Virgin Mary, having completed the course of her earthly life,
was assumed body and soul into heavenly glory." As a dogma, the
Assumption is a required belief of all Catholics; anyone who publicly
dissents from the dogma, Pope Pius declared, "has fallen away completely
from the divine and Catholic Faith."
While the Eastern Orthodox believe in the Dormition, they object to
the papal definition of the dogma, seeing it as unnecessary, since
belief in Mary's bodily assumption, tradition holds, goes back to
apostolic times.
Pope Pius XII, in the text explaining his definition of the dogma of
the Assumption, refers repeatedly to the Blessed Virgin's death before
her Assumption, and the consistent tradition in both the East and the
West holds that Mary did die before she was assumed into Heaven.
However, since the definition of the Assumption is silent on this
question, Catholics can legitimately believe that Mary did not before
the Assumption.
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