Q: Did Mary have any brothers or sisters?
It is widely believed that the story of Anna and Joachim had been
patterned on that of Hannah and Samuel in the Old Testament (see 1 Samuel
1, 1-28). The resemblance of the stories is indeed striking: the barren
wife, the sacrifice(s) of her husband Elkanah (who had two wives one of
whom had "children"), Hannah's prayer, the conception and birth of Samuel,
his presentation to the Lord and service in the temple. Here as in
Proto-James no reference is made to brothers and sisters of Samuel by
Hannah.
It is true that in Hannah's song of praise we find the hyperbolic
statement: "The barren wife bears seven sons" (1 Sam. 2,5), but it cannot
be construed from this that she actually had seven sons neither could the
children of the second wife corroborate the thesis of the brothers and
sisters of Samuel, respectively Mary.
Sources and tradition are overwhelmingly silent about brothers and sisters
not least in order to underline the unique and miraculous character of
these two conceptions and births. They anticipate and foreshadow the
radical uniqueness of the Christchild himself.
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A: As it stands the sources dealing with the
life of Ann,
Joachim and Mary do not mention
brothers and sisters of Our Lord's mother.
The canonical gospels -- as we know -- do not speak of Mary's parents.
They are first mentioned in the apocryphal gospel of Saint James. The
information was later appropriated by Pseudo-Matthew and the Liber de
Nativitate Mariae. Proto-James tells the story of a barren woman whose
prayer is heard and who offers the long-awaited child to God (Mary in the
Temple) whereas the original source does not mention a virginal
conception, later authors/writings take it for granted, so Ephiphanius
(Haer. 79) and Pseudo-Matthew (3.3). It is again Epiphanius who tells us that
Anna died at age seventy-two in Jerusalem. The documents and authors mentioned
do not refer to brothers and sisters of Mary.
Birth of Mary
Pietro Lorenzetti
Museo dell'Opera
Metropolitana
Siena, Italy