Loading...
Loading...
Click here if you don’t see subscription options
America StaffFebruary 27, 2018
Magdala

Each day, I have been overwhelmed by the proximity of Jesus and the disciples. Standing near where Jesus preached the Beatitudes and seeing the Bay of Parables brought these stories to life in a new way.

Yesterday, it was as if Mary, the mother of Jesus, was walking along side me in the Church of the Annunciation. Because she said yes, the word was made flesh here. I still struggle to capture the feelings of that experience into words. All words seem to fail to capture feeling the magnitude of that reality.

Today I was excited to meditate upon another Mary, the one called apostle to the apostles, Mary Magdalene. In Magdala we visited the excavated ruins of a 1st century synagogue.

In Luke 8:1-3 it reads: “He went on through cities and villages preaching and bringing the good news of the kingdom of God. And the twelve were with him and also some women who had been healed of evil spirits and infirmities:  Mary, called Magdalene, from whom seven demons came out…and many others who provided for them out of their means.”

Could Mary have been healed here? Could she have first heard Jesus preach here?

As I stood among these ruins, I found myself overwhelmed with gratitude. Because she persisted, we know details of Jesus’s crucifixion, burial, and resurrection. In John’s Gospel, the resurrected Jesus first appeared to Mary Magdalene. It is she who finds the empty tomb and runs to tell Peter. It is she who stands weeping outside and Jesus appears to her. In that moment, he also sends her on a mission , to go tell the others.

Here in Magdala, in Galilee, she encountered Jesus early on his ministry. Because of her healing in or near this place, she follows Jesus to Jerusalem (where we will soon travel). Because of her faith, the good news spreads. Because she persisted in faith.

As I sat in the chapel dedicated to her, I said a prayer of thanksgiving in gratitude for her witness and mission.

As we continue this pilgrimage, that we may share your steadfast faith and deep love for Our Lord, Jesus Christ. Saint Mary Magdalene, pray for us.

—Meghan Clark

 

 

 

Updates from the Pilgrimage: 

Comments are automatically closed two weeks after an article's initial publication. See our comments policy for more.

The latest from america

Archbishop Vincenzo Paglia, president of the Pontifical Academy for Life, shared that, “The pope is reminding every one of us, all people, starting with us elderly, that we are all frail and therefore we must take care of each other.”
Martin Marty, a towering figure in the study of American Christianity, died last week. Joe McShane, S.J., one of his former graduate students, remembers him with gratitude.
Joseph M. McShaneMarch 03, 2025
“Endorsing utilitarian deregulation and global neoliberalism means imposing the law of the strongest as the only rule; and it is a law that dehumanizes,” the pope wrote in a letter to members of the Pontifical Academy for Life.
Gerard O’ConnellMarch 03, 2025
Today’s update from the pope’s doctors dispels the widespread alarm by Friday’s bronchial spasm. An informed Vatican source confirmed that “there have been no negative consequences from that crisis.”
Gerard O’ConnellMarch 02, 2025