Feast Of The Assumption Of Mary Into Heaven
The Feast of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary, 15
August; also called in old liturgical books Pausatio, Nativitas (for heaven),
Mors, Depositio, Dormitio S. Mariae.
This feast has a double object: (1) the happy departure of Mary from this life;
(2) the assumption of her body into heaven. It is the principal feast of the
Blessed Virgin.
The fact of the Assumption
Regarding the day, year, and manner of Our Lady’s death,
nothing certain is known. The earliest known literary reference to the
Assumption is found in the Greek work De Obitu S. Dominae. Catholic faith,
however, has always derived our knowledge of the mystery from Apostolic
Tradition. Epiphanius (d. 403) acknowledged that he knew nothing definite about
it (Haer., lxxix, 11). The dates assigned for it vary between three and fifteen
years after Christ’s Ascension. Two cities claim to be the place of her
departure: Jerusalem and Ephesus. Common consent favours Jerusalem, where her
tomb is shown; but some argue in favour of Ephesus. The first six centuries did
not know of the tomb of Mary at Jerusalem.
The belief in the corporeal assumption of Mary is founded on the apocryphal
treatise De Obitu S. Dominae, bearing the name of St. John, which belongs
however to the fourth or fifth century. It is also found in the book De Transitu
Virginis, falsely ascribed to St. Melito of Sardis, and in a spurious letter
attributed to St. Denis the Areopagite. If we consult genuine writings in the
East, it is mentioned in the sermons of St. Andrew of Crete, St. John Damascene,
St. Modestus of Jerusalem and others. In the West, St. Gregory of Tours (De
gloria mart., I, iv) mentions it first. The sermons of St. Jerome and St.
Augustine for this feast, however, are spurious. St. John of Damascus (P.G., I,
96) thus formulates the tradition of the Church of Jerusalem:
St. Juvenal, Bishop of Jerusalem, at the Council of Chalcedon (451), made known
to the Emperor Marcian and Pulcheria, who wished to possess the body of the
Mother of God, that Mary died in the presence of all the Apostles, but that her
tomb, when opened, upon the request of St. Thomas, was found empty; wherefrom
the Apostles concluded that the body was taken up to heaven.
Today, the belief in the corporeal assumption of Mary is universal in the East
and in the West; according to Benedict XIV (De Festis B.V.M., I, viii, 18) it is
a probable opinion, which to deny were impious and blasphemous.
The feast of the Assumption
Regarding the origin of the feast we are also uncertain. It
is more probably the anniversary of the dedication of some church than the
actual anniversary of Our Lady’s death. That it originated at the time of the
Council of Ephesus, or that St. Damasus introduced it in Rome is only a
hypothesis.
According to the life of St. Theodosius (d. 529) it was celebrated in Palestine
before the year 500, probably in August (Baeumer, Brevier, 185). In Egypt and
Arabia, however, it was kept in January, and since the monks of Gaul adopted
many usages from the Egyptian monks (Baeumer, Brevier, 163), we find this feast
in Gaul in the sixth century, in January [mediante mense undecimo (Greg. Turon.,
De gloria mart., I, ix)]. The Gallican Liturgy has it on the 18th of January,
under the title: Depositio, Assumptio, or Festivitas S. Mariae (cf. the notes of
Mabillon on the Gallican Liturgy, P.L., LXXII, 180). This custom was kept up in
the Gallican Church to the time of the introduction of the Roman rite. In the
Greek Church, it seems, some kept this feast in January, with the monks of
Egypt; others in August, with those of Palestine; wherefore the Emperor Maurice
(d. 602), if the account of the “Liber Pontificalis” (II, 508) be correct, set
the feast for the Greek Empire on 15 August.
In Rome (Batiffol, Brev. Rom., 134) the oldest and only feast of Our Lady was 1
January, the octave of Christ’s birth. It was celebrated first at Santa Maria
Maggiore, later at Santa Maria ad Martyres. The other feasts are of Byzantine
origin. Duchesne thinks (Origines du culte chr., 262) that before the seventh
century no other feast was kept at Rome, and that consequently the feast of the
Assumption, found in the sacramentaries of Gelasius and Gregory, is a spurious
addition made in the eighth or seventh century. Probst, however (Sacramentarien,
264 sqq.), brings forth good arguments to prove that the Mass of the Blessed
Virgin Mary, found on the 15th of August in the Gelasianum, is genuine, since it
does not mention the corporeal assumption of Mary; that, consequently, the feast
was celebrated in the church of Santa Maria Maggiore at Rome at least in the
sixth century. He proves, furthermore, that the Mass of the Gregorian
Sacramentary, such as we have it, is of Gallican origin (since the belief in the
bodily assumption of Mary, under the influence of the apocryphal writings, is
older in Gaul than in Rome), and that it supplanted the old Gelasian Mass. At
the time of Sergius I (700) this feast was one of the principal festivities in
Rome; the procession started from the church of St. Hadrian. It was always a
double of the first class and a Holy Day of obligation.
The octave was added in 847 by Leo IV; in Germany this octave was not observed
in several dioceses up to the time of the Reformation. The Church of Milan has
not accepted it up to this day (Ordo Ambros., 1906). The octave is privileged in
the dioceses of the provinces of Sienna, Fermo, Michoacan, etc.
The Greek Church continues this feast to 23 August, inclusive, and in some
monasteries of Mount Athos it is protracted to 29 August (Menaea Graeca, Venice,
1880), or was, at least, formerly. In the dioceses of Bavaria a thirtieth day (a
species of month’s mind) of the Assumption was celebrated during the Middle
Ages, 13 Sept., with the Office of the Assumption (double); today, only the
Diocese of Augsburg has retained this old custom.
Some of the Bavarian dioceses and those of Brandenburg, Mainz, Frankfort, etc.,
on 23 Sept. kept the feast of the “Second Assumption”, or the “Fortieth Day of
the Assumption” (double) believing, according to the revelations of St.
Elizabeth of Schönau (d. 1165) and of St. Bertrand, O.C. (d. 1170), that the B.V.
Mary was taken up to heaven on the fortieth day after her death (Grotefend,
Calendaria 2, 136). The Brigittines kept the feast of the “Glorification of
Mary” (double) 30 Aug., since St. Brigitta of Sweden says (Revel., VI, l) that
Mary was taken into heaven fifteen days after her departure (Colvenerius, Cal.
Mar., 30 Aug.). In Central America a special feast of the Coronation of Mary in
heaven (double major) is celebrated 18 August. The city of Gerace in Calabria
keeps three successive days with the rite of a double first class,
commemorating: 15th of August, the death of Mary; 16th of August, her
Coronation.
At Piazza, in Sicily, there is a commemoration of the Assumption of Mary (double
second class) the 20th of February, the anniversary of the earthquake of 1743. A
similar feast (double major with octave) is kept at Martano, Diocese of Otranto,
in Apulia, 19th of November.
Note: By promulgating the Bull Munificentissimus Deus, 1 November, 1950, Pope
Pius XII declared infallibly that the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary was
a dogma of the Catholic Faith. Likewise, the Second Vatican Council taught in
the Dogmatic Constitution Lumen Gentium that “the Immaculate Virgin, preserved
free from all stain of original sin, was taken up body and soul into heavenly
glory, when her earthly life was over, and exalted by the Lord as Queen over all
things (n. 59).”
(Ref – Catholic Encyclopedia)