The 
Assumption of Mary
TRUTH 
OR FICTION?
 
The 
Orthodox Church celebrates the “Dormition of Mary” 
(her death or falling asleep) but not the Assumption of Mary. 
Some 
within Orthodoxy have used the
term 
Assumption of Mary to mean the same thing 
as 
Dormition of Mary, but that is wrong and 
inaccurate.  
***********
The 
Assumption of Mary is a doctrine of the Roman Catholic Church and those 
churches 
that broke from her.  There is no 
biblical authorization or Apostolic teaching 
to 
support this nor is there any historical basis to claim it was the teaching of 
the early church.  
Those 
within Orthodoxy who profess a belief in the Assumption 
have 
abandon true Orthodoxy in favor of the unorthodox teaching authority of the 
Vatican.
______________________________________________________________________
A 
FALSE TEACHING    
The 
Assumption of Mary is a 
Roman 
Catholic Dogma that had been condemned as 
Heretical 
by 2 Popes in the 5th and 6th Centuries.
    
The 
Roman Catholic doctrine of the assumption of Mary teaches that she was 
assumed 
body and soul into heaven either without dying or shortly after death. 
This 
extraordinary claim was only officially declared to be a dogma of Roman 
Catholic 
faith in 1950, though it had been believed by many for hundreds of 
years. 
To dispute this doctrine, according to Rome’s teaching, would result in 
the 
loss of salvation. The official teaching of the Assumption comes from the 
decree 
Munificentissimus Deus by pope Pius 
XII.
 
This 
is truly an amazing dogma, yet there is no Scriptural proof for it, and 
even 
the Roman Catholic writer Eamon Duffy concedes that, 
‘there is, clearly, no 
historical 
evidence whatever for it ...’ (Eamon Duffy, What 
Catholics Believe 
About 
Mary (London: Catholic Truth Society, 1989), p. 17). For centuries in the 
early 
Church there is complete silence regarding Mary’s end. The first mention 
of 
it is by Epiphanius in 377 A.D. and he specifically 
states that no one knows 
what 
actually happened to Mary. He lived near Palestine and if there were, in 
fact, 
a tradition in the Church generally believed and taught he would have 
affirmed 
it. But he clearly states that ‘her end no one knows.’ These are his 
words:
 
In 
addition to Epiphanius, there is St. Jerome who also 
lived in Palestine and 
does 
not report any tradition of an assumption. Isidore of 
Seville, in the 
seventh 
century, echoes Epiphanius by saying that no one has 
any information at 
all 
about Mary’s death. The patristic testimony is therefore non-existent on 
this 
subject. Even Roman Catholic historians readily admit this fact:  In these 
conditions 
we shall not ask patristic thought—as some theologians still do today 
under 
one form or another—to transmit to us, with respect to the Assumption, a 
truth 
received as such in the beginning and faithfully communicated to 
subsequent 
ages. Such an attitude would not fit the facts...Patristic thought 
has 
not, in this instance, played the role of a sheer instrument of 
transmission’ 
(Juniper B. Carol, O.F.M., ed., Mariology, Vol. I (Milwaukee: 
Bruce, 
1955), p. 154). Father Carol is a leading Mariologist 
and was a leading 
Marian 
Theologian, along with Father Most, at the Vatican II 
Council.
 
How 
then did this teaching come to have such prominence in the Church that 
eventually 
led it to be declared an issue of dogma in 1950? 
The 
first Church father to affirm explicitly the assumption of Mary in the 
West 
was Gregory of Tours in 590 A.D. But the basis for his teaching 
was 
not the tradition of the Church but his acceptance of an apocryphal 
Gospel 
known as the Transitus Beatae Mariae which we first hear 
of at 
the 
end of the fifth century and which was spuriously attributed 
to 
Melito of Sardis. There were many versions of this 
literature 
which 
developed over time and which were found throughout the East 
and 
West but they all originated from one source. Mariologist, Father Juniper 
Carol, 
O.F.M. gives the following historical summary of the Transitus 
literature:
 
An 
intriguing corpus of literature on the final lot of Mary is formed by the 
apocryphal 
Transitus Mariae. The 
genesis of these accounts is shrouded in 
history’s 
mist. They apparently originated before the close of the fifth 
century, 
perhaps in Egypt, perhaps in Syria, in consequence of the stimulus 
given 
Marian devotion by the definition of the divine Maternity at Ephesus. The 
period 
of proliferation is the sixth century. At least a score of Transitus 
accounts 
are extant, in Coptic, Greek, Latin, Syriac, Arabic, 
Ethiopic, and 
Armenian. 
Not all are prototypes, for many are simply variations on more ancient 
models 
( Fr. Juniper Carol, O.F.M. ed., Mariology, Vol. II (Milwaukee: Bruce, 
1957), 
p. 144).
 
Thus, 
the Transitus literature is the real source of the 
teaching of the 
assumption 
of Mary and Roman Catholic authorities admit this fact. Fr. Juniper 
Carol, 
for example, writes: ‘The first express witness in the West to a genuine 
assumption 
comes to us in an apocryphal Gospel, the Transitus 
Beatae Mariae of 
Pseudo–Melito’ (Juniper Carol, O.F.M. ed., Mariology, Vol. l 
(Milwaukee: Bruce, 
1957), 
p. 149). Roman Catholic theologian, Ludwig Ott, 
likewise affirms these 
facts 
when he says:
 
The 
idea of the bodily assumption of Mary is first expressed in certain 
transitus–narratives 
of the fifth and sixth centuries. Even though these are 
apocryphal 
they bear witness to the faith of the generation in which they were 
written 
despite their legendary clothing. The first Church author to speak of 
the 
bodily ascension of Mary, in association with an apocryphal transitus 
B.M.V., 
is St. Gregory of Tours’ (Ludwig Ott, Fundamentals of 
Catholic Dogma 
(Rockford: 
Tan, 1974), pp. 209–210).
 
FATHER 
JUNIPER CAROL EXPLICITLY 
STATES 
THE “TRANSITUS” LITERATURE 
IS 
A COMPLETE FABRICATION WHICH 
SHOULD 
BE REJECTED BY ANY
SERIOUS 
HISTORIAN.   
 
The 
account of Pseudo-Melito, like the rest of the Transitus literature, is 
admittedly 
valueless as history, as an historical report of Mary’s death and 
corporeal 
assumption; under that aspect the historian is justified in dismissing 
it 
with a critical distaste (Juniper Carol, O.F.M. ed., Mariology, Vol. l 
(Milwaukee: 
Bruce, 1957), p. 150).
 
It 
was partially through these writings that teachers in the East and West began 
to 
embrace and promote the teaching. But it still took several centuries for it 
to 
become generally accepted. The earliest extant discourse on the feast of the 
Dormition 
affirms that the assumption of Mary comes from the East at the end of 
the 
seventh and beginning of the eighth century. The Transitus literature is 
highly 
significant as the origin of the assumption teaching and it is important 
that 
we understand the nature of these writings. 
The 
Roman Catholic Church would have us believe that this apocryphal work expressed 
an existing, 
common 
belief among the faithful with respect to Mary. They would have us 
believe
the 
Holy Spirit used a fraudulent document to gradually bring to the Church’s 
awareness 
the 
truth of Mary’s assumption. The historical evidence would suggest otherwise. 
 
CONDEMNED 
BY THE CHURCH
History 
proves that when the Transitus teaching originated the 
Church regarded 
it 
as heresy. In 494 to 496 A.D. Pope Gelasius issued a 
decree entitled Decretum 
de 
Libris Canonicis Ecclesiasticis et Apocryphis. This 
decree officially set 
forth 
the writings which were considered to be canonical and those which were 
apocryphal 
and were to be rejected. He gives a list of apocryphal writings and 
makes 
the following statement regarding them:
 
The 
remaining writings which have been compiled or been recognised by heretics 
or 
schismatics the Catholic and Apostolic Roman Church 
does not in any way 
receive; 
of these we have thought it right to cite below some which have been 
handed 
down and which are to be avoided by catholics (New 
Testament Apocrypha, 
Wilhelm 
Schneemelcher, ed. (Cambridge: James Clarke, 1991), p. 
38).
 
In 
the list of apocryphal writings which are to be rejected Gelasius signifies 
the 
following work: Liber qui apellatur Transitus, id est Assumptio Sanctae 
Mariae, 
Apocryphus (Pope Gelasius 1, 
Epistle 42, Migne Series, M.P.L. vol. 59, 
Col. 
162). This specifically means the Transitus writing of 
the assumption of 
Mary. 
At the end of the decree he states that this and all the other listed 
literature 
is heretical and that their authors and teachings and all who adhere 
to 
them are condemned and placed under eternal anathema which is indissoluble. 
And 
he places the Transitus literature in the same 
category as the heretics and 
writings 
of Arius, Simon Magus, Marcion, Apollinaris, Valentinus and Pelagius. 
These 
are his comments. I have provided two translations from authoritative 
sources:
 
These 
and the like, what Simon Magus, Nicolaus, Cerinthus, 
Marcion, Basilides, 
Ebion, 
Paul of Samosata, Photinus 
and Bonosus, who suffered from similar error, 
also 
Montanus with his detestable followers, Apollinaris, Valentinus the 
Manichaean, 
Faustus the African, Sabellius, Arius, Macedonius, Eunomius, 
Novatus, 
Sabbatius, Calistus, Donatus, Eustasius, Iovianus, Pelagius, Iulianus 
of 
ERclanum, Caelestius, Maximian, Priscillian from Spain, 
Nestorius of 
Constantinople, 
Maximus the Cynic, Lampetius,Dioscorus, Eutyches, Peter 
and the other Peter, of whom 
one 
besmirched Alexandria and the other Antioch, Acacius 
of Constantinople with his associates, and what 
all 
disciples of heresy and of the heretics and schismatics, whose names we have scarcely preserved, 
have 
taught or compiled, we acknowledge is to be not merely rejected but excluded 
from 
the whole Roman Catholic and Apostolic Church and with its authors and 
the 
adherents of its authors to be damned in the inextricable shackles of 
anathema 
forever (New Testament Apocrypha, 
Wilhelm 
Schneemelcher, Ed., (Cambridge: James Clark, 
1991).
 
These 
and [writings] similar to these, which ... all the heresiarchs and their 
disciples, 
or the schismatics have taught or written ... we 
confess have not 
only 
been rejected but also banished from the whole Roman and Apostolic Church 
and 
with their authors and followers of their authors have been condemned 
forever 
under the indissoluble bond of anathema (Henry Denzinger, 
The 
Sources of Catholic Dogma (London: Herder, 1954), pp. 
69-70).
 
Pope 
Gelasius explicitly condemns the authors as well as 
their writings and the 
teachings 
which they promote and all who follow them. And significantly, this 
entire 
decree and its condemnation was reaffirmed by Pope Hormisdas in the sixth 
century 
around A.D. 520. (Migne Vol. 62. Col. 537-542). These 
facts prove that 
the 
early Church viewed the assumption teaching, not as a legitimate expression 
of 
the pious belief of the faithful but as a heresy worthy of condemnation. 
There 
are those who question the authority of the so-called Gelasian decree on 
historical 
grounds saying that it is spuriously attributed to Gelasius. However, 
the 
Roman Catholic authorities Denzinger, Charles Joseph 
Hefele, W. A. Jurgens 
and 
the New Catholic Encyclopedia all affirm that the decree derives from Pope 
Gelasius, 
and Pope Nicholas I in a letter to the bishops of Gaul (c. 865 A.D.) 
officially 
quotes from this decree and attributes its authorship to Gelasius. 
(See 
Henry Denzinger, The Sources of Catholic Dogma 
(London: Herder,1954), pp. 
66-69; 
W. A.Jurgens, TheFaith of 
theEarlyFathers, vol. I (Collegeville: 
Liturgical, 
1970), p. 404; New CatholicEncyclopedia, vol. VII 
(Washington D.C.: 
Catholic 
University, 1967), p. 434; Charles Joseph Hefele, A 
History of the 
Councils 
of the Church (Edinburgh: T. & T. Clark, 1895), vol. IV, pp. 43-44). 
While 
the Gelasian decree may be questioned by some, the 
decree of Pope 
Hormisdas 
reaffirming the Gelasian decree in the early sixth 
century has not 
been 
questioned.
 
Prior 
to the seventh and eighth centuries there is complete patristic silence on 
the 
doctrine of the Assumption. But gradually, through the influence of numerous 
forgeries 
which were believed to be genuine, coupled with the misguided 
enthusiasm 
of popular devotion, the doctrine gained a foothold in the Church. 
The 
Dictionary of Christian Antiquities gives the following history of the 
doctrine:
 
In 
the 3rd or 4th century there was composed a book, embodying the Gnostic and 
Collyridian 
traditions as to the death of Mary, called De Transitu 
Virginis 
Mariae 
Liber. This book exists still and may be found in the Bibliotheca Patrum 
Maxima 
(tom. ii. pt. ii. p. 212)....The Liber Transitu Mariae contains already 
the 
whole of the story of the Assumption. But down to the end of the 5th century 
this 
story was regarded by the Church as a Gnostic or Collyridian fable, and the 
Liber 
de Transitu was condemned as heretical by the Decretum de Libris Canonicis 
et 
Apocryphis, attributed to pope Gelasius, A.D. 494. 
How 
then did it pass across the borders and establish itself 
within 
the church, so as to have a festival appointed to commemorate 
it?
In 
the following manner:
In 
the sixth century a great change passed over the sentiments and the 
theology 
of the church in reference to the Theotokos—an 
unintended but very 
noticeable 
result of the Nestorian controversies, which in maintaining the true 
doctrine 
of the Incarnation incidentally gave strong impulse to what became the 
worship 
of Mary. In consequence of this change of sentiment, during the 6th and 
7th 
centuries (or later):
 
    1)The Liber de Transitu, though 
classed by Gelasius with the known 
productions 
of heretics came to be attributed by one...to Melito, 
an orthodox 
bishop 
of Sardis, in the 2nd century, and by another to St. John the 
Apostle.
2) 
A letter suggesting the possibility of the Assumption was written and 
attributed 
to St. Jerome (ad Paulam et Eustochium de Assumptione B. Virginis, 
Op. 
tom. v. p. 82, Paris, 1706).
    3) A treatise to prove it 
not impossible was wrongly attributed to St. 
Augustine 
(Op. tom. vi. p. 1142, ed. Migne).
    4) Two sermons supporting 
the belief were written and wrongly attributed to 
St. 
Athanasius (Op. tom. ii. pp. 393, 416, ed., Ben. Paris, 
1698).
    5) A fraudulent insertion 
was made in Eusebius’s 
Chronicle 
that ‘in the year 48 Mary 
the 
Virgin was taken up into heaven, 
as 
some wrote that they had had it revealed to them.’
 
Thus 
the authority of the names of St. John, of Melito, of 
Athanasius, of 
Eusebius, 
of Augustine, of Jerome was obtained for the belief by a series of 
forgeries 
readily accepted because in accordance with the sentiment of the day, 
and 
the Gnostic legend was attributed to orthodox writers who did not entertain 
it. 
But this was not all, for there is the clearest evidence (1) that no one 
within 
the church taught it for six centuries, and (2) that those who did first 
teach 
it within the church borrowed it directly from the book condemned by pope 
Gelasius 
as heretical. For the first person within the church who held and 
taught 
it was Juvenal, bishop of Jerusalem (if a homily attributed to John 
Damascene 
containing a quotation from from ‘the Eutymiac history’...be for the 
moment 
considered genuine), who (according to this statement) on Marcian and 
Pulcheria’s 
sending to him for information as to St. Mary’s sepulchre, replied 
to 
them by narrating a shortened version of the de Transitu legend as ‘a most 
ancient 
and true tradition.’ The second person within the church who taught it 
(or the first, if the homily attributed to John Damascene 
relating the above 
tale 
of Juvenal be spurious, as it almost certainly is) was Gregory of Tours, 
A.D. 
590.
 
The 
Abbe Migne points out in a note that ‘what Gregory 
here relates of the death 
of 
the Blessed Virgin and its attendant circumstances he undoubtedly drew...from 
Pseudo-Melito’s Liber de Transitu B. 
Mariae, which is classed among apocryphal 
books 
by pope Gelasius.’ He adds that this account, with the 
circumstances 
related 
by Gregory, were soon afterwards introduced into the Gallican 
Liturgy...It 
is demonstrable that the Gnostic legend passed into the church 
through 
Gregory or Juvenal, and so became an accepted tradition within it...Pope 
Benedict 
XIV says naively that ‘the most ancient Fathers of the Primitive CHurch 
are 
silent as to the bodily assumption of the Blesseed 
Virgin, but the fathers 
of 
the middle and latest ages, both Greeks and Latins, 
relate it in the 
distinctest 
terms’ (De Fest. Assumpt. apud. Migne, Theol. Curs. 
Compl. tom. 
xxvi. 
p. 144, Paris, 1842). It was under the shadow of the names of Gregory of 
Tours 
and of these ‘fathers of the middle and latest ages, Greek and Latin,’ 
that 
the De Transitu legend became accepted as catholic 
tradition. 
 
The 
history, therefore, of the belief which this festival was instituted to 
commemorate 
is as follows: It was first taught in the 3rd or 4th century as part 
of 
the Gnostic legend of St. Mary’s death, and it was regarded by the church as 
a 
Gnostic and Collyridian fable down to the end of the 
5th century. It was 
brought 
into the church in the 6th, 7th, and 8th centuries, partly by a series 
of 
successful forgeries, partly by the adoption of the Gnostic legend on part of 
the 
accredited teachers, writers, and liturgists. And a festival in 
commemoration 
of the event, thus came to be believed, was instituted in the East 
at 
the beginning of the 7th, in the West at the beginning of the 9th century (A 
Dictionary 
of Christian Antiquities, William Smith and Samuel Cheetham, Ed., 
(Hartford: 
J.B. Burr, 1880), pp. 1142-1143).
 
R.P.C. 
Hanson gives the following summation of the teaching of the Assumption, 
emphasizing 
the lack of patristic and Scriptural support for it and affirming 
that 
it originated not with the Church but with Gnosticism:
 
This 
dogma has no serious connection with the Bible at all, and its defenders 
scarcely 
pretend that it has. It cannot honestly be said to have any solid 
ground 
in patristic theology either, because it is frist 
known among Catholic 
Christians 
in even its crudest form only at the beginning of the fifth century, 
and 
then among Copts in Egypt whose associations with Gnostic heresy are 
suspiciously 
strong; indeed it can be shown to be a doctrine which manifestly 
had 
its origin among Gnostic heretics. The only argument by which it is defended 
is 
that if the Church has at any time believed it and does now believe it, then 
it 
must be orthodox, whatever its origins, because the final standard of 
orthodoxy 
is what the Church believes. The fact that this belief is presumably 
supposed 
to have some basis on historical fact analogous to the belief of all 
Christians 
in the resurrection of our Lord makes its registration as a dogma de 
fide 
more bewilderingly incomprehensible, for it is wholly devoid of any 
historical 
evidence to support it. In short, the latest example of the Roman 
Catholic 
theory of doctrinal development appears to be a reductio ad absurdum 
expressly 
designed to discredit the whole structure (R.P.C. Hanson, The Bible as 
a 
Norm of Faith (University of Durham, 1963), Inaugral 
Lecture of the Lightfoot 
Professor 
of Divinity delivered in the Appleby Lecture Theatre on 12 March, 
1963, 
p. 14).
 
Pius 
XII, in his decree in 1950, declared the Assumption teaching to be a dogma 
revealed 
by God. But the basis upon which he justifies this assertion is not 
that 
of Scripture or patristic testimony but of speculative theology. He 
concludes 
that because it seems reasonable and just that God should follow a 
certain 
course of action with respect to the person of Mary, and because he has 
the 
power, that he has in fact done so. And, therefore, we must believe that he 
really 
acted in this way. Tertullian dealt with similar reasoning from certain 
men 
in his own day who sought to bolster heretical teachings with the logic that 
nothing 
was impossible with God. His words stand as a much needed rebuke 
to 
the Roman Church of our day in its misguided teachings about 
Mary:
 
But 
if we choose to apply this principle so extravagantly and harshly in our 
capricious 
imaginations, we may then make out God to have done anything we 
please, 
on the ground that it was not impossible for Him to do it. We must not, 
however, 
because He is able to do all things, suppose that He has actually done 
what 
He has not done. But we must inquire whether He has really done it ... It 
will 
be your duty, however, to adduce your proofs out of the Scriptures as 
plainly 
as we do...(Alexander Roberts and James Donaldson, Ante-Nicene Fathers 
(Grand 
Rapids: Eerdmans, 1951), Vol. III, Tertullian, Against Praxeas, ch. X and 
XI, 
p. 605).
 
The 
only grounds the Roman Catholic faithful have for believing in the teaching 
of 
the assumption is that a supposedly ‘infallible’ Pope declares it. The 
Orthodox 
Church says it cannot be defined because it was not taught by the 
Apostles 
and the Apostolic Church, but the faithful are free to accept it or 
reject 
it. It is not dogma and to accept it or deny it is not heresy. 
 
SEE:  http://www.celticorthodoxy.com/bkceltic-orthodox-church/prayto.html
 
SEE: 
http://www.celticorthodoxy.com/bkceltic-orthodox-church/mediatrix.html
 
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