History of the Doctrine of the Assumption
Author: Dr. Robert Schihl
The constant faith (tradition, paradosis) of the Church affirms the belief in the Assumption of Mary.
From the 5th Century:
- the Feast of the Assumption of Mary was celebrated in Syria;
- the Apocryphal Books were testimony of a certain christian sense of the abhorency felt that the body of the Mother of God should lie in a sepulchre;
- the Feast of the Assumption was celebrated in Jerusalem (and perhaps even in Alexandria);
- clear and explicit testimony was given on the Assumption of Mary in the Eastern Church; The same testimony is clear also in the Western Church (Gregory, Tours, 538-594);
- the Feast of the Assumption was celebrated in Spain;
- no dispute whatsoever in the Western Church; there was dispute over the false epistles of Jerome on the subject;
- the Feast of the Assumption was celebrated in the city of Rome, and in France;
- certain and undisputed faith in the Assumption of Mary in the universal Church;
- "Mary, having completed the course of her earthly life, was assumed body and soul to heavenly glory."
From Chap. 7 of A Biblical Apologetic of the Catholic Faith, by Dr. Robert Schihl, Professor at Regent University. It appears here for for personal use only and may not be reproduced for any other use without permission of the author.