The Gospel of Mary Magdalene -- San Francisco Opera Performance Review
The Gospel of Mary Magdalene
San
Francisco Opera Performance
June
22, 2013
There are 13 mentions of Mary Magdalene by name in the
canonical gospels. I will list them here
without quoting them.
Mark 15:40
Mark 15:47
Mark 16:1
Mark 16:9
Luke 8:2
Luke 24:10
Matthew 27:56
Matthew 27:61
Matthew 28:1
John 19:25
John 20:1, 2
John 20:11
John 20: 16
The woman in Luke 7:36-50 who washes and kisses
his feet is sometimes assumed to be Mary Magdalene, but I don't count this
because she is not named in the passage.
There is no other mention of Mary Magdalene in
the New Testament and of these few references all but one of them is related to
the stories Jesus' death and resurrection.
Luke is the only gospel that mentions Mary Magdalene outside the context
of the final events of his life. About a
third of the gospel accounts are taken up with the dramatic last week of Jesus'
life. They are not particularly
interested in recounting the details of his life or who he was as a person. So it is curious that Mary Magdalene would
appear to play such an important role in this crucial part of his life, which
the gospels are supremely interested in, yet otherwise the gospel writers seem
at pains to minimize her importance and even discredit her. I can only conclude that Mary Magdalene must
have played such an important role during the week of Jesus' death and the
immediate aftermath, and this was so well known among the early Christian
groups that the gospel writers could not ignore or omit her, however much they
would have liked to. That immediately
leads to the question of what role she might have played in Jesus' life apart
from the week of his death. The gospels
have almost nothing to say about this.
Luke mentions that Jesus cast seven devils out of her and that she was
part of a group of women who supported Jesus and his (male) followers
"with their own means." (Luke
8:3) This must be the source of the
opera's portrayal of Mary Magdalene as a woman of some significant means. I found this a rather incredible stretch and
I do not think that Mary Magdalene was in any way or shape affluent.
In the gospel accounts Mary Magdalene was the
first one to discover the empty tomb and to "see" the resurrected
Jesus. The opera is ambivalent about the
resurrection, but seems to come down on the side of skepticism. As Mary is hunched over the body of Jesus he
rises up from below the stage behind her as a kind of apparition. They carry on a conversation wherein he
exhorts her to go out and tell others what he has imparted to her, but she
never faces him or interacts with him as in the gospel accounts. He then disappears beneath the stage leaving
Mary alone with the dead body of Jesus.
J. D. Crossan comments
The women's
discovery of the empty tomb was created by Mark to avoid a risen-apparition to
the disciples, and the women's vision of the risen Jesus was created by Matthew
to prepare for a risen apparition to the disciples. There is no evidence of historical tradition
about those two details prior to Mark in the 70s. Furthermore, the women, rather than being
there early and being steadily removed, are not there early but are steadily
included. They are included, of course,
to receive only message-visions, never mandate-visions. They are told to go tell the disciples, while
the disciples are told to go teach the nations.
(Crossan, p. 561)
The Gospel of Mary is a text from the second
century, composed at least a hundred years after the relevant events. It is fragmentary and there are only two
manuscripts in existence, one, a Greek text from the second century, and a
Coptic text from the fifth century ( Ehrman, p. 35) This text indicates that some early Christian
groups held Mary Magdalene in much higher regard than the writers of the
canonical gospels did. It also indicates
some rivalry between the followers of Peter and those who held Mary in higher
esteem. This rivalry probably had to do
with the basic direction and message of the movement. I am skeptical of the opera's depiction of
this as a personal rivalry between Peter and Mary for the attention of Jesus
and of clashes between Jesus and Peter over the basic direction and objectives
of the movement. I am equally skeptical
of Peter's opposition of Jesus marriage to Mary Magdalene, never mind the very idea
of the marriage itself.
This opera is a fanciful rewrite of the gospel
stories and message. It takes
considerable liberties with the traditional texts, and even with the Gnostic
texts that it loosely draws upon. I see
it as an attempt by a disgruntled Roman Catholic to recast the basic message of
Christianity into something a little more palatable for a modern audience. If you are a lapsed Catholic, or a nominal
Catholic, or a disgruntled, alienated Catholic, but unwilling to break entirely
with the Church and your past, you might see something sympathetic in
this.
I didn't care for it and found it frankly rather
dull. I debated with myself about
leaving at intermission, but I sat there so long thinking about it that I ended
up staying for the whole performance.
The reason that it is dull is that there is not much action. The characters share agonized ventilation of
their inner lives and their relationships in a soap-operatic style, but nothing
much happens. There is no drama. You have to be interested in these philosophical
speeches or the whole thing drops dead. The
set is visually uninteresting. It looks
like a construction site or a rock quarry and it doesn't change throughout the entire
performance. Usually operas are visually
interesting and imaginative if nothing else.
Even if you can't stand the music, the spectacle is worth the admission
price. But this one has little to offer
in the way of visual spectacle, so an important element of audience engagement
is removed. It would have helped if the
music was better, but I did not find anything memorable or interesting in the
music score, the singing, and especially in the lyrics. It was preachy, and the messages it was
trying to impart I did not find particularly insightful or thought
provoking. Some of it was rather trite,
in fact. If you are Catholic or a
traditional Christian, you might take umbrage at some of the departures from
the traditional conception of Jesus, his life, and his message. But this does not bother me at all. I thought the conception was a little
far-fetched in some respects, but the way I look at it, any reconstruction of
Jesus, any artistic representation of any aspect of his life, is by definition
an interpretation, and thus will be highly personal and idiosyncratic in
nature. This is fine with me. It is the nature of art and it is what is
interesting about art. I welcome
artists' reinventions of stories, incidents, personalities, and images from the
past in new and interesting characterizations.
My distaste for this performance has nothing to do with stodginess or
conservatism. I just didn't think it
came across.
An opera about Mary Magdalene raises issues for
the contemporary church that have a history going back to the beginning of the
Christian movement: the role of women,
not only within the church, but relations generally between men and women. Asceticism was major social and philosophical trend
both within early Christianity and in the many Gnostic sects that soon followed
and competed with budding Christianity.
Many of these writers despised women and especially warned men against sexual
connection to women. These people became
the orthodoxy within Christianity. But
Mary Magdalene remained a thorny challenge to their authority. If Mary had a special intimacy with Jesus
(whether sexual or not), it would set a bad precedent and a bad role model for
women and men within a church that exalted a de-sexualized existence,
especially for men. Women would have to
be included in the leadership, their views would have to be taken seriously,
sexual relations with women would be a legitimate concern and activity. This was anathema to these early ascetics, as
it is to ascetics today. Necessarily,
the role and significance of Mary Magdalene in the life of Jesus would have to
be minimized and her authority on the teachings and mission of Jesus would have
to be discredited. And that is exactly
what happened. This opera brings these ancient
controversies back to life. It may
resonate with you, if you are struggling with any sort of ascetic proscriptions
weighing down your life, making you miserable, and destroying your personal relationships. But if you have somehow managed to avoid all
of that or freed yourself from it, then this opera will likely not have much to
offer you, and you'll find it rather tedious, as I did. There were plenty of empty seats. You can probably get tickets quite easily.
Notes
Crossan, J. D. (1998) The
Birth of Christianity. New
York: Harper Collins.
Ehrman, Bart D.
(2003) Lost Scriptures: Books that did
not make it into the New Testament.
Oxford and New York: Oxford
University Press.