She in the Holy Scriptures
Mary Magdalene is named in all four Gospels — more frequently than most of the Twelve — and appears consistently first in the lists of the women who followed Christ. The references below trace her from her healing through her witness of the Resurrection.
Healed of seven demons and supporting the ministry: Luke 8:1-3; Mark 16:9.
Present at the Crucifixion: Matthew 27:55-56; Mark 15:40-41; John 19:25.
Witness of the burial: Matthew 27:61; Mark 15:47; Luke 23:55-56.
Coming to the tomb as a Myrrh-bearer: Matthew 28:1-10; Mark 16:1-8; Luke 24:1-12; John 20:1-18.
First to see the risen Lord and sent to announce it to the apostles: John 20:17-18; Mark 16:9-11.
Discipleship and the Resurrection
According to Luke 8:2-3, after the Lord expelled seven demons from her, Mary Magdalene followed Jesus through Galilee and Judea, serving alongside other women and providing for the ministry from her own means. The Gospels present her as one who remained faithful through the crucifixion: while the disciples fled, she stayed near the cross with the mother of Jesus and the Apostle John. Mark 15:40 names her among the women watching from a distance, alongside Mary the mother of James and Salome.
She witnessed the burial of Christ, and on the morning of the resurrection she came to the tomb and found it empty. The risen Christ appeared to her first and sent her to tell the apostles, 'I have seen the Lord!' Orthodox tradition regards this as the first proclamation of the resurrection in the world, and it is the basis for her titles 'Apostle to the Apostles' and Equal-to-the-Apostles — honored as the first messenger sent by the Lord himself to announce his rising.
Later Life and Preaching
By tradition, Mary Magdalene continued as a preacher of the resurrection after Pentecost. The synaxarion relates that she traveled to Rome and proclaimed Christ throughout Italy; some identify her with the woman named in Paul's Epistle to the Romans (16:6) who 'bestowed much labor' on the church, though this identification is uncertain.
She later assisted the Apostle and Evangelist John the Theologian during his missionary work, settling at Ephesus, where, according to tradition, she remained until she reposed in peace and was buried in that city.
Orthodox accounts relate that Mary Magdalene came before the Emperor Tiberius Caesar and spoke to him of the resurrection. When the emperor scoffed that a man could no more rise from the dead than an egg could turn red, the egg in her hand immediately changed color. By tradition this miracle is the origin of the custom of dyeing eggs red at Pascha, accompanied by the greeting 'Christ is Risen!'
Early Witnesses
As early as the third century, Saint Hippolytus of Rome, commenting on the Song of Songs, described the women who announced the resurrection as 'apostles to the apostles' — among the earliest surviving testimonies to Mary Magdalene's distinctive role. Later Fathers carried the same honor forward: Saint John Chrysostom repeatedly praised the courage of the Myrrh-bearing women, contrasting their faithfulness with the fear of the disciples during the Passion, and Saint Gregory Palamas, in his Homily on the Myrrhbearers, emphasized Mary Magdalene as the first witness of the resurrection.
Relics & Shrines
According to tradition, the relics of Mary Magdalene were transferred from Ephesus to Constantinople in the ninth century, during the reign of Emperor Leo VI, and were later moved to the Lateran Cathedral in Rome. Portions of her relics are also venerated at sites in France (Provence) and on Mount Athos.
Veneration and Identity
The Eastern Orthodox Church has always regarded Mary Magdalene as a virtuous Myrrh-bearer and Equal-to-the-Apostles, venerated as distinct from other women of the Gospels and never identified as a penitent sinner. In the Western Church she was long conflated with Mary of Bethany and with the 'sinful woman' of the Gospels; in 1969 Pope Paul VI removed this conflation from the Roman Calendar. Her feast is kept on July 22 in both East and West. She has an Akathist hymn dedicated to her and is commemorated liturgically through a troparion and kontakion.