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Mary’s
presentation was celebrated in Jerusalem in the sixth century. A church was
built there in honor of this mystery. The Eastern Church was more interested
in the feast, but it does appear in the West in the 11th century. Although
the feast at times disappeared from the calendar, in the 16th century it
became a feast of the universal Church.
As with Mary’s birth, we read of Mary’s presentation in the temple only in
apocryphal literature. In what is recognized as an unhistorical account, the
Protoevangelium of James tells us that Anna and Joachim offered Mary to God
in the Temple when she was three years old. This was to carry out a promise
made to God when Anna was still childless.
Though unhistorical, Mary’s presentation has an important theological
purpose. It continues the impact of the feasts of the Immaculate Conception
and of the birth of Mary. It emphasizes that the holiness conferred on Mary
from the beginning of her life on earth continued through her early
childhood and beyond.
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