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The Testament of Mary
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The Testament of Mary - And Lazarus wept... (January 2013)
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Sophia
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Jan 16, 2013 12:26PM

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NB I think I'm following your line of thinking... (!)

Thing Two Testament of Mary
Sophia I think it's a better story John's way. You have this picture of Jesus moved by the beauty of life restored. In this book's account this "miracle" was tragic. Lazarus was raised, but not restored.


I understood that. My beliefs mean that I'm finding it quite a challenge to focus on the text!
I think it's a better story John's way. You have this picture of Jesus moved by the beauty of life restored. In this book's account this "miracle" was tragic. Lazarus was raised, but not restored.
That's interesting and I think it sounds right. He wasn't restored to life – as we understand it. I had thought that maybe Lazarus preferred the next life, but that would have strengthened John's case...
This way is also more realistic; after being four days dead in that sort of climate you would be a mess.

I suppose it could also put forth the suggestion that the answer to one person's well-intentioned and heartfelt prayer (i.e. Mary and Martha) could have such a ruinous effect on another (i.e. Lazarus). In the same hand, I think you'd have to have a pretty nihilistic view of life to suggest that divine intervention (of one sort or another) could produce such trauma. It's one thing to discuss why a putatively good divine being would let bad things happen, but another entirely to suggest that that same deity would willfully inflict such devastation. Tóibín's retelling casts Mary's son as a rather capricious and short-sighted individual—but perhaps that was his intention all along, and it certainly supports her emotional distance in the story.
On a more historical note (RANT WARNING), I'm not aware of any first century Jewish burials that involved digging holes and depositing bodies in the soil. The custom was more along the lines of letting the body rot in a cave and depositing the remaining bones in an ossuary. This goes back to my point in the other thread that The Testament of Mary feels off-the-cuff and poorly researched—especially since The Master came across as completely the opposite. I'm sure the average reader wouldn't know or care about such petty details, but it disturbs me a little that an author who had won me over with impeccable research would so casually flout historical accuracy.

Maybe that's his point: that Christianity is deeply flawed?
I'm not aware of any first century Jewish burials that involved digging holes and depositing bodies in the soil. The custom was more along the lines of letting the body rot in a cave and depositing the remaining bones in an ossuary.
Yes, I'd always understand that Lazarus came out of a cave; equally that Mary gave birth to Jesus in a cave - and not a stable (at least not what Westerners would understand by a stable).
Did Tóibín want people to engage with what is commonly understood as a grave? I think he takes a lot of liberties with factual details to ensure a less well informed readership can engage with the elements of his story that would strike them as 'foreign'. But, but, but surely the appeal of this book would necessarily be limited, in the first case?

Which makes it pretty hard to argue that this isn't some attack against the church... :)
Sophia wrote: "But, but, but surely the appeal of this book would necessarily be limited, in the first case?"
I certainly agree with you there. But do you think that writing about such a reflexively controversial subject limits the audience by definition? At that point, limiting the appeal would be moot since you're essentially writing to a target audience.

I think you are right, Sophia. Particularly since the book is so short, I don't think that many people will be interested in buying it. But who knows.

Sadly, some of us have a relationship with God that is complicated, and a puzzlement about the schism between scripture and daily life. The yearning for the divine butts up hard against the ways that God, Religion and the clergy fail us day to day.

*Chuckle* I can enjoy retellings. It's only when things swing towards reimagining or repurposing that I get a bit irked. I'm also thinking that Testament of Mary has no way of speaking to my Protestant upbringing. Perhaps that's my bigger issue in struggling to find some connection with the book.
Deborah wrote: "Sadly, some of us have a relationship with God that is complicated, and a puzzlement about the schism between scripture and daily life. The yearning for the divine butts up hard..."
Some of us? I'll join Sophia in saying that I know exactly what you mean.

It didn't do much for my Russian Orthodox upbringing - maybe because we revere the Mother of God...
I think my Catholic upbringing probably did help make Toibin's take on the story more interesting. Catholics also revere Mary, of course. Toibin is playing off the idea that Mary was human, but was dragged into this drama of immortals. I was intrigued by Toibin's attempt to explore what that would have been like for Mary. His take obviously differs from Catholic doctrine. Without the Annunciation, Mary would be in a baffling situation.

I take Lazarus' weeping as a sign of his reluctance to return to life on earth. Why would he want to be here when he could be there?
And I didn't see so much importance in the "digging up" because Toibin does call it a tomb at one point. I just assume tombs are dirty places. In re-reading this section, I do see his frequent mention of the word up, but on the first pass, it didn't come across as false to me.