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  1. Mary Magdalene was present at Jesus’ crucifixion and burial, according to the Synoptic Gospels and the other three canonical gospels. All four gospels credit Mary with being the first to see the empty tomb and the first to witness Jesus’ resurrection, either on her own or as part of a group that included included Jesus’ mother.

  2. The Resurrected Christ Appearing to Mary Magdelene in the Garden. South Netherlandish. ca. 1500–1520. Not on view. In the Gospel of John (20:11–17), Mary Magdalene arrives at Jesuss empty tomb and asks a nearby gardener where she can find Jesus’s body.

  3. Apr 5, 2016 · Painted by the 17th century Dutch limner Jan de Wet, one depicts Jesus and Mary Magdalene at the empty tomb–and we understand immediately why she failed to recognize him at first: He looks exactly like a Dutch burgher tending to his garden, wearing a large black hat and leaning on a shovel.

  4. Apr 3, 2021 · Going back to the Biblical accounts of Mary Magdalene, one of the most depicted scenes of her story is taken from the Gospel of John, where she finds the tomb of Jesus empty and weeps. She then meets a man who she mistakes for a gardener, but he is in fact the resurrected Jesus.

  5. Christ and St Mary Magdalene at the Tomb. The day after the Crucifixion, Mary Magdalene found Christ’s tomb empty. Two angels spoke to her as she wept, and when she turned she saw a man she thought was a gardener.

  6. Apr 1, 2024 · Artists extensively interpreted the Noli me tangere scene—the meeting of Mary Magdalene and Jesus served as a creative space to explore various themes like resurrection, renewal, and the connection between Jesus and the metaphorical Garden of Eden.

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  8. Traditionally identified as the woman who was a sinner and wept on Christ’s feet and wiped away her tears with her hair (Luke 7:36-50), Mary Magdalene is shown here as the hermit saint she became upon giving up her life of moral decadence, after her encounter with the Savior.

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