Because the Assumption of Mary falls on a Monday this year, it is not a Holy Day of Obligation. But it remains a solemnity and it will be celebrated at the 8:15 a.m. and 5:30 p.m. Masses.
Today the strongest evidence for Mary's Assumption is, ironically, the complete lack of evidence.
No city ever claimed to have Mary's remains and no early Christian ever claimed to have a bodily relic of Mary. This is unlike the early veneration of the tombs of the Apostles and the other saints. Everyone knew that Peter and Paul's graves were in Rome, John and Timothy's graves were at Ephesus, Luke's grave Luke was in Greece, and Mark's grave was in Alexandria, Egypt and later moved to Venice. Furthermore, James' grave was in Jerusalem and Mary Magdalene's was in Marseille. The graves of the Old Testament saints were similarly venerated: Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob at Hebron; Rachel at Bethlehem (Matt 2:18), and in Jerusalem (Acts 2:29). The most logical reason to explain why NO early Christian ever spoke about a grave of the Virgin Mary was because there wasn't one.
It's also important to note that while Jesus ascended (it was his action) into heaven, Mary was assumed (God's action) into heaven.
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