The Story of Mary Magdalene and the Red Egg
While trying to understand why I had been drawn to placing red eggs in images drawn after a heart attack, I came across the story of Mary Magdalene and the red egg. I was floored, astonished, awed. I knew nothing of this myth or symbolism, yet had been drawn to draw it. It certainly was an experience of living with archetypal images and forces.
(Link to original story)
Mary Magdalene, the Resurrection and the Red Egg
(from The Catholic Company)
It was Mary Magdalene’s great love for Christ that kept her standing at the foot of the Cross, weeping and grief-stricken, until her Savior died. It was her heartbreaking pain of loss that drove her to his tomb at the first light of day in order to anoint his body.
As a reward for her great love and faithfulness, she is the privileged person to whom Jesus first appeared on Easter Sunday morning; she was the very first witness of the Resurrection.
It was Mary Magdalene, a woman, who went and told the Apostles that Jesus had risen from the dead; for this she is called “Apostle to the Apostles.”
After Jesus’ Resurrection and Ascension, Mary Magdalene continued her mission as an evangelizer, contemplative, and mystic in the heart of the Church.
According to tradition, after Jesus’ Ascension into heaven, the Magdalene—a wealthy woman of some importance—boldly presented herself to the Emperor Tiberius Caesar in Rome to proclaim the resurrection of Jesus Christ, with an egg in hand to illustrate her message.
Holding the egg out to him, she exclaimed for the first time what is now the universal Easter proclamation among Christians, “Christ is risen!”
The emperor, mocking her, said that Jesus had no more risen than the egg in her hand was red. Immediately, the egg turned red as a sign from God to illustrate the truth of her message. The Emperor then heeded her complaints about Pilate condemning an innocent man to death, and had Pilate removed from Jerusalem under imperial displeasure.