This weeks reading was very refreshing. It was break from the repetitiveness that I found
myself stuck in while reading through Matthew, Mark, and Luke. Although John is
basically the same storyline that the previous books cover; the way it is
written made the reading very enjoyable to me. I enjoyed the prospective that
the writer wrote from. While reading through a lot of questions arose to me
while going through the book, but one account had me completely stumped. In chapter 2 of John apparently there was a
wedding, and the event was not talked about very long besides a couple of
lines. Growing up all I knew about this chapter was the miracle pf turning
water into wine, but the author seemed to leave out the key details of the
wedding which was who was the couple that was to be wedded. That really made me
look at a couple of things.
One of the
things that had to quickly be dismissed from my thought process was that it was
the wedding of Jesus to a bride. It would be pretty easy to think that the
wedding was indeed for Jesus and Mary Magdalene due to all the speculation
about the relationship between the two characters. I guess what made me come to
the conclusion that this was not the wedding of a Jesus and Mar Magdalene was
that she had not been brought into the picture, and if Jesus was indeed to be
wed that day why would he be invited to his own wedding. I seriously doubt that
it was his wedding unless he had a sudden case of amnesia which is never
mentioned. So with that out of my mind I
was able to deduce that it was not his wedding, and able to form my blog topic.
My question that I will try to find is:
Who was getting married at the wedding that occurred at Cana?
Finding
this answer I had to dig through a couple of websites that all seemed to
agree that the wedding was between Jesus and Mary Magdalene, but since I already
realized that was possible I was very disappointed that published sites found this
to be the case when clearly it isn’t. Eventually I found some good sources that
really helped unravel this mystery. The
first site that helped me form my answer was on the same mind frame that I was
on about the allegation of the event being centered on Jesus, and Mary
Magdalene. The site pointed out three
facts:
“Firstly: Jesus did not give any orders
on His own initiative; His Mother was the one who instructed the servants to do
whatever He tells them to do.
Secondly: If Jesus
and the bridegroom were one and the same, would it be necessary for the Holy
Mother to tell the servants “Do whatever He tells you”? Wouldn’t it have
been self-evident that the word of the bridegroom was sufficient? Isn’t
that what these very critics asserted, when they stated that “only the
bridegroom could give orders”?
Obviously, this was the
wedding of a very close friend or relative, which explains why the Holy
Mother was entitled to give instructions. But, for the Holy Mother to
have had to instruct the servants: “Do whatever He tells you”, is
also proof that the servants didn’t recognize Jesus as a person who had
any say in the festivities, let alone as the groom…
Thirdly: In the last
verse of this same chapter, it says: "After this (Christ’s
supposed wedding-feast in the city of Cana), they went down to Capernaum, He
(the… “bridegroom” Christ) and His mother and His brothers and His
disciples, and there (in Capernaum) they stayed for not many days".
Pay attention to the second statement the author writes; it would seem
like the wedding was a for someone Jesus knew or even a family member. The
website that I got this information from is from the following: “http://www.oodegr.com/english/ag_grafi/kd/kana1.htm”.
Although the website gave me a
good idea to who the wedding was for; I still was finding myself asking ok who
is this wedding for. The nest website I looked up helped me come to a lot of conclusions
about the mystery wedding. The website
that I used was the following: “http://jamestabor.com/2012/07/28/mark-and-john-a-wedding-at-cana-whose-and-where/”.
The post was written by James D. Tabor and basically he came to the conclusion
that the previous website also concluded. Tabor stated the following: “ Since the wedding is held in Cana, my
guess is that it could very well be the wedding of one of Jesus’ brothers,
perhaps James, to a sister or daughter of Nathanael, thus accounting for it
being held in that village. Cana then becomes a place to which Jesus can
return, and as with Capernaum, it served as a kind of “home” for him”.
I found both of these
sites helpful, but I mean all of this is speculation so the truth might not
ever be found in our contemporary society. What can be derived from this
account are two things: The wedding was not between Jesus and Mary Magdalene,
and the wedding was for someone Jesus was either related to or knew as a
friend. The idea makes since due to the
people who were at the wedding one person in particular. Jesus’s mother was
there at the wedding, and if she was there it had to be either one of her other
children’s wedding or a family friend. What I have come to conclude is that
Mary the mother of Jesus was in fact at the event, and for her to be there her
and Jesus must have known whomever was getting married. That is just my
speculation, but it does hold some weight due to the surrounding evidence
presented and other sources that are available.

