Jesus the son of Mary (Mark 6:3)
Helen Bond, writing in the Summer 2026 issue of BAR magazine, discusses the unusual designation by the townspeople of Jesus as 'the son of Mary' after he had preached a sermon in the Nazareth synagogue. The question is: “What was the exact implication behind that statement?” In the first place it was certainly in contradiction to the usual pattern, which is reflected in both Luke (v. 4:22) and John (v. 6:42).
Joel Marcus reviews the first three theories summarized below, only to point out possible objections to each of them:
Possibility #1: “Ilan has shown that a matronym could be used when the mother's pedigree was superior to the father's, but that can scarely be the case here, since Davidic descent was the most important of all, and Jesus was a Davidide on his fathers side.., a fact of which Mark himself seems to be aware (see 10:48; 11:10...)”
Possibility #2: “Bauckham thinks that 'son of Mary' distinguishes Jesus from his 'brothers,' who in Bauckham's view are sons of Joseph by a previous wife, but in that case the brothers' mother would need to be specified too; lacking such an identification, the natural assumption is that the men listed after Jesus have the same mother as he does.”
Possibility #3: “Freedman suggests that perhaps they did all have the same mother, Mary, but that Joseph had a previous or subsequent marriage and that Jesus and his brothers (and sisters) therefore needed to be distinguished from the children of Joseph's other wife or wives. But in that case Mary should be mentioned alongside of Joseph, not instead of him.”
Possibility #4: But that is not the end of the theories since it has been seriously proposed that the townspeople in calling Jesus “the son of Mary” are actually labeling him as being illegitimate. The noted Bible scholar Raymond Brown discusses the pros and cons of this theory in detail, beginning with later Jewish writings. For example, the Christian writer Tertullian (ca. AD 197) noted that in north Africa Jewish opponents had labeled Jesus as the son of a prostitute. Similarly, the Roman critic Celsius in approximately AD 177-180 quoted Jewish sources as saying that Mary was driven out by her husband Joseph for having had sex with a Roman soldier.
Much more germane, however, is the evidence provided by the New Testament itself. And here we run into a mare's nest in which much or little depends on which ancient manuscript is felt to best represent the original writing, and what are the implications of considering the variations in wording found in the other Gospel accounts. Basically it all boils down to the fact that while most early manuscripts of Mark 6:3 have the townspeople calling Jesus “the carpenter, the son of Mary,” there is one even earlier source which reads that he is “the son of the carpenter and of Mary.” Then there are the variations in wording found in the other Gospel accounts which must be dealt with:
Matthew 13:55 – “Is not this the son of the carpenter? Is not his mother called Mary...?”
Luke 4:22 – “ Is not this the son of Joseph?”
John 6:42 – “Is not this Jesus the son of Joseph? Do we not know his father and mother?”
Brown next considers the evidence of John 8:41 in which Jesus states that the “sons of Abraham” are in reality “sons of Satan.” The Jews reply, “We were not born illegitimate. We have but one father, God Himself.” The question remains as to whether the word “we” should be stressed in these two sentences, in which case the Jews are in fact strongly hinting that Jesus is illegitimate, unlike themselves.
The same ambiguity exists in regard to the implications of Mark 6:3. After careful consideration of all these issues, Brown concludes that “as a result of studying both the later and earlier evidence, I would have to judge that we simply do not know whether the Jewish charge of illegitimacy, which appears clearly in the second century, had a source independent of the infancy narrative tradition – a source that would help to confirm as historical the chronology of an early birth supposed by Matthew and (implicitly) by Luke.”
Reeder puts this verse into perspective when he states: “Nothing less than the public face of the household is at stake in Matthew 1:18-19; Mark 6:3-4; Luke 15:11-32.”
“The...phrase 'the son of Mary' is probably disparaging. It was contrary to Jewish usage to describe a man as the son of his mother, even when she was a widow, except in insulting terms. Rumors to the effect that Jesus was illegitimate appear to have circulated in his own lifetime and may lie behind the reference as well. The rhetorical question of the people indicates that they know Jesus only in a superficial way. They find no reason to believe that he possesses the anointment of God.” (Lane)
Mann concurs with the above analysis as he writes that “to describe a man as the 'son of' his mother,' even when the father was deceased, is often a usage of insult. We would be unjustified in seeing the Markan phrase any implication of knowledge of the tradition of virgin birth. The textual evidence is not illuminating, for while all the uncial texts, and many minuscules, have the text we have translated here, many important texts support a version not unlike that of Matthew.”
Anderson states that “it is by no means certain that the original reading in Mark is that of RSV, the carpenter, son of Mary. If it is, it is most unusual. Among the Jews a man is called after his father. Must we suppose then that Joseph was dead by this time (but see Luke 4:22)? Or is a slur intended by naming Jesus after his mother, in order to render his paternity suspect? Or again is Mark's omission of the father meant to suggest that only God is the Father of Jesus?” These are questions which he leaves unanswered.
Grassmick: “The phrase Mary's Son was...derogatory since a man was not described as his mother's son in Jewish usage even if she was a widow, except by insult (cf. Jud. 11:1-2; Josh 8:41; 9:29). Their words, calculated insults, also suggested they knew there was something unusual about Jesus' birth.”
But Rengstorf expresses the contrary opinion that it was common at that time to refer to a person by their mother's name after the father had died.
As Perrin summarizes the situation, “Scholars disagree whether the reference to Jesus as the son of Mary in Mark 6:3 is derogatory. Most note that this reference implies Jesus' illegitimacy. In any case, the climactic saying of Jesus in Mark 6:4...does not reflect positively on the mother (or brothers) of Jesus.”
Finally, getting back to the article by Helen Bond which started this post, here is her conclusion regarding the parentage of Jesus, as understood by the people in Nazareth at that time. “It is often suggested that describing Jesus in this way was a deliberate slur, implying that his father was unknown or that there was something irregular about his birth. But insulting Jesus is not the issue: the villagers' point is that they know everything about him, not that they despise him...The best explanation, in my view, is that Jesus was locally called the 'son of Mary' because Joseph was known to have had more than one wife. The point the villagers are making, once again, is that they know everything about Jesus down to the precise identity of his mother. On the rare occasion when women appear in genealogies in the Hebrew Bible, it typically is to distinguish a man's sons by one wife rather than another [citing Genesis 4:19-22; 1 Kings 1:5; 2:13]. Presumably, Jesus was normally known as the 'son of Joseph' but in Nazareth, where Joseph was known to have had two (or more) wives, he was sometimes further distinguished as the 'son of Mary.'”
Adding to this supposition, according to Bond, is the fact that the Gospel accounts suggest Joseph's family consisted of at least seven children. “If these were full siblings, then Joseph's family was extremely large given the high infant mortality rates at the time, when a third of children died in their first year, and up to half before their fifth birthday. This would require Mary to have had at least 14 pregnancies, and quite possibly more...This is not completely impossible, but it does seem extremely high in an ancient context where poor healthcare and sanitation, not to mention frequent complications during pregnancy and birth, would all have taken their toll.”