Mary could have received severe punishment from the Jewish elders, including being stoned to death. After Joseph received a vision explaining the situation he decided not to subject Mary to a public trial and took her as his wife.
It is not clear , but it could be Nazareth.
Yes, she could have refused but God knew that she would say yes.
It's a 1/365 chance, but it could have happened.
There are many controversial perspectives on this topic. You first have to consider the date, cultural backdrop and rhetoric of that time. It sounds rude in our culture but was it in theirs? Some scholars believe it was Jesus' polite way of addressing women back then.
Mary is mentioned as the mother of Jesus in Mark 6:3, but never as the mother of God. Two other ambiguous passages could be references to Mary the mother of Jesus but, if so, strangely worded.
A group of people could have stolen it. He could have not existed at all. They could have opened the wrong tomb.
But of course! Nobody knows who they are. You could be related for that matter. Jesus had brothers and sisters. Mark 6:3
Yes she could because the desciples went and told her that Jesus got taken away by the roman guards, so she came to him after when he was on the cross and brought cloths and clean water to wash his feet. + he had a crown of thorns on his head, which was a way for the romans to mock him being a 'king',... and Mary knew this.
It is possible for Him to sin at any given time, however, being Jesus, he chooses not to.
AnswerMany of the gods and god-men worshipped around this time were said to have been born of virgin mothers. For Jesus not to have had a virgin mother could have been seen as a failing. Even the Saoshyant, anticipated by the followers of Zoroastrianism and so closely parallelling Jesus, was expected to be born of a virgin mother.
The Romans cast lots for his clothes according to what was foretold in the Psalms, and the sandals to could have been one of them.
The Solemnity of Mary honors Mary as the Mother of Jesus including both His Humanity and His Divinity. The very early Church leaders did not believe that Mary, a human, could be the mother of Jesus as God. A council in AD 41 settled this.