Yes, Mary was present in the Upper Room on Pentecost.
Yes, she was present in the upper room during the visit of the Holy Spirit.
They received the Holy Spirit.
The Holy Spirit, the Blessed Virgin Mary, & the 12 Apostles.
Mary was present with the Apostles when they received the Holy Spirit at Pentecost. She was gathered with them in the upper room as instructed by Jesus before his ascension. She played a vital role in the early Christian community as a witness to these events.
Pentecost is the feast which celebrates the coming of the Holy Spirit upon the Blessed Virgin Mary and the Apostles nine days after Our Blessed Lord's ascension into heaven. It is rightly called the birthday of the Church because, with the coming of the Holy Spirit, the apostles were no longer frightened, timid men in the upper room. They now had the courage of their convictions and were out preaching and baptizing by the thousands.
In the Bible, Mary Magdalene, Mary the mother of James and Joses, Joanna, and Susanna are sometimes referred to as female disciples or followers of Jesus, but they are not explicitly called apostles. There is no clear evidence of female apostles in the traditional sense of the twelve disciples chosen by Jesus.
It was mainly Matthew and john the apostles wrote it. but Mark and Luke also wrote but they were not apostles.
No, Mary of Bethany was not one of the apostles. She was a friend and follower of Jesus, commonly associated with her sister Martha and brother Lazarus. The apostles were the twelve chosen by Jesus to be his closest disciples and to spread his teachings after his death and resurrection.
No exact number is given. There were the eleven apostles (Acts 1:13); "the women" (an unknown number, v.14); Mary the mother of Jesus "and His brethren" (another uncertain number, v.14); and "about" 120 disciples (v.15).
At the last supper Jesus along with his 12 disciples were present.
One gospel song that mentions the days of the week is "Seven Days" by Uche Agu. This song reflects on how God's love and faithfulness are constant throughout the days of the week.
Actually the first Pentecost is recorded in Ex. 19.14-25 and Mary was not born until over 1500 years. But concerning the Pentecost described in Acts 2, Mary was in the upper room, but the disciples had gone up to the Temple to celebrate the First Pentecost (Ex. 19), and the men were in the courtyard of the men and the women were in their own courtyard. Notice that in Acts 2.5 it talks about 'men' and in verses 14, 22 and 29 Peter addresses the 'men'. The men respond in verse 37 and say to the disciples "men and brothers what shall we do".
Feast Days of Mary, Queen of the Apostles are holy days celebrated by Christians in a Church year. These days are celebrated in reverence to Mary, mother of Jesus. The number and in some cases dates of Marian Feasts vary in different Christian denominations.
Purple The Catholic Church uses different colors for different seasons and occasions during the Liturgical year White (or Silver) represents light, innocence, purity, joy, triumph, and glory: • Season of Christmas • Season of Easter • Feasts of the Lord, other than of His passion • Feasts of Mary, the angels, and saints who were not martyrs • All Saints (1 November) • Feasts of the Apostles • Nuptial Masses (Weddings) • Masses for the dead (Requiem Masses) when the deceased is a baptized child who died before the age of reason Red represents the Passion, blood, fire, God's Love, martyrdom: • Feasts of the Lord's passion, Blood, and Cross • Feasts of the martyrs • Palm Sunday • Pentecost Green represents the Holy Ghost, life eternal, hope: • Ordinary Time including . • Time After Epiphany . • Time After Pentecost Purple (or Violet) represents penance, humility, melancholy: • Season of Advent • Season of Lent • Vigils except for Ascension and Pentecost • Good Friday Black represents mourning and sorrow: • All Souls Day • Masses for the dead (Requiem Masses), except for baptized children who've died before the age of reason Rose represents joy: • Gaudete Sunday (Third Sunday of Advent) • Laetare Sunday (Fourth Sunday of Lent)