Considering that He appeared to "Cephas, then of the twelve: after that, he was seen of above five hundred brethren at once" - 1Corinthians 15:5 And that Jesus had committed the care of His mother to John the apostle who was definitely one of "the twelve"(John 19:26-27) it would be a safe assumption that Jesus did indeed appear to His mother after resurrection.
Patience and to never give up.
No!! Jesus never married! And he wasn't English, so he didn't have a 'mum' as you call a mother, or mom.
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.
The word virgin comes from the Virgin Mary, who is the mother of Jesus. A virgin is a person who has never had sex.
No, tradition says she never married again after the death of St. Joseph.
The Catholic Church has never worshiped Mary. They worship God alone.
The women named in the Bible who never die are: Mary, mother of Jesus Sarah, wife of Abraham Deborah, judge of Israel Miriam, sister of Moses Esther, Queen of Persia Ruth, Moabite ancestor of Jesus Abigail, wife of David Elizabeth, mother of John the Baptist Mary Magdalene, witness to the resurrection of Jesus Priscilla, wife of Aquila
No. Jesus never had a girlfriend or a wife, and he never had children.
Mother Teresa was sent here to do God's work. She did the job of Jesus Christ: she touched the lives of many people because she did the stuff Jesus did. She cured the sick and made blind people see again. Mother Teresa will never be forgotten. She worked mostly in India.
God granted the favor to Mary because she never sinned in her life, not even once.
no jesus never fell in love and he never married
A:Probably because he was not really the cousin of Jesus. It is only in Luke's Gospel that we are told they were related, because John's mother Elizabeth was the cousin of Mary, the mother of Jesus. However, Uta Ranke-Heinemann (Putting Away Childish Things) says that Elizabeth was a literary creation by the author of Luke's Gospel. So, on the scholarly view, John and Jesus were not cousins.