Mary Magdalene Wins 2012 Golden Halo!

Congratulations to 2012 Golden Halo Winner -- Mary Magdalene!

The Holy Gospel of Lent Madness,
according to the Supreme Executive Committee.

Early on the first day of the week, while it was still dark, Mary Magdalene came to the tomb and saw that the stone had been removed from the tomb. But Mary stood weeping outside the tomb. As she wept, she bent over to look into the tomb; and she saw two angels in white, sitting where the body of Jesus had been lying, one at the head and the other at the feet. They said to her, ‘Woman, why are you weeping?’ She said to them, ‘They have taken away my Lord, and I do not know where they have laid him. Plus, I was worried that Emma might win the Golden Halo once all of Hawaii cast their votes.’ When she had said this, she turned round and saw Jesus standing there, but she did not know that it was Jesus. Jesus said to her, ‘Woman, why are you weeping?’ Supposing him to be the gardener, she said to him, ‘Sir, if you have voted for Emma please tell me and I will go away.’ Jesus said to her, ‘Mary! You have won the 2012 Golden Halo!’ She turned and said to him in Hebrew, ‘Rabbouni!’ (which means Holy Toledo!). Jesus said to her, ‘Do not hold on to me, because I have not yet decided upon the bracket for Lent Madness 2013. But log onto www.lentmadness.org and encourage my disciples to buy a commemorative mug.' Say to them, “I am ascending to my Father and your Father, to my SEC and your SEC (to straighten out those two goofy priests).”’ Mary Magdalene went and announced to the disciples, ‘I have seen the Lord.’ And then she told them she had won the Golden Halo. They were amazed, but Thomas cast his eyes downward, for he remembered his poor performance in the first round .

The "Gospel" of the Supreme Executive Committee.

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95 comments on “Mary Magdalene Wins 2012 Golden Halo!”

    1. Bless you - Joanie on the pony is my home town (Chinon, France) girl and I too am faithful to her!

  1. Congrats to MM! Heaven's sports bars are filled with celebration! She fought the good fight and well deserves her Golden Halo! Thank you both, Tim and Scott, for bringing light and learning to Lent. May you and yours have a most joyous and blessed Easter. I can't wait for next year's brackets.

    1. "Heaven's sports bars are filled with celebration!" I have loved all of this Lent Madness, but that is the best quote of all! Thanks. This is why I'm an Episcopalian.

  2. Well, as a first time participant in Lent Madness, I must say its been fun, although at times irreverant. As I commented earlier, I was a little disappointed that it turned out to be a popularity contest rather than a serious look at the spiritual virtues of the contestants. Oh well, life is full of disappointments (ask Deitrick Bonhoffer); the blogs were entertaining and our Supreme Council seemed to enjoy themselves enormously. I do admit to getting too serious about something that is really just entertainnment (like politics?!?). I look forward to next year!

    1. Dennis, I respectfully beg to differ about this being a popularity contest. As the brackets dwindled down, I found myself giving great consideration to what all of these individuals faced and accomplished. I had my favorites, but in some cases they didn't get my vote because I did take a very serious look at the spiritual virtues of the contestants. The choices were sometimes difficult and the process was enlightening. It was serious, passionate work, and the humor kept it from devolving into an electronic church fight. The Golden Halo doesn't matter, but the blessed saints we encountered, the marvelous writings we read, and the laughter we shared most certainly do. Today's blog and posts are the perfect end to this madness. This is my first year, too, and it won't be my last. I'll be back...

      1. I didn't see it so much as a popularity context, as a demonstration that different saints resonate with different people. All of the women and the men had virtues... and really how do you compare differing virtues ?

        1. In the middle ages, there were many local saints, and their veneration was an integral part of medieval society (as well as an economic boon). Readers of the Brother Cadfael mysteries will remember the importance of St Winifrid to the town where she was born and buried. I like to think of this year's Lent Madness vis-a-vis Enmegabowh and Emma and Philander Chase as a return to that idea. There are of course and always have been "universal" saints, but people love their local saints with a different kind of love.

          1. . . . and we can only hope that St. Winifred is chosen for Lent Madness one year!

      2. It IS (was!) Lent "Madness", not "Lent Seriousness". Lots of opportunity for the latter other places. Seriously (for a moment), there were people I didn't invite here because I was concerned this exercise would just make them angry (wrong kind of "Madness"!). And people I did, because I hoped they'd enjoy it as much as I did.

  3. Thanks to the SEC and all the celebrity bloggers / participants. It was fun and a wonderful learning event. I am looking forward to next year.

    Congrats to St. Mary Mag - she rocks!

  4. I now leave my house in thanks that Mary Mags has won the GOLDEN HALO fair and square and as I serve as Deacon at the Bishop's Chrism Mass, I will try with all my might and main not to skip in procession, especially since I have poor balance and am wont to trip over a cobblestone or two....OH ! Who gives a holy fig...MARY MAGS has done it ! And I love the SEC version of her appearance at the tomb, knowing full well that my two Padres have been consigned to hell for blasphemy. You go Padres...we'll just have to pray for humorless folk, a/k/a sore losers. Thanks for a glorious LENT MADNESS !!!

  5. I want to add my thanks to everyone who's been with us for this Lent Madness. It's been great fun for me (well, except for having my saints get clobbered a lot). I've enjoyed getting to know the commenters. I'm even more impressed with Tim and Scott's ingenuity and enthusiasm. Best of all, my fellow celebrity bloggers are so creative and are just totally awesome.

  6. Hurrah for Mary Magdalene! She was my pick from the beginning! About that commemorative mug? I already bought the Lent Madness 2012 mug! I want a mug with the winner on it! Possible?

  7. Hurrah! Now on to the Easter Tridium.

    Part of me thinks I should be shocked at this version of the Gospel, but it appears that I am not. 😉

    Can I pre-order my Lent 2013 mug so that it arrives in Australia for Ash Wednesday??

  8. I must confess that I thought Bonhoeffer would win... then I realized that no matter who I voted for, I didn't really object to whomever eventually won. I'm a TEXAN (EVERYONE KNOWS WHAT THAT MEANS!) and understand how local pride trumps many things... but surprised even myself that when it came time to vote for Mary vs. Emma, the Hawaiians had me convinced that Emma deserved to be in the final contest...and my finger, no longer under my control, despite my desire to vote for Mary Magdalene, knowing she would probably win, pressed the Emma button in fellowship with Hawaii, so long an underdog state, yet a strong Anglican one. Not everyone who voted for Emma lived on the island! You rock, Hawaii! Those of us following LentMadness now know a true Hawaiian saint! Would we, had it not been for LentMadness?

    1. Heck no -- I know I wouldn't have encountered her otherwise -- and I am surely glad to have made her aquaintance!

  9. correction... no matter for whom I voted...
    anticipating self righteous grammatical response

  10. This has been educational, fun, and thought provoking. 🙂 it's been great exploring my connections to the saints and to my fellow Believers. I'm putting in my early 2013 bids for Catherine of Alexandria (mythical? Never!), Hildegard of Bingen, and Kassiani. And I love the idea of someone creating original artwork (or finding public domain artwork) for Mags on a Golden Halo mug... Next best thing to that Lent Madness tattoo.

    1. Ooh yes, Kassiani! I found out about her through Lent Madness links too, and she wasn't even on the bracket.

  11. Thank you for this great learning experience and good fun
    And as I wanted MM to win from the beginning I'm a happy camper
    But I was thrilled to see that even if my namesake did nto win she did pretty well
    blessings to all fellow Lent Madness fans
    Margaret+

  12. I plan to deal with Lent Madness Withdrawal by crocheting a kitschie little Mary Magdalene figure with her Golden Halo. Thus I am relieved that she won because it will be easier to adapt my pattern to Mary than to Emma. (I was seriously worried about Bonhoeffer).
    Many thanks to all who participated, and especially the SEC & CB! And the comments kept me returning to the site to read more. Thank you all. See you next time in this virtual mad world!

  13. I knew you would win Mary, because I have that little feather that floated down from the ceiling of La Sainte Baume, your Holy shrine in France.
    Bravo !

  14. As Mary Magdalene and Emma meet in heaven, Mary says, with a smile, "ma halo!"
    Thanks for a delightful Lent.

    1. "Oh, wonderful, wonderful, and most wonderful, wonderful, and yet again wonderful, and after that, out of all hooping!"* "Ma halo," indeed (but I'm sure Mary is too humble to gloat)! Huzzah for Mary Magdalene!

      My husband and I have thoroughly enjoyed all this madness, only regretting that we had but one computer and therefore but one vote between us each day. We're looking forward to next year already!

      *W. Shakespeare, "As You Like It" somewhere in Act I, I think. Clever of Will to have come up with a basketball term usable in this context, don't you think?

  15. thanks to the SEC and all of the great bloggers. A good job well done, plus lots of laughing. Thanks for finally translating "Rabbouni" in a way I can understand.

  16. My bracket is pretty much in shambles and although the final scores have not been posted I know that I did not finish in first place. However with Lent Madness I learned some things and had fun doing it so that counts as a win in my book.

    To the SECc I can only say well done good and faithful servants, or however that phrase is supposed to go. Next week would be a good time for you two to start planning that fact finding junket to Hawaii that you have talked about.

  17. I have learned so much as I voted. I am still amazed that Emma beat out Bonhoeffer. I'm looking forward to meeting new saints in the 2013 brackets.

  18. So happy about the result this morning! This has been the best Lent ever. I can't wait for 2013. Thanks to all involved, and a Happy and Holy Easter.

  19. This good humored, yet serious competition helped me with Lent this year. I learned a lot and got to laugh. What could be better!

  20. Thank you Tim and Scott, this has been a blast as always! What would Lent be without Madness?!

  21. What an exceptional time this has been. I am only sad to see it end. I am not going to read the comments for today in fear that you guys are taking a bath for a hilarious bit of writing. My only disapointement has been people's need to criticize you for trying to have a little fun. Why is it that people think we are allowed to have every emotion in our lives of faith except fun? Weeping good, laughing bad seems to be the mantra.

    Thank you so much for educating and enriching the the season of lent for my congregation and me. Next year I am printing brackets and handing them out on the Sunday before the games begin!

  22. Hurrah for Mary Magdalene and I look forward to next year. This was such fun.

  23. A spur of the moment, what the h*** is that all about, click to the link in the Episcopal News (Diocese of Los Angeles weekly e-news) and I was hooked on LM! What a fun way to learn about the saints and my church. Have thoroughly enjoyed my lenten journey (pilgrimmage?) this year. Glad that MM won, sorry that it is over. Next year awaits!

  24. Thanks to Tim and Scott for inviting me to be a part of Lent Madness. What an honor to shepherd "my" four saints. That Emma made it to the final round was especially thrilling! (Though it was quite a week last week with three saint write-ups, my kitchen being ripped out, and waiting for nine college decisions for our twin sons. Sheesh!) I've learned so much from all the offerings from my fellow celebrity bloggers. I am dazzled by their gifts and good humor, and the comments I enjoyed to no end.

    My only regret is that the word limitations caused so much to be left out in the telling of the lives of these saints. I was moved by Enmegahbowh's passionate advocacy on behalf of his people who were starving as the result of government foodstuffs that were rotten and wormy. I got choked up reading his account of the migration from St. Columba's Mission to the White Earth reservation when he described the sorrow of parting from the graves of his children who had died from exposure when they were on the run from Hole-in-the-Day the Younger. He writes of Iron Sky Woman, "It was a long time before I could get my wife away from the little graves, and finally I got her away with broken hearts. I know so well that I shall never walk around them again while life shall last."

    I would have liked to have shared more about Emma's deep love for all creation and her care for native species, as well as her adventurousness as a horsewoman and one who hiked across the remote and wild places on the islands. Some of hundreds of Mele (or chants) dedicated to her - and written by her - are elegant and beautiful. The description in one biography of the last hours of young Prince Albert is incredibly heart-wrenching.

    Then there was that time when St. Augustine gave Monnica the slip by telling her the wrong time of departure as he, his lady friend, and their son, and sailed off to Rome. Little did he know who he was up against.

    Thanks to all for such good companionship over these last weeks. May Easter blessings abound!