Antidicomarianites
ANTIDICOMARIANITES, an´´ti-dic´´o-mê´ri-ɑn-ɑits:
A name applied by Epiphanius (Hær.,
lxxviii.) to opponents of the belief in the perpetual
virginity of Mary, the mother of Christ. The New
Testament speaks of the “brethren” of Jesus;
and in Tertullian’s time the opinion was still prevalent that Mary’s marriage with Joseph was a true
marriage. Thus he writes (De monogamia, viii.): “Truly it was a virgin who bore Christ, but after
doing so she married, in order that the last title of
sanctity might be checked off in the inventory of
Christ; a mother who was both a virgin and a
once married woman.” But by the fourth century
it was considered as established that there had not
been a real marriage. The older belief had not,
however, altogether disappeared. Epiphanius
found the opinion current in Arabia that Mary,
after the birth of Christ, had lived with Joseph as
his wife and had children by him. He classed the
adherents of this view as a sect, bestowed upon
them a name of his own composition, meaning “opponents of Mary,” and controverted their
belief in a lengthy treatise, which he gives in the
passage cited above.
(A. Hauck).