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First, where do you get that Mary died while with John? Is this something extra-Biblical that you are coming to the table with that informs your interpretive lens? Regardless of if/when/where/and with whom Mary may have died, it has zero bearing on WHO MARY IS.
Extra-biblical? No
We know that Jesus entrusted Mary to in John 19 and I think we can agree he wouldn't have taken that responsibility lightly. Further he's on Patmos decades later and no mention of her that I'm aware of, so we can make a basic assumption she's not there.
Just to head off your counterargument, John gives zero indication that Mary was assumed into heaven, which might be something worth noting.
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Why do we allegorize Mary as the Woman? It begins in Genesis 3 when God declared HE will place enmity between the woman (MARY) and the devil, and also of her seed/offspring (JESUS):
"14 And the Lord God said unto the serpent, Because thou hast done this, thou art cursed above all cattle, and above every beast of the field; upon thy belly shalt thou go, and dust shalt thou eat all the days of thy life:
15 And I will put enmity between thee and the woman, and between thy seed and her seed; it shall bruise thy head, and thou shalt bruise his heel.
16 Unto the woman he said, I will greatly multiply thy sorrow and thy conception; in sorrow thou shalt bring forth children; and thy desire shall be to thy husband, and he shall rule over thee."
This is really not a good argument because you do something similar to Thaddeus and look for feminine words and say "see Mary!"
But lets dig into this because, as always, when proof-texting, we should not be afraid of the surrounding verses.
You start with verse 14, but lets see what verse 13 says:
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13 Then the Lord God said to the woman, "What is this that you have done?" The woman said, "The serpent deceived me, and I ate."
God's reference to woman is in a direct conversation with this woman. It's not an abstract reference, but we are left with a question, why does God call her woman and not Eve? Verse 20 answers that "20 And Adam called his wife's name Eve, because she was the mother of all living."
So the usage of the word woman by God is not allegorical, but the literal proper name for the woman who would become Eve.
Does that parallel to John in Revelation? Not in any reasonable way. Mary's name is known and there's no reason to hide it behind two things in back to back verses.
In fact, I think it would be most fair to say that when the NT references a generic woman or bride, it is in reference to the Church (certainly in Paul's case).
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Before skipping ahead to the sun and the moon, lets first acknowledge the WOMAN and the OT scriptures for understanding WHO the woman IS.
No problem. How many times do we see the generic "woman" used as a direct reference to Eve, after she was named Eve? (I don't actually know the answer here, but assume it's minimal to none).
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To this I say Amen. Joseph, like Adam, was a type of Christ.
Yet this is not about Joseph, and in fact, as you have pointed out, Joesph is replaced by a woman. So unless you're argument is Mary is also a type of Christ, then it's not her, but the readers of his letter would certainly know that this is a call back to the 12 tribes of Israel.
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WHO gave birth to this male child who was to rule all the nations with a rod of iron (Jesus)?
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Can you show me where I have claimed that every word of the Apocalypse of John is to be read and understood only and entirely literally?
I put these back to back because I already made it clear that you would have to do this.
What you're asking us to do is go verse by verse, switching back and forth between literal and allegorical, without John giving any hint that we should take that approach.
Speaking of which, who is the lamb's bride in Rev 21? Obviously since it says bride, we must interpret that as an actual woman right? (intended as sarcasm).
The rest of your responses are more or less repeats of "we can't take it literal because it wouldn't make sense in relation to our view of Mary."
So if I summarize your defense of the Roman Catholic view
11:19 - Mary is the literal ark, but the next words are all allegorical
12:1 - Mary is also literally the woman (odd she's 2 different things back to back), but everything else is allegorical
12:2-12 - allegorical
12:13 - Mary is the literal one who gave birth to a Child, but the dragon is definitely allegorical
12:14-16 - allegorical
12:17 - dragon is allegorical, then we switch to a woman who is definitely Mary, but then immediately switch back to allegorical because she was a virgin and didn't have literal children. Definitely not confusing for John's readers.