Thursday, May 7, 2020

Medieval Christianity: Women spirituality and women saints, Female Mystics


“The only ‘problem’ was that I was a woman…“ – Mary Daly
1. Introduction
Many medieval theologians repeat some of the main ideas on women found in the church fathers. Thomas Aquinas, for example claimed that women were created as subordinate and inferior to man. Not only was she second in the order of creation, but she was endowed with less intellectual capability and consequently less ability to make right moral decisions.[1] Christianity during the medieval period went through different phases both in the spiritual, political and development sphere. The church was instrumental in lifting the people out of the cruelty of Roman paganism and the barbarism of wild tribes. This was made possible through her missionary expansion in spite of her many limitations. In this paper it’s an attempt to deal the Medieval Christianity's Women Spirituality and women Saints and
Female Mystics. 
2. Status of Woman
The images of women that emerge in the medieval literature were shaped to a large extent by monks, bishops, and noblemen who comprised that small percentage of the population that was literate. Images of woman in both secular and church writings oscillate between two extreme positions which historians have described as the pit and the throne. On one hand women are denounced in strong terms as wicked and inferior. This virulent misogynism reached its peak in the witch craze which swept across Europe from the 15th  to 18th centuries. Many medieval theologians repeat some of the main ideas on woman found in the church fathers. Thomas Aquinas, for example, claimed that women were created as subordinate and inferior to man. Not only was she second in the order of creation but she was endowed with less intellectual capability consequently, less ability to make the right moral decisions.Aquinas and others also propagated the belief that women were more sensual than men and 
more oriented toward the iimctions and appetites of the human body.[2] A fear of women and their power to cause lust in men permeated not only theology but popular piety as well. Stories about adulterous wives far outnumbered those of unfaithful husbands. Books of wicked wives detailed all the women in the bible and in history who had led men astray. The widespread voices of women were constantly stressed as well as the need to keep women under control in church and society. A few positive attitudes toward women did find their way into medieval theology. Aquinas and others stressed that woman, although inferior, had been given the important task of procreation by God. Some theologians also insisted that men and women have rational souls and that in future kingdom of God, male and female would be equivalent. The institution of marriage itself was also given a slightly more positive character.[3]
3. Women Spirituality
It was the institution of Monasticism that offered women the real opportunities for professional ministry during the Middle Ages. Monasticism was an important outlet for women who desired to commit their lives to fulltirne spiritual endeavours, especially after the fifth century, when communal monasticism began to flourish. Monasticism for women began in the west in AD 512 when bishop Caesaruis of Aries established a convent that was ruled by his sister Caesaria. Only widows and virgins were permitted to join the convent and they were required to make lifetime commitment, renouncing all claims to material wealth. The purpose of this convent seems to have been primarily focused on personal spirituality for the women were admonished by Caesaria to dwell in their cells seeking in earnest prayers the presence of the son of God that they might be of the number of holy virgins devoted to God By the seventh century their numbers were vastly increased. The Benedictines monasteries were the first to be organised under the rule of Benedict on a wide scale strictly for men but around the year AD. 530 with the help of his twin sister Scholastica, Benedict of Nursia founded a convent for women.[4] In the monasteries the actual lifestyle at a particular convent was determined to large extent by abbess. In many instances, she had as much power as did her male counterparts. Despite the church best efforts to place tight reins on nunneries, the abbess often ruled her community according to her own prescribed standards.
The position of the abbess was the highest to which women could attain. The abbess not only ruled a large community of nuns but also had jurisdiction over vast territories that often included villages and towns. Whatever credentials an abbess possessed the recognition depended initially on her social rank and to a great extent depended on the local church and political authorities and of course on her won charisma and assertiveness. No matter how high her social rank was, it was common for an abbess to fight for her community.[5]
4. Women Saints
The medieval definition of sainthood was not humanly oriented by divine. It was said that God elect a person to sainthood and that election began before birth and was manifested by what god affected through that person. According to the teaching of the church the saints reign together with Christ and offer their prayers to God on behalf of humankind. During the eleventh and twelfth centuries CE the phenomenon of women recluses developed in Western Europe.
Women from well to do families renounced marriages and devoted to solitary religious life in cities by living in a cell attached to the church. Medieval women were kept out of the universities for they could not become scholastic theologians. But many achieved distinction through becoming powerful writers on spirituality and mysticism providing spiritual leadership and counsel to others. These were women of greatest independence and power not so much in external terms but in terms of moral authority and spiritual perfection. These women were strong enough to resist the pressure of family, society and even the church at times, out of deep commitment to a higher calling. Some of the women are cited below.[6]
4.1. Saint Leoba (700-779)
Leoba was born in Wessex, England and was sent as a child to Wimbome to study the sacred science under Mother Tetta. Leoba was a diligent student and became known both for her intellect and for her sanctity. She was a religious teacher of royalty and was deeply respected throughout her life lime as a
person of depth. a received her name from the place  Wimboume which may be translated as an ancient name meaning wine stream. Thus the received her name from the clearness and sweetness of the water there, which was better that any other in that land Leoba‘s father and mother were barren yet they were strict observers of Gods commandment. Alter long years of barrenness one night her mother had a dream that she would conceive a child. Shortly after she conceived and gave birth to a daughter who named as Leoba. The mother consecrated the child to God. Leoba grew up taking no pleasures in the aimless girlish romance but fired by the love of Christ fixed her mind always on reading or hearing the word of God. Leoba was appointed abbess of Bisch of sheim and from there she helped in the establishment of new convent. As an abbess she found her life tilled with richness and variety. Her position according to Edith deen was not merely as of a ruler but of a teacher and expositor and she became so learned in the scriptures and so wise in counsel that bishops often discussed church matters with her. Yet with all her learning and scholarship she was a mystic who believed that she was endowed with certain charismatic gifts. Her success as a missionary abbess was viewed as a direct result of her holiness and evidence of her ability to make direct contact with God in prayer.[7]
4.2. Catherine of Siena (1347-1380)
Catherine was a Dominican tertiary remaining at home in solitary life of prayer. Originally named Caterina Benincasa she was born in Siena Italy on March 25, 1347. Her mother was Lap-a and her father was Giacomo di Benincasa a dyer. From early childhood, Catherine sensed that God had a special ministry for her. At the age of seven she made a vow of virginity facing a strong family resistance. Even as a child she claimed to have visions and lived ascetically. At the age of 16 she joined the Third order of St Dominic in Siena, where she became noted for her gift of contemplation and her devotion to the poor. She became increasingly influential in the church, concerning herself with such issues as crusades, civil war, the Avignon Papacy and ecclesiastical reforms.[8] In 1370 she experienced mystical death strengthening her resolve to be about the business of God. After three years of celestial visitations and familiar conversation with Christ, she underwent the mystical experience known as the spiritual espousals. She now rejoined her family, and began to tend the sick. She began to gather disciples round her, both men and women who formed a spiritual fellowship. During the summer of 1370 she received a trance, a kind of mystical death, in which she had a vision of hell, purgatory and heaven, and heard a divine command to leave her cell and enter the public life of Italy. She was consulted by the papal legates about the affairs of the church, and set herself to heal the wounds of her native land by ministering during the fury of civil war and the ravages of faction. In 1376 Catherine journeyed to Avignon France to plead with Pope Gregory and she convinced the Pope to return to Rome and end the Avignonese exile of popes. In 1376, Gregory left Avignon by water for Rome. On the same day Catherine and her followers also began the same journey by road. The two parties met in Genoa, but Catherine then went to Florence. Catherine returned to contemplation and worked in Siena and simultaneously tried to promote peace in Italy and crusaded to recover the Holy Land.[9]
4.3. Saint Joan of Arc (1412-1431):
Joan of Arc, in French Jeanne d’Arc also called the Maid of Orleans, was a national heroine and patron saint of France. She was instrumental in uniting the nation at a critical time a decisively turned the Hundred years war in favour of France. Joan was brought up during the Hundred Years war (1337-1453). After the death of Charles VI of France, the English armies under the Duke of Bedford fought a successful campaign and took numerous fortified towns. England had held a territory for a long time in what is now France. However the French kings had been constantly trying to extend their influence in the English territories, and the two sides had fought several small battles over the issue The situation became more complicated in 1327 with the succession of the English king Edward III. Edward had a claim to the French throne through his mother’s side of the family. But when Philip VI of France took possession of the last bit of territory that Edward held on the continent, Edward declared himself the true French king and invaded France.[10]
Joan was born of peasant parentage in Domremy. When she was 13 years old she believed she heard celestial voices. These she identified as belonging to St Michael and to the early martyrs of St Catherine of Alexandria and St Margret. They told her to save France. Early in l429 during the Hundred years war when English were about to capture Orelans the vorces exhorted her to help the Dauphin later Charles VII, King of France.[11]
4.4. Christina of Markyate
Christina’s life gives evidence of three ways in which sanctity was empowering for a twelfth century women. It enabled her to defy family and social expectations, to challenge the church and enjoy churchmen’s warm support, and to follow with success and esteem a life she chose foe herself through which she shaped and affected the lives of the small and the great. Christina, at the age of thirteen made a vow to be the spouse of Christ and no other. Firm in her resolution to remain a virgin and live for God only, Christian resisted the intention of her family to see her married, fending off all her suitors, especially the young and persistent Burthred. Christina escaped from the family’s house on disguise as a boy and found refuge with anchoress Alfwen and then with the Hermit Roger.Roger served initially as her spiritual director. It was also said that Abbot Geoffrey of St.Albans a worldly, powerful feudal ecclesiastic was converted under her influence. He became so changed a man from what he once was. Her spirituality was rooted in an effective experience of belonging to Christ; her holiness was grounded first in this unsparing obedience to the vision of her life in Christ. The resistance of her family’s proposal of marriage flowed out of an obedience to God which was a love affair, she abandoned the world for this love affair with God and was in retum girded against anything the world could inflict. To be a virgin and spouse of Christ symbolised the enhancing, freeing, empowering love and touch of God in her life which gave her strength to stand Victoriously against all who opposed her. In the Spiritual life Christiana recognised herself and was recognised by men and the society around her as a figure of authority, in every way equal, if not holier and thus more powerful in the realm of the spirit than her male co religious.”[12]
4.5. Papess of Johanna:
The influence of medieval church women was most evident in the convents where they rose to the position of abbess and often wrelded substantial power political as well as spiritual. One of the most fascinating footnotes of medieval history is the story of the Papess Johanna, who wore the Triple Crown for more than two years in the period between Pope Leo [V (847) and Benedict III (855). Because of her sex she was forced to disguise herself while a student in Athens and later while teaching theology in Rome. She went by name Johannes Anglicus, and took the name John VIII when she was elevated to the papal dignity. But her reign as pope came to an abrupt and tragic end. Her life was terminated suddenly in the open street during a solemn procession from the Vatican to the Lateran. This mysterious saga of the scholarly Papess Johanna apparently originated with the Dominicans and was widely accepted as truth during the late medieval period, so much so that a bust of this mythical female pope was actually displayed alongside the bust of other popes during the early hfteenth century. The Roman Catholic Church was deeply committed to a [position of male domination in spiritual matters. Women had a place in the church but that place was clearly defined as on that carried what with it no oiiicial authority. But by their own leadership ability and charismatic influence, women on occasion overcame this disability. However, whatever roles they attained almost always remained within the confines of monasticism.[13]
4.6. Julian of Norwich (1343-1413):
Julian was an Englishwoman who lived outside the walls of what is now known as St Julian church in Norwich. a town thriving with both ecclesial and intellectual interests. She emerged as an outstanding theological writer who composed her work in vernacular English It was after twenty revelations that Julian recorded them and reflected them on their meaning. It was the struggle with the nature of sin, its effects on human nature and on a person’s relationship with God. She paid her attention to the Trinity and to Christ‘s role in mediating love and compassion for a fallen humanity. Her writings combine the passion of visionary literature with theological carefulness Julian tells of the judgement of God and of the church and the presenring love that protect us.'8.lulian claimed that Jesus had the character and performed the activities of an earthly mother. Jesus sustained and loved the Christian and gave the Christian life. He fed the Christian with his body just as a mother feed her child with milk. Julian also believed that, like mothers love, the love of Jesus knew no end."[14]
4.7. Margery Kempe:
one of the few spiritual autobiographies extant from the medieval period was written by an English woman Margery Kempe. Kempe has Iett us an account of her answered prayers, Visions, and prophetic insights which she believed to come from God in The Book of Margery Kempe. As some others, her emotional outbursts and her pointed condemnation of the monks and priests led the churchmen to accuse her for heresy. She amused the anger of the clergy because of her flamboyant and eccentric behaviour. Yet she was regarded with suspicion and hostility also because she believed that her spiritual experiences gave her the right to teach and advise questionable activities for medieval Christian wife.”[15]
4.8. Birgitta of Sweden:
She is also known as Bridget. She was born into one of the wealthiest families in Sweden. Her revelations began after her husband’s death. Three years later she journeyed to Rome. She felt called to help purify the church and return the papacy from Avignon to Rome. She remained in Rome to pursue this work until her death, gaining the ear of many powerful officials within the church and secular Government. She had marked organising and administrative abilities. She founded an order which at first associated with the ecclesiastical authorities of the Augustinian Cannons. But eventually it became distinct known as the Bridget -tines which was carried on by her daughter Katherine and expanded to other land. She was held by the Roman people for working miracles and caring for the poor. After her death an elaborate tradition quickly established itself, rich with legends and miracles of Brigittas early life.[16] 
5. Female Mystics:
One of the pilgrimages Margery Kempe made was to a nun who lived alone in room attached to the side of a church in Norwich, England. This nun was Julian, who, together with a number of other medieval women, made a significant contribution to the church’s tradition of mystical theology which flourished in the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries. At the heart of the mystical tradition were the experiences of people who had acquired a direct and intimate knowledge of God in visions and at times of worship and meditation Women frequently had mystical experiences which they then, on occasion, committed to writing. Julian of Norwich, for example. describes a series of visions or revelations that she received during an illness in her Revelations of Divine Love. Catherine of Siena writes about a similar set of experiences in the Dialogue of St. Catherine of Sierra.[17]
 The content of this mystical writing varies from woman to woman but there are certain common features. There is considerable emphasis on the physical suffering of Jesus and a free use of bridal imagery to describe the relationship between the Christian and low. Both God and Jesus are also described in female and feminine images in some of the writings. One of the nuns of Helfta frequently referred to God as the mother of humanity to show that God’s justice was tempered by love and comfort. Julian claimed that Jesus had the character and performed the activities of an earthly mother.
6. Conclusion
Medieval women were different from that of the early centuries. It was because monasticism offered them a place of prominence that could not be found elsewhere in the early Christian history. Though women lost their place in the medieval church they enjoyed full freedom and equality in the monasteries and in the mysticism. Therefore it is undeniable that the medieval women’s religious order had a greater impact on women of the period. The achievement or sacrifice which they made might have shaken the history of Christianity like anything unless, As Mary Daly said, The only ‘problem’ was that they were women’.




                [1]Barbara J. Mac Haffie, Her Story: Women in Christian Tradition (Philadelphia: Fortress Press, 1986), 43.
                [2] Mac Haffie, Her Story…, 43.
                [3] Mac Haffie, Her Story…, 44.
                [4] Ruth A. Tucker and Walter L. Liefeld, Daughters of the Church (Michigan: Zondervan Publishing House, 1987), 133-134.
                [5] Narola Imchen, Women in the History of Christianity (Jorhat: TDCC, 2014), 77.
                [6] Narola Imchen, Women in the History…, 77.
                [7] Narola Imchen, Women in the Hisoty …, 78-79.
                [8] Hans Kung, Women in Christianity (New York: Continuum, 2001), 73.
                [9] Kung, Women in Christianity…, 74.
                [10] Kung, Women in Christianity…, 77.

                [11]David Hugh Farmer, The oxford Dictionary of Saints (New York: Oxford University Press, 1992), 225.
                [12] Narola Imchen, Women in the History…, 85.
                [13] Ruth A. Tucker and Walter. L. Liefeld,  Daughters of the Church (Secunderabad: OM-Authentic, 2006), 139-140.
                [14] Narola Imchen, Women in the History…, 88-89.
                [15] Mac Haffie, Her Story…, 59.       
                [16] Mac Haffie, Her Story…, 54.
                [17] Kung, Women in Christianity…, 80.

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