РефератыИностранный языкSuSupernatural In Middle Ages Essay Research Paper

Supernatural In Middle Ages Essay Research Paper

Supernatural In Middle Ages Essay, Research Paper


Supernatural events and miracles are very common in medieval literature. Many of


these miracles were used for common purposes, which were to provide examples of


an ideal Christian way of life and promote conversion to Christianity. They do


this by writing about miracles that punished people who acted improperly,


miracles that took place to reward Christians for doing good deeds, showing


extreme and persistent faith, or for those who were leading moral lives. Some


examples of medieval literature that contain miracles which serve this purpose


are Saint Augustine?s Confessions, MacMullen?s Christianity and Paganism in


the Fourth to Eighth Centuries, HillGarth?s Christianity and Paganism,


350-750, Bede?s Ecclesiastical History of the English People, Gregory of


Tours? History of the Franks, and in the works of Saint Boniface. Saint


Augustine?s work includes a miracle that took place because a man begged his


admission to god. This man was blind and had heard of people who were


?…vexed by impure spirits and were healed…? (165). He immediately asked


his guide to being him to the place were this was happening, which was where the


bodies of the martyrs Protasius and Gervasius lay. He rubbed a sacred cloth over


his eyes and immediately regained his lost eyesight. This miracle was included


to show the benefits of showing one?s allegiance to god and by doing so,


Augustine would be able to get others to convert to Christianity. Augustine


describes the roles of miracles himself when he wrote that they ?…symbolize


the sacraments of initiation and miraculous wonders necessary to initiate and


convert ?uninstructed and unbelieving people? (I Cor. 14:23)? (299).


MacMullen?s book also contains accounts of miracles that were used for


conversion. One such miracle (from Augustine?s catalog) took place when a


youth was said to have been entered by a water demon. He was brought to the same


shrine I mentioned earlier which contained relics of Protasius and Gervasius.


The demon then leaves the child?s body and writhes in pain and the boy is


cured. Other such miracles that were said to have taken place in front of large


crowds were done by Gregory the Great. He was known for ?…exorcisms,


restoration of sight to the blind, even restoration of sight to the dead…?


(96). It is his belief that ?The converts had cared little for sect or


theology, only for relief of what ailed them? (125). In other words, people


would often convert for selfish reasons, in order to heal themselves of a


physical problem rather than converting due to true belief in Christianity.


MacMullen also wrote of supernaural beliefs whose existence began sometime


around midway through the fourth century. This book touches on these beliefs


more so than the others. The beliefs in the healing power of relics is ironic in


that it almost seems Pagan. For instance, object that saints touched while


living were believed to hold special powers that the saints used during their


lives. There were even arguements in Palestine as to who would own the remnants


of martyrs bodies. This superstition got to the point where even monks were ween


fighting over Saint Martin?s cloak because of the belief that it was full of


healing power. MacMullen writes of how martrys may have been a creation of the


bishops of the time in an effort to put an end to paganism. Another example of a


supernatural superstition takes place when Severinus went on a mission to


Noricum and attempted to ?…banish blight from the wheat fields…by marking


boundary posts with the cross, to ward off floods? (97). Yet another case of


superstition existed in the belief that plants that were found only at the foot


of a statue of Jesus contained immense healing powers. While these plants may


have contained healing power, MacMullen takes note of the fact that many of the


plants taken from around saint?s relics were already known for their value as


healing agents. The reason I stated earlier that these beliefs were Pagan-like


is the fact that they are based purely on superstition. MacMullen?s


Christianity and Paganism in the Fourth to Eighth Centuries offers many more


examples of both miraculous events and superstitions that existed in late


antiquity and the early middle ages. Through MacMullen?s work, it b

ecomes


clear that many of these superstitions may have been fabricated in an attempt to


gain conversions to Christianity. In Christianity and Paganism, 350-750,


HilGarth justifies some of these practices by writing ?Today we know that


neither an unscientific view of the world nor the exaltation of asceticism were


the creatures of Christianity but were the leading features of the world


Christianity entered? (5). In other words, these supernatural beliefs in


miracles and superstitions were not at all purely Christian. On the other hand,


they existed in Chrisianity because people of that period accepted and believed


in them, which is why they play such a prominant role in the development of


Christianity. Hilgarth believes that Christianity?s advantages over Paganism


lay in its superior organization and its moral teachings, rather than its use of


miracles which was relatively universal to religions during this time period.


From Hilgarth?s work, it can be said that miracles were used mostly as a means


of conversion and proof of God?s will. For example in one of Saint


Boniface?s work, a section was devoted to the description of an event that


occured when a Pagan tree was ordered to be cut down. The Pagans held this tree


as sacred and believed that it contained special powers. When the very first


chop of the axe hit the tree, it magically shattered into many pieces, which was


supposed to prove to the Pagans that their religion is heretic and that they


should convert to Christianity. Miracles of this cleary prove HilGrath?s


belief that they focused on conversion. Bede?s Ecclesiastical History of the


English People and Gregory of Tours? History of the Franks also contain many


miracles which served the purpose of promoting conversion. This is supported in


a letter to Augustine from Pope Gregory in which Gregory wrote ?Clearly


understand your own character, and how much grace is in this nation for whose


conversion God has given you the power to work miracles? (93). One of these


miracles happened in the Province of the Northumbrians. According to Willibrord,


archbishop of Utrecht, a man returned from the dead and gave an account of all


that he saw. He died in the early hours of one night and woke up alive the next


morning to a group of people standing around him weeping. During his flirttion


with death, had a guide who showed him the souls of men in purgatory who failed


to show allegience to God. Upon his resurection, he became a monk. There is no


doubt that this passage was written to wanr non-Christians of what will come


after death if they fail to convert. While Gregory?s miracles often speak of


conversion, many of them also provide examples of an ideal Christian way of


life. For example, on page 107, Gregory wrote of a young Christain girl who was


being persecuted by Trasamund. Because this girl refused to renounce the Holy


Trinity, she was tortured and untimately killed. Gregory then wrote of how after


her death, the girl was ?…consecrated to Christ our lord…? (108). This


passage was about how absolute faith in God is rewarded in the end and that


there are benefits such as the afterlife for having strong faith. Gregory also


wrote of Saint Eugenius and how he often made miracles happen through Christ?s


guidance. Because of this, the Aryan Bishop, Cyrola, became jealous and


attempted to stage a fake miracle in Eugenius? presence. The Aryan Bishop paid


a man fifty pieces of gold to feign blindness. While Cyrola and Eugenius passed


by the man, he pleaded to Cyrola to cure his blindness. While Cyrola and


Eugenius passed by the man, he pleaded to Cyrola to cure his blindness. Cyrola


put his hand on the man and pretended to cause a miracle to happen. The man was


caused extreme pain in his eyes and lost his vision. He then pleaded for


forgiveness to Eugenius and regained his eyesight. This story taught Christians


that they can be forgiven for their sins, but they must be careful to look out


for false miracles. These miracles in these books were mostly used for


conversion, or to provide examples of an ideal Christian way of life. Many of


the superstitions may have been used for conversion as well. Regardless of their


respective purposes, there is no denying the significance of miracles and


superstitions in late antiquity and the medieval period.

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