Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- Acknowledgements
- List of Abbreviations
- Introduction: The Christus medicus Tradition
- 1 The Virgin Mary as Nurse, Medicine and Mother: Devotional Texts and Hospitals
- 2 Sacramental Medicine and Frequent Communion from Prague to Kraków
- 3 Disenfranchised Surgeons: Christus chirurgus and Wycliffite Preaching in England
- 4 The Diseased Ecclesia from Jan Hus’s Exile to the Council of Basel
- 5 Responses to Heresy at the Councils of Constance and Basel
- Afterword
- Bibliography
- Index
- Miscellaneous Endmatter
3 - Disenfranchised Surgeons: Christus chirurgus and Wycliffite Preaching in England
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 09 May 2024
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- Acknowledgements
- List of Abbreviations
- Introduction: The Christus medicus Tradition
- 1 The Virgin Mary as Nurse, Medicine and Mother: Devotional Texts and Hospitals
- 2 Sacramental Medicine and Frequent Communion from Prague to Kraków
- 3 Disenfranchised Surgeons: Christus chirurgus and Wycliffite Preaching in England
- 4 The Diseased Ecclesia from Jan Hus’s Exile to the Council of Basel
- 5 Responses to Heresy at the Councils of Constance and Basel
- Afterword
- Bibliography
- Index
- Miscellaneous Endmatter
Summary
At the same time that theologians in Central Europe were campaigning for frequent communion to heal the soul, Wycliffites in England were sceptical of the power of the Eucharist. Although John Wyclif was not connected to Jan Milič and his followers, he exploited the same grass roots approach to affective piety among the laity and his theology had a similarly profound impact on later proceedings at the councils of Constance and Basel. Wyclif stressed the ways in which the laity were healed through the pastoral duties of the preacher. Preaching was, for Wyclif, a penitential act in which Christ the ‘summus medicus’ cured the wounds of sin. Yet Wyclif argued that each member of the clergy resembled an incompetent surgeon who wounded (leserit) those he was entrusted to heal, harming congregations with tales ‘contra scripturam’ of no moral fortitude. Wyclif relays such a fictitious tale that he heard from a preacher:
I have heard a certain person tell a tale of how a host descended gradually from the altar into the centre of the church, and entered the heart of a certain sick man, who devoutly and publicly professed, thus saying: ‘You, God, knew that I would reverently consume you if I were not ill, but it is not a mental illness, but a bodily one that hinders me.’ In truth the sacrament, opening the chest and the heart of the sick man, crept into the ventricle of the heart, and thus the sick man immediately recovered total health.
Christus chirurgus, Christ the Divine Surgeon, performs open-heart surgery in this narrative, where the Eucharist enters the chest of the patient and cures his bodily illness. The emphasis the patient places on the fact that his infirmity is physical, accentuates that this was not a spiritual metaphor, but an act of surgery in which the host entered his body. Wyclif 's objection to the priest’s exemplum did not pertain to its medical component, but rather to its use for deception. The priest boasted, ‘the mouth fabricated that pretty little lie.’ Wyclif endorsed using an exemplum as a ‘preco vel ancilla’ [herald or handmaiden] to Scripture that encouraged devotion and helped congregations to digest God’s words, but he opposed the lie of the anecdote.
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- Christ the Physician in Late-Medieval Religious ControversyEngland and Central Europe, 1350-1434, pp. 113 - 158Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2024