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The Virile Bride of Bernard of Clairvaux
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 July 2009
Extract
That feminine metaphors dominate Bernard of Clairvaux's treatment of the contemplative soul who as loving Bride marries Christ in prayerful ecstasy, and as Mother nurtures the world in active service, is indisputable. And much has been made in recent years of the significance of a medieval male “assuming” the role of the female, both in relation to society at large and in relation to God. These latter arguments might be summarized by the claims that the appropriation of feminine images to the medieval male self is frequently either a conscious play on cultural stereotypes to signal spiritual renunciation or the rejection of worldly values, or reflects a need, whether conscious or unconscious, for psychological integration of the feminine and masculine in the lives of those confined to a homo-social world. In Bernard's Bride, then, we discover either the male appropriation of feminine weakness as a sign of spiritual strength or the rational male appropriation of the counterbalancing feminine virtue of affective love. What has not been recognized, however, is the possibility that the figure of the Bride in Bernard of Clairvaux's Sermons on the Song of Songs might function paradoxically as a “virile woman,” a female “figure” or type who serves appropriately to represent the highest spiritual attainments of the human soul (whether of biological male or female), precisely because she has overcome any stereotypically “womanly” weaknesses and become typologically “male” or “virile.” Our interpretation of this seminal figure must thus not only take into account the confluence of masculine and feminine in her nature in ways we have not previously suspected. We must also consider the paradoxical reality that this figure may simultaneously represent a soul who is virtuous for having renounced male privilege and become a weak woman and a soul who is valorized for having overcome feminine weakness and become virile. It is this thesis that I will argue in what follows.
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- Biblical Interpretation and the Construction of Christian Sexualities
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References
Earlier versions of this paper were first presented at the Cistercian Studies Conferences of the 32nd and 33rd International Congresses on Medieval Studies at Kalamazoo, Mich., May 1997 and May 1998.
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6. Bernard insists, for instance, in a letter to the novice Hugh, that receptivity to the “mothering” of Jesus, and by implication, the “mothering” of the abbot, requires the renunciation of earthly mothers. “If your mother should lie prostrate at the door,” he writes, “if she should bare her breasts, the breasts that gave you suck…yet with dry eyes fixed upon the cross go ahead and tread over your prostrate mother and father.” Ep. 322.1–2, SBOp 8:256–57,Google Scholartrans. James, Bruno Scott, The Letters of Bernard of Clairvaux (Burns Oates, 1953, reprint Kalamazoo, Mich.: Cistercian Publications, 1998), 449: “Si prostratus…iaceat in limine pater, si nudato sinu, quibus te lactavit, ubera mater ostendat…per calcatum transi patrem, per calcatam perge matrem, et siccis oculis ad vexillum crucis evola.” I am aware that this may signify nothing more than rejection of “the world” for the cloister, and that in this passage both earthly mother and father are rejected. However, I do not think it is appropriate to ignore entirely the gender implications of the decision to make a lifetime commitment to an exclusively male community.Google Scholar
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21. Bernard's role as the “last of the Fathers” has been much commented on. It is suggestive of Bernard's fundamental theological conservatism, not only in his reluctance to embrace the new forms of philosophical reasoning that were developing in his own time, but in his characteristic dependence on and intimate knowledge of his patristic forbears. It has been said that Bernard represents the culmination of the patristic theological legacy. What is new in his thought is most often discovered in the creative synthesis, or the imaginative presentation, and not in the fundamental theological components of his thought. Thomas Merton used the phrase as the title of a book;Google ScholarMerton, Thomas, The Last of the Fathers: Saint Bernard ofClairvaux and the Encyclical Letter, Doctor Mellifluus (New York: Harcourt, Brace and Co., 1954). The phrase appears in Mabillon's general preface to the Patrologia Latina volume on Bernard: Mabillon, Bernardi opera, Praefatio generalis no. 23, in Patrologia latina, ed. J.-P. Migne (1844–65; hereafter PL), 182:26;Google Scholarsee also Gilson, Etienne, The Mystical Theology of St. Bernard (London: Sheed and Ward, 1940: reprint Kalamazoo, Mich.: Cistercian Publications, 1990), 23–32;Google ScholarWaddell, Chrysogonus, introduction to Bernard of Clairvaux, Homilies in Praise of the Blessed Virgin Mary, Cistercian Fathers 18a (Kalamazoo, Mich.: Cistercian Publications, 1993), xvi–xviii.Google Scholar
22. My distinction between the “feminine-negative” and “feminine-positive” in Bernard's language is not unlike the claim of Ulrike Wiethaus that Bernard's feminine imagery continues to reflect the Western psychic split between virgin and whore, although I choose to use the more neutral terms because I do not wish to sexualize the language to the degree found in Wiethaus. See “Christian Piety,” 51, 54–55. Jean Leclercq has also noted that while Bernard often describes women who bear qualities that counter the failings for which women are often reproached, his language occasionally reflects the stereotypes of his day. Leclercq, Women and St. Bernard, passim.Google Scholar
23. SC 71.4; SBOp 2:216, line 23 (hereafter cited as 216.23); Song 4:51.Google Scholar
24. SC 13.5; SBOp 1:71.21–22; Song 1:91.Google Scholar
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26. SC 54.2; SBOp 2:103.29–104.2; Song 3:70: “non solum magnis et spiritualibus viris, sed et aliquibus de populo, etiam et nonnullis mulieribus.” See also SC 13.4; SBOp 1:70,27–71, 6; Song 1:90.Google Scholar
27. Ep. 523, SBOp 8:486.13;Google ScholarEng. trans. Aelred of Rievaulx, The Mirror of Charity, trans. Connor, Elizabeth, O.C.S.O., Cistercian Fathers 17 (Kalamazoo, Mich.: Cistercian Publications, 1990), 69.Google Scholar
28. SC 73.4;Google ScholarSBOp 2:235.17–21;Google ScholarSong 4: 78.Google Scholar
29. SC 52.1;Google ScholarSBOp 2:90.9;Google ScholarSong 3: 49: “Has enim filias ierusalem dicit, quia, etsi delicatae et molles, et quasi adhuc femineis affectibus et actibus infirmae … ”Google Scholar
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31. See, for instance, ep. 38.2; SBOp 7:96–97, James, Letters, 72–73;Google Scholar and Vita Sancti Malachiae (hereafter V Mal) 19, SBOp 3:330, in The Life and Death of Saint Malachy the Irishman, trans. Meyer, Robert T., Cistercian Fathers 10 (Kalamazoo, Mich.: Cistercian Publications, 1978), 38.Google Scholar
32. Csi 2.20; SBOp 3:428; Consideration, 75: “oculus … suffusus fluxa quadam et muliebri mollitie animi rectum non videt.”Google Scholar
33. Sermo in purificatione B.V.M. 4.1 (hereafter Pur), SBOp 4:337; ep. 385.3, SBOp 8:353, James, Letters, 492. See also Pur 1.3, SBOp 4:336.Google Scholar
34. SC 1:2; SBOp 1:3;Google ScholarSong 1: 2: “ vanus … amor mundi, et superfluus sui.”Google Scholar
35. Apologia ad Guillelmum abbatem 17 (hereafter Apo), SBOp 3:96.1–2;Google ScholarEng. trans. The Works of Bernard of Clairvaux: Treatises I, trans. Casey, Michael, O.C.S.O., ed. Pennington, M. Basil, O.C.S.O., Cistercian Fathers 1 (Kalamazoo, Mich.: Cistercian Publications, 1970), 53.Google Scholar
36. SC 38.4; SBOp 2:16.17–22;Google ScholarSong 2: 189: “Ego enim puto mulierum nomine hoc loco appellatas animas carnales ac saeculares, nihil in se virile habentes, nihil forte aut constans in suis actibus demonstrantes, sed totum remissum, totum femineum et molle, quod vivunt and quod agunt.”Google Scholar
37. SC 66.3; SBOp 2:180.1–2,Google ScholarSong 3: 193: “nonne reples eam concubinariis, incestuosis, seminifluis, mollibus, masculorum concubitoribus, et omni denique genere immundorum?” It is likely that it is the passive or receptive role in homosexual behavior that is being condemned here.Google Scholar
38. SC 39.7, SBOp 2:22.15,Google ScholarSong 2: 196;Google ScholarApo 22, SBOp 3:99.20, Treatises I, 58; Apo 26, SBOp 3:102.23, Treatises I, 62; Csi 2.13, SBOp 3:420.22–23, Consideration, 62; epp. 1.11, 2.11–12, 5.2, SBOp 7:9.13,22.5–7, 29.1, James, Letters, 8,17–18; Liber ad milites templi 2.3 (hereafter Tpl), SBOp 3:216,Google ScholarThe Works of Bernard of Clairvaux: Treatises III, trans. Greenia, Congrad, O.C.S.O., Cistercian Fathers 19 (Kalamazoo, Mich.: Cistercian Publications, 1977), 132–33.Google Scholar
39. Ep. 113.3; SBOp 7:289; James, Letters, 175: “Filiae Babylonis … induuntur purpua et bysso, et subinde conscientia pannosa iacet; fulgent monilibus, moribus sordent.”Google Scholar
40. Ep. 113.1; SBOp 7:288.9–10; James, Letters, 174: “Nam si in viris virtus, rara est avis in terris, quanto magis in femina fragili et nobili?” The passage continues: “Denique mulierem fortem quis inveniet (Prov 31.10)? Multo magis quis fortem et nobilem?”Google Scholar
41. Ep. 2.12 to Fulk, SBOp 7:22.5; James, Letters, 18.Google Scholar
42. Apo 16, Tpl 2.3; SBOp 3:95,216; Treatises 1,52–53, Treatises III, 132–33.Google Scholar
43. Apo 26; SBOp 3:102.23; Treatises I, 62: “Mollia indumenta animi mollitiem indicant.”Google Scholar
44. Leclercq, , Women and St. Bernard, 21, 152.Google Scholar
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47. Sermo in epiphania domini 2.2 (hereafter Epi), SBOp 4:302: “Vobis ergo dicimus, filiae Sion, animae saeculares, debiles delicatae filiae, et non filii, in quibus nihil est fortitudinis, nihil virilis animi: EGREDIMI FILIAE SION. Egredimini de sensu carnis ad intellectum mentis, de servitute carnalis concupiscentiae ad libertatem spiritualis intelligentiae.”
48. SC 44.5; SBOp 2:47; Song 2:229: “Hinc homo iunior filius appellatur, quod natura quodam insensatae lubrico adolescentiae depravata, omnem virilis maturitatis ac sapientiae succum amiserit et, versus in asperum, arente animo, praeter se universos despiciat, factus sine affectione.”
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51. Div 71.1; SBOp 6.1:306–7.Google Scholar
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55. Ep 113.1, SBOp 7:288, James, Letters, 174; Homiliae super missus est in laudibus virginis matris 2.5 (hereafter Miss), SBOp 4:24,Google ScholarEng. trans, in Magnificat: Homilies in Praise of the Blessed Virgin Mary by Bernard of Clairvaux and Amadeus of Lausanne, trans. Saïd, Marie-Bernard, Cistercian Fathers 18 (Kalamazoo, Mich.: Cistercian Publications, 1979; reprinted in Waddell, Homilies in Praise, 18; hereafter CF 18);Google ScholarCsi 2.14, SBOp 3:442.6, Five Books on Consideration, 97; SC 45.3, SBOp 2:51.12–13, Song 2:234.Google Scholar
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57. Ep. 363; SBOp 8:314.Google Scholar
58. Ep. 331; SBOp 8:269–70; James, Letters, 323–24. See also ep. 362.2, SBOp 8:310, James 387; Csi 4.12, SBOp 3.457, On Consideration 123, addressed to Pope Eugenius III, and ep. 270.2, SBOp 8:179, James 418.Google Scholar
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60. SC 12.9; SBOp 1:66;Google ScholarSong 1: 84–85: “sed qui iuvat multos, et melius facit, et virilius.” See also SC 44.4–8; SBOp 2:46–49; Song 2:227–31, where the prodigal son who has forfeited “the virile energy and wisdom of mature manhood” through debauched living might once more become a man among men (homo in hominem) when undisciplined worldliness is abandoned. Such a one is once again clothed with compassionate tenderness (mansuetudo), and is prepared to exercise that fraternal charity which is a combination of zeal and the perfection of Christ's love in the soul. Note the confluence of feminine tenderness and images of masculinity. Also note that it is the prior perfection of Christ's love in the soul that makes such fraternal charity possible.Google Scholar
61. This ambivalence is vividly portrayed, for instance, in the section just prior to the one under discussion; SC 12.8; SBOp 1:65–66; Song 1:83–84.Google Scholar
62. Sermo de conversione ad clericos 101 (hereafter Div), SBOp 6.1:368. See also epp. 2.1, 2.8, 88.2,143.1–2, 351, 354, 389, 397.1; SBOp 7:12–13,19, 232–33, 342, 8:294–95, 298, 356–57, 373; James, Letters, 10,16,136,212,357,346,379,498, for these themes.Google Scholar
63. Div 10, SBOp 6.1:121–24; 3 Sententia 73, SBOp 6.2:108–12.Google ScholarSee the discussion in Bernardo Olivera, “Aspects of the Love of Neighbor in the Spiritual Doctrine of St Bernard,” Cistercian Studies Quarterly 26 (1991): 116–17.Google Scholar
64. Div 90.3; SBOp 6.1:339.Google Scholar
65. Newman, Martha G., The Boundaries of Charity: Cistercian Culture and Ecclesiastical Reform, 1098–1180 (Stanford, Calif.: Stanford University Press, 1996), cited at 237.Google Scholar
66. SC 58.1; SBOp 2:127;Google ScholarSong 3: 108.Google Scholar
67. SC 58.2; SBOp 2:128;Google ScholarSong 3: 108–9: “Non itaque suscitatur praeterquam velit, quando fit prius ut velit.”Google Scholar
68. SC 50.4–6; SBOp 2:80–82;Google ScholarSong 3: 32–35. Quote is from SC 50.4: “Sed est affectio quam caro gignit, et est quam ratio regit, et est quam condit sapientia.”Google Scholar
69. SC 49.5; SBOp 2:75–76;Google ScholarSong 3: 25.Google Scholar
70. SC 7.3; SBOp 1:32;Google ScholarSong 1: 39–40: “Amat ardenter, quae ita proprio debriatur amore, ut maiestatem non cogitet.”Google Scholar
71. SC 1.5; SBOp 1:5;Google ScholarSong 1: 3.Google Scholar
72. SC 9.2; SBOp 1:43;Google ScholarSong 1: 54: “sed praeceps amor, nec iudicium praestolator, nec consilio temperatur, nec pudore frenatur, nec rationi subicitur.” See also SC 27.11,64.10, 79.1; SBOp 1:190,2:171,2:272;Google ScholarSong 2: 84, 3: 177,4: 137.Google Scholar
73. Dil 10.27; SBOp 3:142; On Loving God, 119: “ut divino debriatus amore animus, oblitus sui… totus pergat in Deum.”Google Scholar
74. SC 27.10; SBOp 1:189;Google ScholarSong 2: 83: “proficit in virum perfectum, in mensuram aetatis plenitudinis Christi.”Google Scholar
75. SC 27.10; SBOp 1:188–89; Song 2:83: “quae divinam in se praesentiam … digna invenitur suscipere … quid illa cui et spatiosa suppetunt deambulatoria ad opus quidem maiestatis?”Google Scholar
76. SC 27.10; SBOp 1:189;Google ScholarSong 2: 83: “Non est profecto intricata forensibus causis curisve saecularibus, nec certe ventri et luxurne dedita, sed nec curiosa spectandi, seu cupida omnino dominandi, veletiam tumida dominatu.”Google Scholar
77. SC 27.7; SBOp 1:186–87;Google ScholarSong 2: 80.Google Scholar
78. SC 27.10–11; SBOp 1:189–90;Google ScholarSong 2: 83–84.Google Scholar
79. SC 27:12; SBOp 1:190–91;Google ScholarSong 2: 85: “homines spirituales… contemplatione suspensos. Et hi pluentes pluviam verbi salutarem, tonant increpationibus … legem vitae et disciplinae digito quidem Dei scriptam in semetipsis ostendunt, ad dandum scientiam salutis plebi eius.”Google Scholar
80. SC 14.5; SBOp 1:79;Google ScholarSong 1: 101: “Sponsus et sponsa soli interim intus sint, mutuis secretisque fruantur amplexibus, nullo strepitu carnalium desideriorum, nullo corporeorum phantasmatum perturbante tumultu.”Google Scholar
81. See SC 80.2, SBOp 2:278, Song 4:146–47;Google ScholarSC 83.3, SBOp 2:299, Song 4:182.Google Scholar
82. SC 43.1–2, SBOp 2:41–42,Google ScholarSong 2: 220–221 (myrrh);Google ScholarSC 9.7–8,10.1, 32.10, 41.6, 52.6, 85.13, SBOp 1:46–47, 48, 232–33,2:36,93–94, 315–16,Google ScholarSong 1: 58–59, 61, 2:142–43, 208, 3:55,4:209. See Emero Steigman, “Action and Contemplation in St. Bernard's Sermons on the Song of Songs, ” in Walsh and Edmonds, Song 3:x-xii, on this theme, as well as Bynum, Jesus as Mother, 110–69.Google Scholar
83. SC 27.10, SBOp 1:189,Google ScholarSong 2: 83: “proficit in virum perfectum”; and SC 27.10, SBOp 1:188–89, Song 2:83: “quae divinam in se praesentiam … digna invenitur suscipere.”Google Scholar
84. SC 27.7; SBOp 1:186;Google ScholarSong 2: 80.Google Scholar
85. On the Virgin, see particularly Miss 1–4; SBOp 4:13–58; Homilies in Praise (CF 18a).Google Scholar
86. For Mary and Martha, see De gradibus humilitatis et superbiae 52 (hereafter Hum), SBOp 3:55.14–56.11,Google Scholartrans, as “Steps of Humility and Pride,” in Treatises II, trans. Walton, Robert, Cistercian Fathers Series 13 (Kalamazoo, Mich.: Cistercian, 1980), 78–79;Google Scholarfor the Samaritan woman at the well, see Dil 26, SBOp 3:141.5–12, Treatises II, 118; the Gospel woman who searched her house for the lost coin is treated in Gra 32, SBOp 3:188.22–28, On Grace and Free Choice, 88. For further examples, see the analysis of Leclercq, Women and St. Bernard of Clairvaux.Google Scholar
87. SC 12.8–9; SBOp 1:65–66;Google ScholarSong 1: 84–85.Google Scholar
88. Newman, , From Virile Woman to WomanChrist, 26. Cf. Bynum, “ ‘… And Woman His Humanity‘” 268–69; and eadem, Jesus as Mother, 128.Google Scholar
89. Epp. 144.1, 154, 341, 389; SBOp 7:344, 7:361, 8:283, 8:356–57; James, Letters, 214, 230, 453, 379.Google Scholar
90. Cloke, , This Female Man of God, 75, 200–02, 216–17, 220. See also David Damrosch, who has argued that for Bernard, there are strong parallels between the facts of women's lives as “other” or second-class citizens in medieval society and the lives of Bernard and his monks. Damrosch goes to far as to suggest that Bernard appropriates both the positive and negative qualities of “woman” to describe what it means to live as outsiders in this world, in exile from God and trapped within the burdensome mortal body. Damrosch, “Non Alia Sed Aliter,” 181–95.Google Scholar
91. Mal l; SBOp 5:417; The Life and Death of Malachy, 97: “illecebris carnalibus et oblectamentis saecularibus viriliter abrenuntiasse.”Google Scholar
92. This is suggested by placing contemplative presence at the height of the four degrees of love (Dil 27; SBOp 3: 142; On Loving God 119–20), or bridal love at the top of the hierarchy of loves (SC 7.2, 83.4–5; SBOp 1:31–32, 2:300–01; Song 1:38–39, 4:183–85), as well as in those letters that urge the benefits of life in the cloister over life in the world (for instance, ep. 2; SBOp 7:12–22; James, Letters, 10–18).Google Scholar
93. SC 50–52, SBOp 2:78–95, Song 3:30–57, esp. SC 50.5,52.6; Newman, Boundaries of Charity.Google Scholar
94. SC 52.6, SBOp 2:94, Song 3:55; Div 101, SBOp 6.1:368.Google Scholar
95. Ep. 289; SBOp 8:205.16; James, Letters, 147.Google Scholar
96. Ep. 354; SBOp 8:298; James, Letters, 346.Google Scholar
97. Ep. 113.1, SBOp 7:288, James, Letters, 174; Miss 2.5, SBOp 4:24, Homilies in Praise (CF18a), 18.Google Scholar
98. Csi 2.14; SBOp 3:4442.6; Five Books on Consideration, 97.Google Scholar
99. SC 38.4; SBOp 2:16,17–28;Google ScholarSong 2: 189–90.Google Scholar
100. SC 45.3; SBOp 2:51.12–13;Google ScholarSong 2: 234: “Rara avis in terris, aut sanctitatem non perdere, aut humilitatem sanctimonia non excludi.”Google Scholar
101. SC 45.3–4; SBOp 2:51–52;Google ScholarSong 2: 234–35.Google Scholar
102. SC 27.10; SBOp 1:189;Google ScholarSong 2: 83: “proficit in virum perfectum, in mensuram aetatis pienitudinis Christi.”Google Scholar
103. Leclercq, , Women and St. Bernard;Google ScholarHufgard, M. Kilian, “St. Bernard of Clairvaux's Image of Womanhood,” Cistercian Studies 24 (1989): 215–22;Google ScholarRussel, Edith, “Saint Bernard et les dames de son temps,” in Saint Bernard de Clairvaux, Editiones Alsatia Paris 6 (Paris: Commission d'histoire de l'ordre de Citeaux, 1953), 411–25.Google Scholar
104. Sermon 2.2–3; SBOp 4:22–23; Homilies in Praise (CF 18a) 16–17.Google Scholar
105. Leclercq, , Women and St. Bernard, 92–109.Google Scholar
106. Bynum, , Jesus as Mother, 148–49.Google Scholar
107. See n. 47 above.Google Scholar
108. Bernard himself refers to this paradox several times in the Sermons on the Song of Songs. See SC 25.7,29.7,34.4; SBOp 1:167,208, 247;Google ScholarSong 2: 55, 108–9, 163.Google Scholar
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