Medici et medicamenta: The Medicine of Penance in Late Antiquity.
Firey, Abigail
Medici et medicamenta: The Medicine of Penance in Late Antiquity.
By Natalie Brigit Molineaux. Lanham, Md.: University Press of America,
2009. xviii + 315 pp. $44.95 paper.
Natalie Brigit Molineaux became intrigued, she tells us, by the
question of whether there were connections between the spiritual
exercises of late antique ascetics and Celtic monastic penance (xiv).
That enquiry broadened to encompass very large questions about the
origins, functions, forms, and causes for change in penitential practices. This book presents the preparatory research for investigating
those questions. Whether probing the concept of a priori religiosity (chapter 1), examining ante-Nicene authors for their perspectives on
penance (chapter 6), investigating pre-Christian and Christian
constructions of guilt and sin (chapter 5), rehearsing late antique
interest in penance (chapter 7), arguing for "the monasticization
of penance" (chapter 8), or reviewing the historiography of penance
between the sixteenth and twenty-first centuries (chapters 2-4), her
method is to survey many, many authors and to summarize each one's
stance, contribution, or context. The book as a whole, then, is a
virtual DNB of authors who, throughout the ages, grappled with penance
or subjects related to it. Molineaux demonstrates just how many such
authors there were, and delineates the central issues that preoccupied
them.
When there are the excellent, concise historiographic surveys by
Mary Mansfield in The Humiliation of Sinners: Public Penance in
Thirteenth-Century France ([Ithaca, N.Y.: Cornell University Press,
1995], 5-15) and Sarah Hamilton in The Practice of Penance, 900-1050
([Woodbridge, Suffolk: Boydell, 2001], 9-23) and most recently, the
extensive essay by R. Emmet McLaughlin, "Truth, Tradition, and
History: The Historiography of High/Late Medieval and Early Modern
Penance" (in A New History of Penance, ed. Abigail Firey [Leiden:
Brill, 2008], 19-71), one may wonder what more needs to be said. Readers
familiar with scholarship on penance will readily recognize the major
authors noted by Molineaux, and will find few surprises in the outlines
she traces of prevailing trends and interests. Her work harvests,
however, interstitial authors that may not be as familiar, and that
accumulation of voices shows the tipping balances in debates, and in
some instances clarifies that there were, indeed, debates, many of them
still unresolved.
The chapters cast chronologically seem to this reviewer more
successful than the chapters oriented around theoretical issues. In the
latter, rather than excavating unexplored primary sources or offering
new readings of known sources, Molineaux sets forth the historiographic
trappings encasing the issues. The chapter on a priori religiosity
places in the foreground the views of Hegel, Friedrich Max Muller,
Locke, Hume, Kant, Christoph Meiners, Gerardus van der Leeuw,
Schleiermacher, Kierkegaard, Auguste Comte, Durkheim, William James,
Levi-Strauss, Eliade, Buber, Jung, Ricoeur, and others. A similarly
sweeping approach shapes chapter 6, a general review of ante-Nicene
writings on sin and penance, framed with a strong contrast between
eastern and western authors even in the early Christian period. The
equally general review of late antique asceticism, represented by
well-known figures and standard texts, is framed largely with reference
to Peter Brown's model of the "holy man" (chapter 7).
Less conventional, but also less secure, are Molineaux's lexical
descriptions of Sumerian, Babylonian, Akkadian, Egyptian, Aramaic,
Hebrew, Greek, and Latin references to sin and atonement. Lacking
facility in these languages, Molineaux does not undertake genuine
philological investigation or provide contexts that vest the selected
terms with meaning. The same chapter (5, "Penance in pre-Christian
Antiquity") is weakened by inattention to the precept that the
meanings of myths are neither static nor singular; thus,
Molineaux's effort to investigate whether some cultures are more
sensitive to guilt and sin than others (148) is compromised.
In the purely historiographic chapters, however, Molineaux hits her
stride. The second chapter, "From Dogmatic History to the History
of Dogma (ca. 1520-1920)," accords with the consensus among the
present generation of scholars, identifying H. C. Lea as an
extraordinarily influential scholar and confessional polemicist,
pointing to the seventeenth-century scholars Amauld and Morin as
determining the historiographic infrastructure for centuries to come,
and integrating Hamack as the story moves toward Wasserschleben and
Schmitz. Incorporated as well are Cano, Canisius, Cajetan, Jean Daille,
Natalis Alexandrr, Jacques Boileau, Sarpi, Nathaniel Marshall, Balthazar
[Baldasarre] Francolini, Alphonse Mafia de Ligouri, and others. The
chapter is also thickened with consideration of early modern English scholars, such as Bucer, Cranmer, Jewel, and Hooker (38-41), and of
writers reacting against Lea's work (60-61). Chapter 4,
"Paradigms in the Contemporary Historiography of Penance,"
reflects growing sentiment that the long-dominant accounts by Bernhard
Poschmann and Cyrille Vogel need reconsideration, that Thomas
Tentler's paradigm of penance's use for social control was
transformative, that Mary Mansfield's work on late medieval public
penance shattered the discursive dichotomies of public v. private and
sacramental v. popular, and that Foucault's theories on power,
sexuality, and secrecy sent tremors through scholarship on penance.
Again, Molineaux details a host of authors (Boyle, Frantzen, Morris,
Murray, deJong, Payer, Brundage, Biller, Kerff, Bossy, Natalie Davis,
Gurevich, Vauchez, Ohst, and others) influenced by or responding to
these works and themes.
The third chapter, treating the period between 1920 and 2000, gives
considerable weight to the question of Celtic influence on western
penitential norms. In the preceding chapter, Molineaux weaves the 1622
treatise by James Ussher, archbishop (Protestant) of Armagh into her
section on "a diffusion of Romantic idealism and a surge of
national consciousness" (50) in the nineteenth century. Ussher, she
notes, was "one of the most ardent advocates for the uniqueness of
early Celtic Christianity" (50), and that uniqueness became
integral in analyses of penance. Pointing to works such as Thomas
Leland's History of Ireland (1773), Mervyn Archdall's
Monasticon Hibernicum (1786), and Edward Ledwich's Antiquities of
Ireland (1794), Molineaux affirms that, "Inexorably, in the ensuing
decades, the forging of a distinctively Irish historiography served to
underscore the 'idiosyncratic quality of the Early Irish
Church'" (51). Frederick Warren, George Stokes, and Thomas
Olden advanced the theory that the Celtic Church's distinction from
continental (leg. Roman) churches derived from eastern influence. In
response, Heinrich Zimmer linked Celtic and British Christianity; this
did still preserve some notion of "insular" Christianity. The
emphasis on "Celtic" as a crucial category in the history of
penance was maintained in John T. McNeill's The Celtic Penitentials
and their Influence on Continental Christianity (Paris: Edouard
Champion, 1923) and A History of the Cure of Souls (New York: Harper,
1951), Oscar Watkins's A History of Penance (London: Longmans,
Green, 1920), and, although differently, studies by Thomas Oakley
(1932-1940). Molineaux rightly sets the promotion of Celtic
exceptionalism in the context of the debates between Karl Adam and
Bernard Poschmann over "public" and "private"
penitential rites. Indeed, this chapter reveals just how much resistance
to Poschmann's constructs and their antecedents there was in the
earlier twentieth century. Molineaux usefully draws our attention to the
alternative views of not only Adam but also Emil Grller, LaGarde, Paul
Galtier, Aloys Dirksen, Josef Jungmann, Bernard Carra de Vaux Saint-Cyr,
and others.
Molineaux is an intelligent reader, and represents the evidence
supporting standard interpretations fairly. Where there is slippage is
in the early medieval domain. There is an egregious lapse of judgment in
her suggestion that the churches of northern and southern Ireland had
significantly different, oppositional "characters" in the late
sixth and seventh centuries (265), for which, not surprisingly, she
provides no evidence, and she misdates the manuscript Paris, B.N., lat.
3182 by six centuries (267). Although she asserts that the
seventh-century diffusions of penitentials she considers Celtic
"marked a culmination of processes that had been set in motion over
two centuries earlier" (269), she offers no discussion of the
content or texts of those penitentials.
The questions Molineaux raises are indeed vital, and her curiosity
about the influence of Greek and Jewish penitential traditions on those
of the Latin west is well-founded. Lamentably, her book appears to have
had the benefit of neither an editor nor a pre-publication reviewer. An
astonishingly high number of typographical and syntactical errors mar
the majority of its pages (the missing words and extraneous words,
incomplete sentences, and endnotes that do not correspond to their call
numbers are especially disturbing), as do a set of frequently repeated,
distracting authorial tics. Nevertheless, students interested in the
historiography of penance may benefit from consulting the often
informative pages of Medici et medicamenta.
doi: 10.1017/S0009640710001101
Abigail Firey
University of Kentucky