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Mystical marriage

 

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Mystical marriage



 
 
Mystical marriage is a term equating the intimacy of a mystical relationship, as between a Christian mystic
Mystic

Mystic may refer to:* A person who practices mysticism, or a reference to a mystery a mystic knows or studies. It may also be a person who seeks the truth of life beyond the five senses....
 and God, with the natural intimacy between marital partners. The best known examples are the Mystical Marriage of Saint Catherine
Mystical Marriage of Saint Catherine

The Mystical Marriage of Saint Catherine is an iconographic motif of Christian painting arising from visions of both Saint Catherine of Alexandria and Saint Catherine of Siena....
, Saint Teresa of Avila, and Saint John of the Cross.

he Bible (Old and New Testament), the love of God for man, and in particular his relations with his chosen people (whether of the Jewish synagogue
Synagogue

A synagogue is a Jewish house of prayer.Synagogues usually have a large hall for prayer , smaller rooms for study and sometimes a social hall and offices....
 or of the Christian church
Christian Church

Christian Church and the word church are used to denote both a Christian Groups of people and a Church . The word church is usually, but not exclusively, associated with Christianity....
), are frequently typified under the form of the relations between bridegroom (God) and bride (mortal).






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Mystical marriage is a term equating the intimacy of a mystical relationship, as between a Christian mystic
Mystic

Mystic may refer to:* A person who practices mysticism, or a reference to a mystery a mystic knows or studies. It may also be a person who seeks the truth of life beyond the five senses....
 and God, with the natural intimacy between marital partners. The best known examples are the Mystical Marriage of Saint Catherine
Mystical Marriage of Saint Catherine

The Mystical Marriage of Saint Catherine is an iconographic motif of Christian painting arising from visions of both Saint Catherine of Alexandria and Saint Catherine of Siena....
, Saint Teresa of Avila, and Saint John of the Cross.

History

In the Bible (Old and New Testament), the love of God for man, and in particular his relations with his chosen people (whether of the Jewish synagogue
Synagogue

A synagogue is a Jewish house of prayer.Synagogues usually have a large hall for prayer , smaller rooms for study and sometimes a social hall and offices....
 or of the Christian church
Christian Church

Christian Church and the word church are used to denote both a Christian Groups of people and a Church . The word church is usually, but not exclusively, associated with Christianity....
), are frequently typified under the form of the relations between bridegroom (God) and bride (mortal). A mystical union may easily be travestied by an unsympathetic writer, by emphasizing physical or trivial details of human marriage
Marriage

Marriage is a social, spirituality, or law union of individuals. This union may also be called matrimony, while the ceremony that marks its beginning is usually called a wedding and the married status created is sometimes called wedlock....
: the classic example from Greek mythology
Greek mythology

Greek mythology is the body of myths and legends belonging to the Ancient Greece concerning their List of Greek mythological figures#Immortals and Greek hero cult, Cosmology#Metaphysical cosmology, and the origins and significance of their own cult and ritual practices....
 is the myth of Pasiphaë
Pasiphaë

In Greek mythology, Pasipha? , "wide-shining" was the daughter of Helios, the Sun, by the eldest of the Oceanids, Perse; Like her doublet Europa, her origins were in the East, in her case at Colchis, the palace of the Sun; she was given in marriage to King Minos of Crete....
, whose union with the solar bull
Bull (mythology)

Appearances of the Bull in mythology and worship are widespread in the ancient world. It is the subject of various cultural and Religion incarnations, as well as modern mentions in new age cultures....
 was rendered by Hellenic mythographers as an unnatural passion for a specific bull, made possible by a cow-like contraption built by Daedalus
Daedalus

In Greek mythology, Daedalus was a most skillful artificer, or craftsman, so skillful that he was said to have invented images that seemed to move about....
, within which Pasiphaë literally consummated her carnal desires. Much was made by disapproving Christian writers like Arnobius
Arnobius

Arnobius of Sicca was an Early Christian apologetics, during the reign of Diocletian . According to Jerome's Chronicle, Arnobius, before his conversion, was a distinguished rhetorician at Sicca Veneria , a major Christian center in Proconsular Africa , and owed his conversion to a premonitory dream....
 of the "rapes" of Zeus
Zeus

Zeus in Greek mythology is the king of the gods, the ruler of Mount Olympus and the god of the sky father and List of thunder gods. His symbols are the thunderbolt, eagle, bull , and oak....
 (Jupiter
Jupiter

Jupiter is the fifth planet from the Sun and the Solar system by size planet within the Solar System. It is two and a half times as massive as all of the other planets in our Solar System combined....
).

In Christianity, virginity
Virginity

A Virgin is, originally, a woman who has never had sexual intercourse. Virginity is the state of being a virgin. The term has traditionally also been applied to men....
 been considered from the earliest centuries as a special offering made by the soul to its spouse, Jesus Christ. Nothing else seems to have been meant in speaking of the mystical nuptials of Saint Agnes
Saint Agnes

Agnes of Rome is a Consecrated virgin-Christian martyrs, venerated as a saint in the Roman Catholic Church, Eastern Catholic Churches, the Anglican Communion, and in Eastern Orthodoxy....
 and of St. Catherine of Alexandria, or that of the Blessed Virgin, as Spouse of the Holy Spirit
Holy Spirit

In Christianity, the Holy Ghost or Holy Spirit is the spirit of God. The term Christ , is also used to refer to this presence. That is, the Spirit is considered to act in concert with and share an essential nature with God the Father and God the Son ....
(as she had Conceived Christ, by the Power of the Holy Spirit, in the Gospels according to Sts. Matthew and Luke). These primitive notions were afterwards developed more completely, and the phrase mystical marriage has been taken in two different senses, the one wide and the other more restricted.

(1) In many of the lives of the saint
Saint

A saint in Christianity is a human being who has been called to holiness. The term is used differently by various denominations, with some, such as the Anglicans, Methodists, and Lutherans distinguishing between Saints and saints....
s, the wide sense is intended. Here the mystical marriage consists in a vision in which Christ tells a soul that He takes it for His bride, presenting it with the customary wedding ring, and the apparition is accompanied by a ceremony; the Blessed Virgin, other saints and angels are present. This festivity is but the accompaniment and symbol of a purely spiritual grace; hagiographers do not make clear what this grace is, but it may at least be said that the soul receives a sudden augmentation of charity and of familiarity with God, who will thereafter take more special care of it. All this, indeed, is involved in the notion of marriage. Moreover, as a wife should share in the life of her husband, and as Christ suffered for the redemption of mankind, the mystical spouse enters into a more intimate participation in Jesus' sufferings. Accordingly, in three cases out of every four, the mystical marriage has been granted to stigmatics. Dr. Imbert estimated that from the earliest times to the 2àth century history has recorded seventy-seven mystical marriages; they are mentioned in connection with female saints, beatae and venerabiles -- e.g. Blessed Angela of Foligno
Angela of Foligno

Angela of Foligno was a Christian author, nun, and Christian mysticism. She was noted not only for her spiritual writings, but also for founding a religious order....
, St. Catherine of Siena, St. Colette, St. Teresa, St. Catherine of Ricci, Venerable Marina d'Escobar, St. Mary Magdalen de' Pazzi, St. Veronica Giuliani, Venerable Maria de Agreda
Maria de Agreda

Mar?a Fern?ndez Coronel y Arana, Abbess of ?greda or, known in religion as Sor Mar?a de Jes?s de ?greda , also known as the Lady in Blue and the Blue Nun, was born and died in ?greda, a town located in the Soria , Castile and Le?n, Spain....
. Religious art has exercised its resources upon mystical marriage, considered as a festive celebration. That of St. Catherine of Alexandria is the subject of Hans Memling
Hans Memling

Hans Memling was an Early Netherlandish painting, born in Seligenstadt/Germany, who was the last major fifteenth century artist in the Low Countries, the successor to Jan van Eyck and Rogier van der Weyden, whose tradition he continued with little innovation....
's masterpiece (in St. John's Hospital, Bruges), as also of paintings by Jordaens (Madrid), Antonio da Correggio
Antonio da Correggio

Antonio Allegri da Correggio was the foremost painter of the Parma school of the Italy Renaissance, who was responsible for some of the most vigorous and sensuous works of the 16th century....
 (Naples and the Louvre) and others; Fra Bartolommeo
Fra Bartolommeo

Fra Bartolomeo or Fra Bartolommeo , also known as Baccio della Porta, was an Italian people Renaissance painter of religious subjects....
 has done as much for St. Catherine of Siena. (2) In a more restricted sense, the term mystical marriage is employed by St. Teresa and St. John of the Cross to designate that mystical union with God which is the most exalted condition attainable by the soul in this life. It is also called a "transforming union", "consummate union" and "deification". St. Teresa likewise calls it "the seventh resting-place" of the "interior castle"; she speaks of it only in the last treatise she composed five years before her death, when she had been but recently raised to this degree. This state consists of three elements:
  • an almost continual sense of the presence of God, even in the midst of external occupations. This favour does not of itself produce an alienation of the senses; ecstasies are more rare. Nor does this permanent sense of God's presence suffice to constitute the spiritual marriage, but is only a state somewhat near to it.
  • a transformation of the higher faculties in respect to their mode of operation: hence the name "transforming union"; it is the essential note of the state. The soul is conscious that in its supernatural acts of intellect and of will, it participates in the Divine life and the analogous acts in God. To understand what is meant by this, it must be remembered that in heaven we are not only to enjoy the vision of God, but to feel our participation in His nature. Mystical writers have sometimes exaggerated in describing this grace; it has been said that we think by the eternal thought of God, love by His infinite love and will by His will. Thus they appear to confound the Divine and human natures. They are describing what they believe they feel; like the astronomers, they speak the language of appearances, which we find easier to understand. Here, as in human marriage, there is a fusion of two lives.
  • an habitual vision of the Blessed Trinity or of some Divine attribute. This grace is sometimes accorded before the transforming union. Certain authors appear to hold that in the transforming union there is produced a union with the Divine Word more special than that with the other two Divine Persons; but there is no proof that this is so in all cases. St. Teresa gives the name of "spiritual betrothal" to passing foretastes of the transforming union, such as occur in raptures.


See also

  • Bridal theology
    Bridal theology

    Within the Judeo-Christian tradition, bridal theology, also referred to as mystical marriage, concerns the relationship of the believer, or body of believers and God, drawing an analogy with the natural husband/wife relationship....
  • Bride of Christ
    Bride of Christ

    The Bride of Christ is a metaphor for the Ecclesia , likening the relationship between Christians and Jesus to a betrothal pointing to a future wedding, when Christians are re-united with Jesus....


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