Crossing: The INPR Journal
Vol. 1 (2020): 112-129
DOI: 10.21428/8766eb43.1f767536
Unseeing Sainthood
Elizabeth Sutherland
Franciscan University of Steubenville
The saint. What sort of saint? No one has ever seen a saint. For the saint remains invisible, not by chance, but in principle and by right.[1]
Jean-Luc Marion
The saint is “the ‘stranger’ par excellence.”[2] Saints transcend material reality through their close affinity with the divine. They share in that which marks God’s alterity: his holiness. If saints join God in being set apart, can they be recognized precisely as set apart? The dialectic between presence and absence, hiddenness and revelation, intimacy and ineffability, homeliness and the uncanny haunts all aspects of cultic devotion. This tension emerges in a special way with regard to the hagiographical tradition. According to the apophatic or negative theological school of thought, holiness cannot be represented mimetically. Aesthetic depiction of an ineffable phenomenon should be impossible. Yet this is the task of hagiography. The literature of sainthood must produce saintly visibility, rendering sainthood perceivable by imagining what holiness looks like. Saints are made, by God but also by culture. In both cases “making” has the full force of poesis. Legendum, one of several words used throughout the Middle Ages to describe the genre of saint’s life, indicates the deep textuality of sainthood. From the Latin verb legere (“to read,” “to collect or gather together”), legendum translates “ought to be read.” The word “legend” has come to signify a quasi-historical event imbued with mythic (if not actual) truth and, in its colloquial usage, often has fantastical connotations. Despite its givenness in the mode of textuality, hagiography seeks to preserve the mystery of the holy even as it depicts holy persons. In order to represent holiness as such, hagiography must constantly undo its project of cataphatic (that is—affirmative, imagistic) representation. It must mortify the gaze, hide the saint, offend the mind’s eye—all in an attempt to let the dark luminescence of the holy shine forth more brightly. Because of this, the hagiographical mode of literature can be said to have an apophatic, or negative, poetics. It must render the icon without creating an idol. Hagiography has the difficult task of preserving the transcendent prerogative of holiness while creating an imaginary space within which one might contemplate holy persons. The aesthetic apparatus of sainthood—the cult-making—provides a backdrop against which the phenomenon of sainthood can emerge, even if the holy itself can never been seen in its essence. Christ’s concrete personhood, and its attendant theology of Word-made-flesh, guarantees sainthood’s ability to manifest, however fuzzily. While the cultic process necessarily distorts the phenomenon of sanctity, it indicates the presence of something real and positions devotees within an epistemological darkness that is generative rather than void.
It may seem surprising that holiness should be considered ineffable, given the wealth of images that flood the mind as soon as one hears the word “saint.” Within a Christian framework, a holy life participates in the vita Christi. The sanctified person becomes conformed to Christ, an alter Christus.[3] Holiness, then, is an irreducibly supernatural phenomenon. Sainthood does not refer to moral perfection, though goodness bears a direct relationship to holiness, and the two are often conflated. Ethicists working within the analytic tradition have taken up the concept of “moral sainthood,” coined by Susan Wolf, in an ongoing conversation about supererogation. Those interested in the possibility of a postmodern ethics have occasionally made a similar move. [4] Zooming outward from the personal to the civic, sainthood is sometimes viewed as fundamentally political.[5] So charismatic is the saint as a cultural force, the idea of such a figure compels even when evacuated of spiritual content. It makes sense that sainthood has proven an enduringly slippery phenomenon, difficult to pin down. The “definition” of sanctity has no independent content of its own; rather, it describes a mode of relationality toward the divine. Its sense is more directional than prescriptive. It reconfigures the thrust of one’s existence. Only God’s own activity can complete the process of becoming holy. Sanctification transfigures individual human persons. Orthodox thinkers refer to this transformative process as theosis, or divinization, focusing on the soul’s ability to share in the divine life. In the Judeo-Christian tradition, God’s holiness is coordinate with his transcendence. When a person becomes sanctified, she enters into this alterity. Participating in the divine life entails a partial sharing in God’s ineffable nature. If saints as such share in God’s unknowability, then it would seem we have no hope of recognizing them as saints.
One contemporary strain of phenomenology articulates this paradox most starkly. Following Michel Henry, Jean-Luc Marion applies phenomenology to the revelatory, transcendent realm. His doctrine of saturation has created an entire field of inquiry, with implications for many topics. He addresses sainthood specifically in an essay titled “The Invisibility of the Saint.” For Marion, anyone who thinks he has recognized a saint fools himself: saints are invisible. “The saint. What sort of saint? No one has ever seen a saint. For the saint remains invisible, not by chance, but in principle and by right.” [6] He borrows the language of praise for this declamation: le saint, le saint?, le saint. Holy, holy, holy.[7] He affirms, questions, then negates the saint, arguing that she retains her invisibility in all circumstances. In order to recognize saintliness in another person, one must have experienced the phenomenon of holiness within oneself. Upon what other basis can one attribute it to another? Holiness cannot be defined, only known by direct experience. How does this work, though, if “no one can say ‘I am a saint’ without total self-deception”?[8] To account oneself holy is to commit the sin of pride. In fact, the holier a person becomes, the more fallible she seems in her own eyes. The evidence of one’s holiness must manifest during an encounter with the holiness of another. True recognition of the holy consists in understanding one’s own lowliness. It is known not by similitude, but by disparity. Rudolf Otto calls this reaction the mysterium tremendum, a shuddering awareness of one’s own creaturely nature.[9] When Jesus’s identity as the Christ begins to dawn on Peter, the disciple does not gape or touch. He takes a step back: “Depart from me, Lord, for I am a sinful man.” (Luke 5.8). So strong is his reaction, he dares to address Jesus with an imperative. This reaction sanctifies Peter. According to Marion, presuming to comprehend and label the holy verges on idolatry, and “all idolatry actually results in self-idolatry.”[10] One’s own standards become the measure of the divine. The holy’s elusiveness consigns saintliness to formal invisibility.
Marion makes a powerful case for why sanctity’s phenomenality must remain invisible, but his disturbing claim invites further conversation. For example, how does one attain to this higher order of “recognition”? What enables that penitential movement in the first place? How does the mysterium tremendum effect or enable sanctification? Most striking of all, how do we account for all the material accoutrements of cultic devotion, which somehow mediate sanctity to devotees? Consigning holiness to absolute invisibility seems to preclude the possibility of being drawn to it or following its implicit command of imitatio—which would seem, in turn, to make sanctification impossible. There must be a kind of “recognition without recognition” if conversion is to remain possible.
Petra Turner develops the concept of saintly invisibility within the context of Marion’s larger body of thought. Drawing on his doctrine of the saturated phenomenon, a phenomenon whose intuition (in-flowing) exceeds one’s ability to intend (reach out to) it, Turner sheds some light on Marion’s argument. Her commentary illuminates the dynamism of saintly invisibility, distinguishing it from something like an abyss or vacuum. The perceiver experiences saintliness “as something outside of and foreign to oneself, and perceives and receives it as a conceptual lack, as a space where the profane cannot enter” (emphasis added).[11] What is experienced as lack, however, is actually the sense of a fullness that exceeds one’s ability to perceive and conceive of it. We might liken an experience of holy hiddenness to the paradoxical realization that one has a blind spot. How does one come to see a blind spot? This experience has a negative component: holiness “inscribes itself in the individual’s response to it,” in Turner’s words, carving out a space within the individual.[12] To see holiness is to lower the gaze in nascent repentance; to repent is to begin to become holy. This participation increases one’s ability to receive the phenomenality of holiness even more. Turner calls this the “holy dance of encounter and change.”[13] Though clarified by the use of a wider philosophical lexicon, the idea of saintly invisibility remains an insoluble problem. That moment of conversion retains its profound mystery. What makes one person jeer at the crucifixion tableau and another weep? As Turner points out, “to recognize the holy is already to be caught up in it.”[14] A basic tautology resides at the heart of the thesis proposed by Marion and elaborated by Turner: one must belong to holiness in order to recognize it, and one must recognize holiness in order to belong to it. In order to deepen this quasi-gnostic conception of sainthood let us turn from philosophical to cultural responses to holiness.
Christians have always imagined saints as intercessory beings. In some way, however qualified, saints ostensibly strive for recognition, precisely because they desire to be companioned. This will-to-relationship is embedded in the very idea of Christian sainthood. The cultural production of saints—canonization if you will—depends precisely upon the recognition and naming of saintliness. People who come to be recognized as saints have often positioned themselves within a genealogy or are imagined as having done so. Dorothy Day (twentieth c., whom the Catholic Church is considering for canonization) quotes Thérèse of Lisieux (nineteenth c.), who authored plays about Joan of Arc (fifteenth c.), who heard a voice she ascribed to Margaret of Antioch (third c.), who, legend has it, craved martyrdom upon hearing the stories of Sts. Lawrence (third c.) and Stephen (first c.). Saints are creatures of community, always situated within an ongoing story of heroic holiness. If the greatest commandment, according to Christ, is to love God, the second most important is to love one’s neighbor (Matt. 22.36-40). The neighbor-oriented aspect of holiness makes its set apartness not exclusive, but invitational.
In one of the most popular texts of the late Middle Ages, a collection of vitae known as the Legenda aurea, or Golden Legend, Jacobus de Voragine (thirteenth c.) offers this account of All Saints Day: “The saints make festival in heaven over us, for there is joy before the angels of God and holy souls over one sinner doing penance, and so we should make a fair return by celebrating their feasts on earth… When we pay tribute to our brothers, we honor ourselves, since love makes all things to be in common, and all things are ours, in heaven, on earth, and in eternity.”[15] The feast days that pepper the medieval calendar reflect the celestial celebrations that these intercessory figures make in heaven, rejoicing when a soul is added to their number. Though the saint refers her being to God, doing so refers her back to humankind. Saints are ineluctably pro nobis. Their project of imitatio Christi drives them to serve and commune with others, whether through heavenly prayer or earthly ministry. The communion of saints unites the church triumphant with the church militant, extending the church’s sociality from this world into the next. According to Paul, the saints are nothing less than a great “cloud of witnesses” (Heb. 12.1). Surrounding the heavenly throne, they are caught up in the beatific vision, gazing at the Godhead and offering ceaseless hosannas. But they are also imagined as looking downward, their eyes glued to the spectacle of human suffering. They cheer the living on as if they watched a sporting event. Occupying the space in-between God and the world, the saint is a Janus-faced creature, simultaneously focused on heaven and earth. The cloud of witnesses both witness and bear witness to God, reflecting his glory in their own luminous souls. Hagiography must figure out a way of holding their transcendence in tension with this intercessory givenness. For if one cannot see holiness in its essence, it is by no means true that one looks on embodied holiness and sees nothing.
If holiness as such remains invisible, what does one see when one looks at a saint? What does a saint look like? This is an aesthetic question. It explores the connection between human sense perception and divine activity. Since Christianity’s earliest days, thinkers who have wanted to understand sanctification have favored one mode of writing above others: hagiography. The “writing” of “holy writing” also means “drawing.” Iconographers, though they produce visual images, are said to write icons. So does a hagiographer present “a verbal portrait or icon of the saint.”[16] It has become commonplace to point out that the western church has an underdeveloped pneumatology, or theology of the Holy Spirit. Yet it has an overabundant tradition of spiritual writing, both confessional and narratival. “Spirituality is at the core of any practice of a religion,” according to one scholar.[17] It encompasses lived, embodied faith. As a kind of spiritual writing, hagiography addresses the question of God’s activity in the sensible world.
In its attempt to understand and then depict the mystery of sainthood, the hagiographical mode can itself be understood as performing a phenomenology of sanctity. The hagiographer examines the phenomenality of holiness as embodied by exceptional individuals. He then recreates artistically what he perceives (with his bodily eye) or imagines (with his mind’s eye)—producing a virtual experience of sanctity. Let us not confuse this process with reporting. The hagiographer stylizes sainthood, refracting its ineffable quality through the prism of artistic interpretation.[18] Each literary device the hagiographer employs acts as a facet on this prism, drawing out the colors hidden within sanctity’s invisible light. In so doing, he performs what I call the hagiographical reduction, leading the mystery of embodied sanctity back to the perceiver through the mediation of a literary product. As aesthetic endeavors, saints’ lives do not seek explicitly to define holiness. Rather, they represent it in dynamic, painterly terms. Husserl himself, the father of modern phenomenology, acknowledged the kinship between the aesthetic and the phenomenological gazes.[19] Artistic endeavor affords one way of performing the phenomenological reduction. It employs and fosters the sort of beholding to which phenomenology exhorts us, even if it eschews the technical vocabulary.[20] Self-consciously to translate reality so that it might be understood and beheld while simultaneously adding to the mystery and depth of that reality: this is the project of art. That such translation is especially needed in the case of saintly persons is attested by the wealth of artistic renderings that survive and continue to be produced in the form of narrative and homiletic prose, verse, stained glass, jewelry, reliquaries, statuary, drama, icons, carvings, ballads, film, and more.
The visibility of the saints emerges within a literary tradition that not only represents them, but also makes the idea of sainthood thinkable. Perhaps sainthood as such is formally invisible, as Marion argues. Practically speaking, however, sainthood exists neither in the abstract nor in isolation: it always springs forth from a representational tradition from which it cannot be divorced. It is always personal, never merely conceptual. The representational matrix in which Christianity is embedded provides the horizon against which saintly phenomenality can emerge. Saints are textual creatures. Both literary-historical and theological data support this claim. Christian sainthood is premised upon the imitation of Christ, who is himself Word made flesh (John 1.14). The Incarnation, which gives humanity an ultimate visible instantiation of the divine, resembles an act of cosmic writing, translating the divine Word into material reality. Christ’s afterlife in the gospels and other literal, legible texts—themselves containing words ascribed to him—further compounds this translation. Theologies of the divine Logos aside, the historical Jesus of Nazareth was firmly rooted within a Jewish scriptural tradition. Much of his speech as reported in the gospels quotes and interprets the so-called “Old” Testament. “Jesus’ own conscious imitation of scriptural types” invited the gospel writers to imagine other parallels, producing a typological relationship between the Old Testament and the earliest Christian writings.[21] Saints carry this typological relationship forward, imagining themselves as the Body of Christ. Throughout late antiquity and the Middle Ages, movement of saintly bodies through space was imagined as analogous to textual acts; the relocation of a saint’s corpse or relics was an official event known as translatio. Additionally, the material realities of ancient and medieval writing lent themselves to a rich theology of text and flesh.[22] The process of writing “bridged the mental and the bodily; while the written text, inscribed on papyrus or on skin, was embodied logos.”[23] A saintly life, as lived in material reality, bore a direct relationship to the literary vita representing it.
Even if the vita was mostly imaginative embellishment, it endowed the saint with a liveliness that continued past death. The saints that were pure fabrications of a hagiographical tradition almost literally took on a life of their own. St. Catherine of Alexandria (fourth c.) was one of the most venerated saints of late antiquity and the Middle Ages but was temporarily removed from the Catholic calendar in 1969, along with many popular saints, due to lack of evidence substantiating her existence. St. Christopher is another figure whose story is likely pure invention. In the western version of his vita, Christopher is a giant who carries the Christ child across a river. His name, of course, means “Christ-bearer,” making the story an obvious case of allegory. Eastern traditions imagine him as a cynocephalus, a dog-headed man such as those reported in fantastical travelogues like the fourteenth-century Travels of Sir John Mandeville. Unbothered, iconographers depicted the saint’s canid features with gusto. Given his monstrous form, the Byzantine St. Christopher may afford the best example of legendum as legend. His immense popularity as patron saint of travel sparked a reaction against his removal from the calendar. Catherine, Christopher, and the other demoted saints were eventually reinstated. In the cases of these early, undocumented cults, the stories swiftly outpaced their origins. A textual life conferred a kind of presence, even in the absence of a corresponding biological life. As Robert Bartlett puts it—and this is key: “The saint is only seen through the writing about the saint as saint.”[24]
Yet the story of saintly stories is not one of triumphal, straightforward presence. Textuality is not a panacea for the trauma of absence. It functions like a vaccine, reproducing a manageable dose of absence in order to achieve a deeper understanding of what is in fact present. Hagiography both manifests and hides the individual venerated. Usually, Bartlett continues, “there can be no lifting of the veil; it is a veil that is created by the fact that, by the time people in the present can have any kind of encounter with the long dead person, that dead person has already been conceptualized as a saint, with all the implications.”[25] If this is so, then the person herself disappears into the formal invisibility of sainthood-as-a-concept as soon as people begin to identify her as such—to say nothing of her body’s absence in death.[26] Indeed, this covering over of a holy person by the idea of sainthood can happen during one’s lifetime. When referred to as a saint during an interview, social activist Dorothy Day reportedly rebuked the journalist for trivializing her.[27] This then is the paradox of representing sainthood: as soon as a person emerges as a saint, the mystery of her holiness retreats somewhat. The logic behind Marion’s claim is compelling, even relentless: saints cannot be seen as such. Yet who cares if sainthood remains invisible in essence? Sainthood is never abstract since it refers by definition to a specific person. It is always an incarnational, particularizable phenomenon. If it exists at all, it never exists as pure concept.
Similarly (and prototypically), the Christian God is not pure spirit or idea. Rather, he “proceeds” toward creation in the form of a material being—a person, specifically. The theological precondition for the possibility of Christian sainthood is Christ as incarnate Second Person. The historical precondition is the production of a gospel genre rendering Christ’s exemplarity and recounting speeches ascribed to him. Indeed, the Second Person has often been identified with scripture itself, his passion-wounded skin imagined as marked pages of parchment. Sainthood enters into this textual tradition. Saint-making is always a poetic endeavor. Not only does a saint know truth and do good—he is beautiful as well, moving toward beatification, although that beauty is cruciform here on earth. As Hans Urs von Balthasar has elaborated at length, recognizing the beauty of holiness means understanding the (anti-)aesthetics of the cross. This is no easy task and is largely what keeps holiness hazy in a this-worldly context. In an attempt to accommodate a commonsense understanding of sainthood, I argue that it can be recognized as sainthood, if only through the mediation of a cultic tradition that renders its form somehow manifest. This does not mean that sainthood is subject to easy and unqualified revelation. The same literary tradition that guarantees the saint’s presence also acknowledges and preserves her inscrutability, refracted through the cruciform aesthetic of the cross. This dialectic between appearing and non-appearing is the mechanism by which saintly representation becomes possible.
The saint’s absence is the wound at the heart of cultic devotion. The protagonist of a hagiographical narrative manifests an absent body. She does so precisely because hers is a textual body, however visual its poetic construal.[28] Yet even though “texts might substitute for bodies, texts did not provide an opposition to the body,” according to Derek Krueger.[29] The saint is endowed with a “textual body,” able to absorb the demands of both visibility and invisibility.[30] She is read, her body delivered to the mind by way of language. This non-apparitional quality of textuality becomes ironically “apparent” in the overdetermined visuality of martyr narratives. The earliest iterations of the passio subgenre favored long passages of ekphrasis, exhorting the hearer or reader to envision the absent saint. This imagistic impulse is auto-deconstructive, ultimately reminding the reader of the saint’s physical absence. Even when a relic provided physical, material presence, much imaginative and theological work assisted its manifestation as more than inert matter. Focusing on sculptural art objects, Peter Brown argues that “the art of the shrine in late antiquity is an art of closed surfaces. Behind these surfaces, the holy lay, either totally hidden or glimpsed through narrow apertures. The opacity of the surfaces heightened an awareness of the ultimate unattainability in this life of the person they [i.e., pilgrims] had traveled over such wide spaces to touch.”[31] This may sound pessimistic, yet the “carefully maintained tension between distance and proximity ensured one thing: praesentia… the presence of an invisible person.”[32] If this paradoxical absence-presence seems irreducibly mysterious, one thing is certain: artistic mediation makes it possible. While the hagiographical mode certainly evolved throughout the Middle Ages, an intensely visual poetic remained at its core, a generic holdover from its late antique past. Often the language with which scholars themselves discuss passion narratives slips into the immediate and spectacular. Seduced by the texts’ ocular rhetoric, they treat the subject as if she were immediately present.[33]
Narratives of martyrdom deal with this presence-absence, visibility-invisibility most overtly, being self-proclaimed accounts of witness. Early Christians obsessed over the fate of martyred bodies.[34] These bodies comprised the raw material of Christian cult-making and so had a formative impact on the genre of hagiography. The word “martyr” means “witness,” a juridical term that accrued its sacrificial and supernatural valence with the persecutions of Christians that occurred sporadically in the late antique world. These persecutions were by no means as systematic, constant, or unbridled as Christian accounts—especially passion narratives—make them seem.[35] In fact, Larissa Tracy argues that violence in late medieval hagiography more directly evoked Inquisitional and political torture enacted by Christians upon one another than it did conflict with pagan oppressors.[36] Yet the cultural trauma of martyrdom created a deep wound, one that replicated and compounded the logic of Christianity’s foundational event: the Crucifixion.[37] The threat of martyrdom shaped the collective Christian consciousness—manifest in its art, liturgy, theology, burial practice, and so on—to say nothing of the actual experience and testimony of those who witnessed or underwent such executions.[38] The possibility of torture and capital punishment inspired Christians to respond dialectically to state violence, producing a literature of triumphant suffering. The term “martyrdom” is value-laden, reflecting a desire to find meaning in pain, to remember the dead, and to produce what Elizabeth Castelli calls a “useable story” that could be handed down.[39] The highly visual, spectacle-oriented quality with which martyrdom imbued hagiography intensified the challenges inherent in representing an ineffable phenomenon.
The hagiographical mode contains a paradox at its heart. Saintly bodies assume a measure of God’s ineffability; as Marion insists, a share in God’s holiness necessitates participation in his invisibility. God tells Moses that no one can see God’s face and live (Exod. 33.20). Yet the aesthetic givenness of the incarnate Second Person guarantees some degree of visibility for holy things. Since saints restage the vita Christi, participating in Christ’s holiness, their own holiness should also deliver itself to the gaze (sensorial or mental). Still, the paradox remains, as Christ himself provides no easy, straightforward revelations. Even the Transfiguration, the most explicit manifestation of his divinity, confuses the disciples who witness it. Christ’s own presence, especially his resurrection apparitions, is fraught with a sort of invisibility. Denys Turner notes that Christ contains “not only the visibility of the Godhead, but also the invisibility: if Christ is the Way, Christ is, in short, our access to the unknowability of God, not so as ultimately to know it, but so as to be brought into participation with the Deus absconditus precisely as unknown.”[40] Thus, the saints’ participation in Christ’s givenness does not result in a mere buffet of presence. They are swept up in his hiddenness as well. In a turn-of-the-century work titled The Psychology of the Saints, Henri Joly argues that saints must “manifest exteriorly the ‘hidden’ life… [of Christ], but in order to do this, they must have begun by ‘hiding’ Him in their hearts.”[41] The saints emulate Christ not stagily, performing him for the world’s eyes, but meekly. As Marion notes, holiness is not self-conscious. It is blind to itself and cannot present as such. The left hand does not know what the right one is doing (Matt. 6.3). Still, sainthood invites emulation. Imitate me as I imitate Christ, says Paul (1 Cor. 11.1). Hagiography works to reconcile this joint imperative of hiddenness and manifestation—a “problem” that is not resolved, but is perhaps deepened into mystery, by its Christic template. The hagiographical reduction leads readers back to sainthood by guiding them through a thick cloud of unknowing. How does it do this? As a genre it has, over time, developed an array of poetic devices meant to put the protagonist under erasure. Saints’ lives often contain moments of negativity, opacity, blindness, indeterminacy, darkness, and unknowing. The hagiographical mode has developed many motifs and topoi in order to express sanctity’s elusiveness.
One of the most illustrative of these devices is the blinding of an impudent onlooker. This topos often has a sexual charge and appears in many kinds of folklore, the most iconic instance being the Anglo-Saxon tale of Lady Godiva (Godgifu). According to legend, she rides through town naked in an attempt to obtain a lighter tax burden for her people. The townsfolk shut themselves indoors out of gratitude and respect—with the exception of one young man who, in later versions, comes to be known as “peeping Tom.” God blinds the voyeur as punishment for his obscene gaze.[42] This plot point appeared early on within a particular strain of passio narrative: the virgin martyr legend. In most of these tales, the protagonist (beautiful, nubile) pledges her virginity to Christ. A male authority figure and would-be suitor invariably challenges this intention. The threat of rape hovers over these narratives but remains implicit since the saint’s fetishized virginity must remain intact. Although these tales stop short of imagining the protagonist’s violation, they delectate in exposing and tormenting her body, often edging toward the pornographic. In so doing, they raise questions about how to view a saint.
Take Prudentius’s account of St. Agnes, found in the fifth-century Peristephanon Liber, a compendium of martyr tales in verse. When Agnes, a “scarce yet marriageable” young girl refuses to honor Minerva, the judge orders her placed in the outdoor area of a public brothel, hoping that “the young men will rush to seek the new slave of their sport.”[43] Without explicitly stating it, the text lets us know that she has been stripped since, as in the Godiva legend, the crowd collectively lowers its eyes to respect her modesty. Her wounds on naked display, Agnes is at her most cruciform. Nevertheless, possibilities for misrecognition abound. The phenomenon of holiness retreats under the lustful gaze: “One [onlooker], as it chanced, did aim an impudent gaze at the girl, not fearing to look on her sacred figure with a lustful eye; when behold… he fell blinded.”[44] The verb H. J. Thomson translates as “aim” is intendere, which means “to stretch toward.” This word evolved into one of phenomenology’s central concepts, that of intentionality—the perceiver’s attempt to assist manifestation. Here, divinity rebukes intentionality: “a fire came flying like a thunderbolt and with its quivering blaze struck his eyes.”[45] In attempting to “reduce” holy things, intentionality overreaches itself—risks voyeurism—and must be purified through mortification. The young man falls as if dead. Agnes intercedes on his behalf, and God restores both life and sight. His vision is reborn, having passed through the darkness of death. The poem concludes with a surreal depiction of the martyr’s ascent to heaven, clicking into Agnes’s point-of-view. Whereas she was the object under review, she is now the viewing subject. Anticipating The Blue Marble photograph taken by the Apollo 17 crew, Prudentius has Agnes lower her gaze to regard the universe: “She marvels at the world that lies beneath her feet; as she mounts on high she looks at the darkness below and laughs at the circling of the sun’s orb… the life that is lived in the black whirlwind of circumstance.”[46] Holiness affords true perspective, right vision. A literary portrait of holiness can make this point, taking the reader beyond this world into the shimmering space between heaven and earth.
Still, hagiography has limits. The young man undergoes reform, but does the reader? Prudentius’s poem gets caught up in its own erotic charge, evoking the very details it has censored. At the executioner’s approach Agnes declares herself pleased by “this lover” (hic amator). “I shall welcome the whole length of his blade into my bosom,” she enthuses, and it is no coincidence that “vagina” comes from the Latin word for “sheath.”[47] Suggestive language like this coaxes the reader into a voyeuristic gaze, potentially undermining the text’s theology. “Writers and readers of ascetic literature, like the persistent pilgrims crying at the doorway or peering into the chinks of an ascetic’s cell, are thus positioned as so many ‘peeping Toms,’” according to Virginia Burrus.[48] Is Prudentius winking at readers, making a moral point at their expense? Is the text trying to create the same feeling of shame that the characters experience? Perhaps. But I tend to think these titillating moments are symptomatic of the canonizing move in general.
Artistic representation exaggerates by necessity, presenting us with a heightened, curated portrait of reality. It does this precisely in order to render subtle phenomena more visible so that we might reflect on them. Art’s temptation, then, is to give us more and better spectacle, whether linguistic or visual, in order to drive its point home. This does not mean that art is caricature, only that its purpose is to command attention. Minimalist traditions like color field painting and quiet realism seem like exceptions but in fact prove the rule. The more nuance in a piece, the louder the imperative: Look at me. What’s more mesmerizing? A cherry—or Rothko’s Red on Maroon set against the institutional white of a museum wall? The painting helps us think about the cherry, a window onto redness as such. If we let it, the contemplation of art prepares us for the particular dazzle of that cherry’s red, how it pinks when light hits it, gradates into blood clot crimson at the base of the stem. Under the abstract expressionist’s cracked-open gaze, unnoticed hues become obscenely apparent. This, I believe, is what Husserl means when he likens the artist to the phenomenologist. Still—and this may seem mundane—art is always symbolic, never the thing itself. That representational difference is a sacred, magical space, the condition of art’s possibility. But it is still a gap.
While art can help us imagine the holy, its stylization of an ineffable phenomenon will always fall short. It can only gesture. The case of the virgin martyr is not unique. It epitomizes a dynamic inherent in any attempt to view, or depict, the holy. To regard the crucified Christ casually or even with curiosity indicates a degree of blindness. It takes a willingness to abject oneself, allowing one’s gaze to be darkened, in order to receive the drenching transformations of that same holiness. At least within the Judeo-Christian tradition, the same God who strikes Uzzah dead for steadying the Ark with his bare hand is the God-man who invites Thomas to probe his wounds (2 Sam. 6.3-8, 1 Chron. 13.7-11, John 20.24-29). Thomas is allowed his well-intentioned impudence, but Christ gently rebukes him nonetheless. “Blessed are they that have not seen and have believed” (John 20.29). Throughout the history of Christian thought, theologians and artists have striven to take this not-seeing seriously.
A parallel strain of discourse developed alongside hagiography, asking similar questions about representation and holiness. Apophatic theology, known also as negative theology or the via negativa, responds to concerns about God’s hiddenness. It emerged out of early contemplative, Neo-Platonic thought. It now constitutes an entire theological tradition, albeit one that remains inextricably braided with its cataphatic counterpart. In some ways apophatic conceptions of the divine allowed proponents of Christian art to both have and eat their cake.[49] From the beginning apophatic theology was embedded in debates about the status of religious images, consistently brought to bear against iconoclastic perspectives. Nor was it a fleeting movement, only occasionally in the air for subsequent generations of Christians. The liberating logic of the via negativa enabled and encouraged a rich material tradition—and it never went away.
The literary devices meant to render the saint indeterminate constitute hagiography’s intersection with the apophatic tradition. Just as apophatic theology made the veneration and use of religious images possible, it undergirded and informed textual representations of holiness as well. This makes sense especially if one follows Patricia Cox Miller in viewing hagiography “not as a discrete genre limited to literary lives of saints but rather as a set of discursive strategies for presenting sainthood.”[50] This discursive technique side-steps idolatry by endowing the saint with an “apophatic body” or a “subtracted self.”[51] Miller’s work analyzes uncanny representative techniques used to mediate holiness, scenarios in which the materiality of a saint’s body is put into question. For Miller, these instances of subtle embodiment dislocate saintly presence, producing a “‘haunting’ whereby the saint’s textually reconstituted body flits in and out of focus, tantalizing the reader with intimations of complete divine-human synergy.”[52] Such material indeterminacy preserves the saints from reification. These “subtle embodiments are the hagiographical version of apophasis.”[53] Ideally, this apophatic hagiography shields the devotee from idolatry by informing the way he perceives or conceives of the imagery, both frustrating and opening up the mind’s eye. As a “spiritual exercise,” reading saints’ lives helps prime the physical eyes to interpret material representations of the holy with a deeper understanding of matter’s ambivalence.[54] This dialectic (or synergy, as Miller puts it) reminds us that holiness is ultimately a mystery that eludes both understanding and perception.
The hagiographical mode may delectate in its cataphatic images, but it also endeavors to push readers beyond perceptual and conceptual experience altogether. Of course, being an artistic medium, hagiography can never do this entirely. Yet it can simulate the final stage of apophatic negation, exhorting readers to question and transcend their own sensorial and intellectual gazes.[55] The pervasive presence of monstrosity in early legends (dog-headed men, centaurs, dragons), for example, was intended to startle the reader into a meditation on the holy’s otherworldliness. “Monster” comes from the Latin monere, meaning “to warn” or “show.” It is etymologically linked to the word “monstrance,” the liturgical device that frames and displays the Eucharist. In addition to blurring the line between spiritual and material manifestation, the hagiographical mode occasionally works to undermine the gaze entirely. It does this by depicting secondary characters as going blind in the saint’s presence (as illustrated above), by eclipsing the saint’s body with another entity (i.e., constructing a scene in which she is present but inapparent), by allowing others to mistake the saint for someone else, and by describing her with grammatical negatives. These topoi constitute the heart of hagiography’s apophatic poetics.
It seems tempting to call these instances of saintly invisibility. Yet, as mentioned, the presence of a vita before the reader’s eyes (or mind) keeps the saint from disappearing altogether. I prefer a less stark term, borrowed from Marion’s “Sketch of the Saturated Phenomenon”: irregardability. This word maintains the saint’s presence and reality while emphasizing her ability to frustrate the gaze. It describes not absence, but a kind of super-manifestation. The saint eludes the gaze not because there is nothing to see, but because there is too much. The mind’s eye rolls off of her. For Marion, “Determining the saturated phenomenon as irregardable amounts to imagining the possibility that it imposes itself on sight with such an excess of intuition that it can no longer be reduced to the conditions of experience.”[56] “Saturated phenomena” (for our purposes, saints) cannot be experientially reduced, or “led back,” in the way that regular objects can. Marion acknowledges that this seems to imply impossibility of experience. He insists that the phenomenon “is nevertheless seen, but as blurred by the too narrow aperture, the too short lens, the too cramped frame, that receives—or rather that cannot receive it as such.”[57] This metaphor recalls the narrow apertures that Peter Brown identifies as key to the function of a reliquary—as well as the Eucharistic monstrance itself. Rather than enjoying an easy spectacle, the eye sees primarily its own impotence and inadequacy, which is not the same as seeing nothing. Additionally, the perceiver becomes aware of her own scrutiny by a rarefied and penetrating gaze. This causes her to regard herself anew, and to recognize the limits of her own gaze. The awareness of these limitations—of “the narrow aperture”—indicates the presence of something not fully visible. The direction of experience has been reversed, producing a “counter-experience.”[58] The saturated phenomenon constitutes the perceiving subject as a “witness,” rather than allowing itself to be constituted as an object.[59] This seems to be the dynamic at play in the Peristephanon Liber, a narrative about the double “witness” of martyrdom. By the poem’s end Agnes looks down on all that is—and laughs. She sees the “black whirlwind of circumstance” for what it is. God sees reality laid bare, and for Marion the ultimate saturated phenomenon is the divine, the source and wellspring of all holiness. Some have described the saturated phenomenon as an intrinsically theological concept, not merely philosophical. Bracketing this issue, it is nevertheless the case that the doctrine lends itself beautifully to an analysis of hagiography, a theologico-imaginary discourse that attempts to portray the elusive, supernatural phenomenon of holiness. By unpacking literature’s attempts to render the saint as irregardable, we learn to unsee her, deepening our understanding of the ineffable sanctity at her core.
[1] Jean-Luc Marion, “The Invisibility of the Saint,” trans. Christina M. Gschwandtner, Saints: Faith Without Borders, ed. Françoise Meltzer and Jaś Elsner (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2011), 355.
[2] Peter Brown, “The Rise and Function of the Holy Man in Late Antiquity,” The Journal of Roman Studies 61 (1971): 91.
[3] See Candida Moss, The Other Christs: Imitating Jesus in Ancient Christian Ideologies of Martyrdom (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2012).
[4] Rudolf Otto, The Idea of the Holy, trans. John W. Harvey (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1958): “We generally take ‘holy’ as meaning ‘completely good’; it is the absolute moral attribute, denoting the consummation of moral goodness… But this common usage of the term is inaccurate” (5); Susan Wolf’s now-classic essay “Moral Saints” has sparked an interesting conversation about this exact issue. In it, she equates sainthood with moral perfection. Robert Adams answers her directly in The Virtue of Faith and Other Essays in Philosophical Theology, emphasizing the supernatural and non-pragmatic aspects of sainthood. Discussions of postmodernism sometimes turn to saints as exemplars of an optimal ethics. Edith Wyschogrod’s Saints and Postmodernism affords one example. This conception of sainthood as pure ethics would have been foreign to medieval thinkers. See Susan Wolf, “Moral Saints,” The Journal of Philosophy 79 (1982): 419-439; Robert Merrihew Adams, The Virtue of Faith and Other Essays in Philosophical Theology (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1987); Edith Wyschogrod, Saints and Postmodernism: Revisioning Moral Philosophy (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1990).
[5] David M. Halperin, Saint Foucault: Towards a Gay Hagiography (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1995); Alexander Irwin, Saints of the Impossible: Bataille, Weil, and the Politics of the Sacred (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 2002).
[6] Marion, “The Invisibility of the Saint,” 355.
[7] Petra Turner, “The Unknown Saint: Reflections on Jean-Luc Marion’s Understanding of Holiness,” The Postmodern Saints of France: Refiguring ‘the Holy’ in Contemporary French Philosophy, ed. Colby Dickinson (London: T&T Clark, 2013), 231.
[8] Marion, “The Invisibility of the Saint,” 356.
[9] Otto, The Idea of the Holy, 12.
[10] Marion, “The Invisibility of the Saint,” 356.
[11] Turner, “The Unknown Saint,” 235.
[12] Ibid, 239.
[13] Ibid, 243.
[14] Ibid.
[15] Jacobus de Voragine, The Golden Legend, trans. William Granger Ryan (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2012), 660.
[16] Derek Krueger, Writing and Holiness: The Practice of Authorship in the Early Christian East (Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2004), 6.
[17] Patrick Sherry, Spirits, Saints, and Immortality (Albany: State University of New York Press, 1984), 1-3.
[18] Depending on the vita’s place in literary history, this stylization ranges from fabulist recastings of some kernel of truth to the scientistic aspirations of modern biography, which nonetheless remains susceptible to rhetorical flourish and narratological intervention. (The more obvious this intervention, the more likely the biography will be disparaged as “hagiography,” but that is another story.) Lives are not narratives, after all, even if humans are meaning-making creatures. The text can never be the bios, not literally—however closely they are identified.
[19] “Husserl an von Hofmannsthal (12. 1. 1907),” Briefwechsel, 10 vols: Wissenschaftlerkorrespondenz, ed. Elisabeth Schuhmann and Karl Schuhmann (Boston: Kluwer, 1994) 7:135. Cited in Kevin Hart, Poetry and Revelation (London: Bloomsbury, 2017), 156.
[20] See Michel Henry, Seeing the Invisible, On Kandinsky, trans. Scott Davidson (New York: Continuum, 2009), 3, 13.
[21] E. P. Sanders, The Historical Figure of Jesus (London: Penguin, 1995), 85.
[22] See Bruce Holsinger, “Parchment Ethics: A Statement of More than Modest Concern,” New Medieval Literatures 12 (2010): 131-136.
[23] Krueger, Writing and Holiness, 4.
[24] Robert Bartlett, Why Can the Dead Do Such Great Things? Saints and Worshippers from the Martyrs to the Reformation (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2013), 519.
[25] Ibid.
[26] Even if her body is exposed as a relic, the saint’s liveliness is eclipsed by the more obvious fact of her death. Should she disrupt this inertness through miraculous intervention, there is no guarantee that this manifestation will be understood and processed. As Christ himself points out, “signs” are at best a problematic mode of appearing that invariably produce as many skeptics as believers. Nevertheless, the liber miraculorum, or “miracle book,” is a popular sub-genre of hagiography: a catalogue of posthumous miracles meant to validate a particular shrine and encourage pilgrimage.
[27] Kenneth L. Woodward, Making Saints: How the Catholic Church Determines Who Becomes a Saint, Who Doesn’t, and Why (New York: Touchstone, 1990), 33; Andrew M. Flescher, Heroes, Saints, and Ordinary Morality (Washington, D.C.: Georgetown University Press, 2003) 192-6. Flescher even goes so far as to call Day a “nonsaint.”
[28] Patricia Cox Miller, The Corporeal Imagination: Signifying the Holy in Late Ancient Christianity (Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2009). Patricia Cox Miller refers to “the invisible bodies of the saints in hagiography,” arguing that saints’ lives develop a corporeal poetics in order to make those bodies manifest (8).
[29] Krueger, Writing and Holiness, 133.
[30] Ibid.
[31] Peter Brown, The Cult of the Saints: Its Rise and Function in Latin Christianity (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1982), 87.
[32] Ibid, 88.
[33] Virginia Burrus, Saving Shame: Martyrs, Saints, and Other Abject Subjects (Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2008): “Here we view four well-known—indeed, virtually classic—literary performances of Christian witness…” (19, emphases added); “Writers and readers… of travelogues and hagiographies not only frequently betray awareness of the ocular transgression inherent to their literary endeavors but also sometimes seem to exult in the very shamelessness of these acts of exposure” (36, emphases added); Elizabeth A. Castelli, Martyrdom and Memory: Early Christian Culture Making (New York: Columbia University Press, 2004): “…the cultural production of Christian martyrdom as performance and spectacle transforms the seer into the seen… And it transforms the readers and consumers of this tradition into uneasy voyeurs of the suffering of others” (133, emphases added).
[34] Caroline Walker Bynum, The Resurrection of the Body in Western Christianity, 200-1336, Lectures on the History of Religions 15 (New York: Columbia University Press, 1995): “…Christians did worry passionately about the bodies of the martyrs” (49).
[35] See Candida Moss, The Myth of Persecution: How Early Christians Invented a Story of Martyrdom (New York: HarperCollins, 2013).
[36] See Larissa Tracy, Torture and Brutality in Medieval Literature: Negotiations of National Identity (Cambridge: D.S. Brewer, 2012).
[37] See Ron Eyerman, Cultural Trauma: Slavery and the Formation of African American Identity (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2001), 2.
[38] Castelli, Martyrdom and Memory: “Indeed, one might argue that the capriciousness of state violence—the mere presence of the imperial judicial apparatus with its omnipresent threat of violence, whether or not it was actually carried out—performed a critical kind of psychological work for all manner of subjected peoples, Christians included” (38).
[39] Castelli, Martyrdom and Memory, 29; See also Richard A. Bauman, Crime and Punishment in Ancient Rome (New York: Routledge, 1996); Richard C. Beacham, Spectacle Entertainments of Early Imperial Rome (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1999); G. W. Bowersock, Martyrdom and Rome (New York: Cambridge University Press, 1995); Alison Futrell, Blood in the Arena: The Spectacle of Roman Power (Austin: University of Texas Press, 1997); Ed. Ralph Jackson, Gladiators and Caesars: The Power of Spectacle in Ancient Rome (London: British Museum Press, 2000); Paula James, “Prudentius’ Psychomachia: The Christian Arena and the Politics of Display,” Constructing Identities in Late Antiquity, ed. Richard Miles (London: Routledge, 1999), 74; Donald G. Kyle, Spectacles of Death in Ancient Rome (New York: Routledge, 1998); Thomas E. Wiedemann, Emperors and Gladiators (London: Routledge, 1992); Magnus Wistrand, Entertainment and Violence in Ancient Rome: The Attitudes of Roman Writers of the First Century A.D. (Göteburg: Acta Universitatis Gothoburgensis, 1992).
[40] Denys Turner, “Apophaticism, Idolatry and the Claims of Reason,” Silence and the Word: Negative Theology and Incarnation, ed. Denys Turner and Oliver Davies (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2008), 23.
[41] Henri Joly, The Psychology of the Saints (Fort Collins, CO: Roman Catholic Books), 22. (First pub. 1898).
[42] Daniel Donoghue, Lady Godiva, a Literary History of the Legend (Malden, MA: Blackwell Publishing, 2003).
[43] Aurelius Prudentius Clemens, Peristephanon Liber in Prudentius, Volume II, trans. H. J. Thomson (Cambridge, MA: Loeb Classical Library, 1953), 339.
[44] Ibid, 341.
[45] Ibid.
[46] Ibid, 343
[47] Ibid, 342-343.
[48] Burrus, Saving Shame, 36.
[49] See Filip Ivanović, Symbol and Icon: Dionysius the Areopagite and the Iconoclastic Crisis (Eugene, OR: Pickwick Publications, 2010).
[50] Patricia Cox Miller, “Subtle Embodiments: Imagining the Holy in Late Antiquity,” Apophatic Bodies: Negative Theology, Incarnation, and Relationality, ed. Chris Boesel and Catherine Keller (New York: Fordham University Press, 2009), 45.
[51] Ibid.
[52] Ibid, 57.
[53] Ibid, 57-8.
[54] Jacques Fontaine, Naissance de la poésie dans l’occident chrétien: Esquisse d’une histoire de la poésie latine chrétienne du IIIe au VIe siècle (Paris: Études augustiniennes, 1981). Quoted and cited in Miller, Corporeal Imagination, 90.
[55] See Miller, “Subtle Embodiments,” 45-58.
[56] Jean-Luc Marion, The Essential Writings, Perspectives in Continental Philosophy, ed. Kevin Hart (New York: Fordham University Press, 2013), 120-121.
[57] Ibid.
[58] Ibid.
[59] Ibid.