神圣的坚持:德国天主教朝圣,1832-1937,斯凯·唐尼(回顾)

IF 0.2 4区 社会学 Q4 AREA STUDIES German Studies Review Pub Date : 2023-10-01 DOI:10.1353/gsr.2023.a910201
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This work also presents a new interpretation of notions of the feminization of religion, demonstrating the multitude of ways that men participated in religious life through their involvement in the pilgrimage process. Finally, the author points to ways in which many in the Catholic Church leadership engaged with larger issues in German society, particularly in their attempts to overcome the legacy of the Kulturkampf, proving that Catholics were just as respectably German as their Lutheran counterparts were. Through the use of a multitude of primary source materials, Doney is able to present how many average Catholics interpreted their participation in pilgrimage. Chapter One's examination of pilgrim songs, processions, and prayers reveals the changing attitudes of many Catholics toward relics, moving toward the belief that the Holy Coat of Jesus was symbolic of the sacred and not the literal coat that Jesus wore. This change in belief corresponded to the increased emphasis on science and reason present in modern German society, yet Church leaders and their parishioners never truly denied the possibility that the relics were genuine. Through prayers, pilgrims prepared themselves for the journey to venerate the holy objects; with songs, they praised the power of God; and in their processions, they publicly affirmed their Catholic identity. Chapter Two, \"Modern Miracles,\" tracks the quest that so many pilgrims were on: to visit the relics in the hope that illnesses would be cured. In this fascinating chapter, [End Page 491] Doney points out that while modernity moved forward, with modern transportation and scientific advancements in health and medicine, Rhenish Catholic culture still held firm to the belief that coming into contact with holy relics could provide the miracle of healing. This chapter flows seamlessly into Chapter Three with its examination of how pilgrims and clergy created Andenken (remembrances) and Abzeichen (badges), which commemorated participation in the pilgrimage. Moreover, Andenken also came to have significant meaning for most pilgrims in that many believed that by coming into contact with the Andenken, physical or spiritual suffering could be healed. No matter how clergy might attempt to counter some of these beliefs, they could not control how pilgrims continued to think about the power Andenken might have after coming into contact with sacred relics. Chapter Four examines one Catholic defrocked priest, Johannes Ronge, who led the charge to rid Catholicism of what he perceived to be superstitions, including pilgrimages to the Holy Coat at Trier. Catholic clergy answered Ronge's challenge by first asserting God's presence in the world made manifest in the Holy Coat, and then later in time, clergy argued that the Holy Coat was symbolically important in the history of Catholicism. For many pilgrims, however, the nuances of these new interpretations did not change their desire to see the sacred items and hope for divine intervention in their world. Chapter Five provides insight into how Catholic clergy, reacting to the call for \"modern\" interpretations, began consulting outside authorities such as medical professionals to verify pilgrim claims of miraculous cures and bringing in scientists and archaeologists to attest to the authenticity of the relics. Despite the work of clergy to incorporate the work of professionals, many pilgrims continued to ignore the professionals' opinions, stating that where science and medicine had failed them, God could intervene and alleviate their suffering. 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引用次数: 0

摘要

《神圣的坚持:德国天主教朝圣,1832-1937》作者:Skye Doney Beth Griech-Polelle《神圣的坚持:德国天主教朝圣,1832-1937》斯凯·唐尼著。多伦多:多伦多大学出版社,2022。第22 + 345页。精装书85.00美元。ISBN 9781487543105。Skye Doney的作品挑战了许多关于19世纪和20世纪初德国天主教的长期假设。唐尼没有从自上而下的政治和官僚精英的角度来审视德国天主教,而是呈现了神职领袖、世俗当局和普通德国天主教徒对参加在亚琛和特里尔举行的敬拜圣物的朝圣活动的期望之间的互动。这部作品还对宗教女性化的概念提出了新的解释,展示了男性通过参与朝圣过程参与宗教生活的多种方式。最后,作者指出了许多天主教会领导人参与德国社会更大问题的方式,特别是在他们试图克服文化斗争遗产的过程中,证明天主教徒和他们的路德会同行一样是受人尊敬的德国人。通过使用大量的原始资料,唐尼能够展示多少普通天主教徒解释他们参与朝圣。第一章考察了朝圣者的歌曲、游行和祈祷,揭示了许多天主教徒对圣物态度的变化,他们开始相信耶稣的圣衣是神圣的象征,而不是耶稣穿的真正的圣衣。这种信仰的变化与现代德国社会对科学和理性的日益重视相一致,然而教会领袖和他们的教区居民从未真正否认这些遗物是真的可能性。通过祈祷,朝圣者们为崇敬圣物的旅程做好了准备;他们唱诗赞美上帝的大能;在游行中,他们公开肯定了自己的天主教徒身份。第二章“现代奇迹”(Modern Miracles)讲述了许多朝圣者的探索之旅:他们参观圣物,希望能治愈疾病。在这一引人入胜的章节中,Doney指出,随着现代交通工具的发展以及健康和医学方面的科学进步,现代性在向前发展,而莱茵河天主教文化仍然坚定地相信与圣物接触可以提供治愈的奇迹。这一章与第三章无缝衔接,考察了朝圣者和神职人员如何创造Andenken(纪念品)和Abzeichen(徽章),以纪念参与朝圣。此外,Andenken对大多数朝圣者来说也有重要的意义,因为许多人相信,通过与Andenken接触,身体或精神上的痛苦可以得到治愈。无论神职人员如何试图反驳这些信仰,他们都无法控制朝圣者继续思考Andenken在接触到圣物后可能拥有的力量。第四章考察了一位被解除神职的天主教牧师约翰内斯·朗格,他领导了一场清除天主教迷信的运动,包括在特里尔朝圣圣衣的活动。天主教神职人员回答荣格的挑战,首先主张上帝在世界上的存在体现在圣衣上,后来,神职人员认为圣衣在天主教历史上具有重要的象征意义。然而,对于许多朝圣者来说,这些新解释的细微差别并没有改变他们看到神圣物品的愿望,也没有改变他们希望神介入他们的世界的愿望。第五章深入探讨了天主教神职人员是如何响应“现代”解释的呼吁,开始咨询外部权威,如医疗专业人士,以核实朝圣者声称的神奇疗法,并引入科学家和考古学家来证明文物的真实性。尽管神职人员的工作结合了专业人士的工作,但许多朝圣者仍然无视专业人士的意见,声称在科学和医学失败的地方,上帝可以干预并减轻他们的痛苦。最后一章讲述了用科学分析寻找圣物的真实性,以及神职人员试图将朝圣与古代日耳曼习俗联系起来的方式。尽管一些神职人员试图将朝圣与天主教信仰分开,但大多数……
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The Persistence of the Sacred: German Catholic Pilgrimage, 1832–1937 by Skye Doney (review)
Reviewed by: The Persistence of the Sacred: German Catholic Pilgrimage, 1832–1937 by Skye Doney Beth Griech-Polelle The Persistence of the Sacred: German Catholic Pilgrimage, 1832–1937. By Skye Doney. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 2022. Pp. xxii + 345. Hardcover $85.00. ISBN 9781487543105. Skye Doney's work challenges many of the long-held assumptions regarding Catholicism in nineteenth and early twentieth-century Germany. Rather than examine German Catholicism from the top-down approach of political and bureaucratic elites, Doney presents an interaction between what clerical leaders, secular authorities, and average German Catholics expected from participation in pilgrimages to venerate sacred relics held in Aachen and Trier. This work also presents a new interpretation of notions of the feminization of religion, demonstrating the multitude of ways that men participated in religious life through their involvement in the pilgrimage process. Finally, the author points to ways in which many in the Catholic Church leadership engaged with larger issues in German society, particularly in their attempts to overcome the legacy of the Kulturkampf, proving that Catholics were just as respectably German as their Lutheran counterparts were. Through the use of a multitude of primary source materials, Doney is able to present how many average Catholics interpreted their participation in pilgrimage. Chapter One's examination of pilgrim songs, processions, and prayers reveals the changing attitudes of many Catholics toward relics, moving toward the belief that the Holy Coat of Jesus was symbolic of the sacred and not the literal coat that Jesus wore. This change in belief corresponded to the increased emphasis on science and reason present in modern German society, yet Church leaders and their parishioners never truly denied the possibility that the relics were genuine. Through prayers, pilgrims prepared themselves for the journey to venerate the holy objects; with songs, they praised the power of God; and in their processions, they publicly affirmed their Catholic identity. Chapter Two, "Modern Miracles," tracks the quest that so many pilgrims were on: to visit the relics in the hope that illnesses would be cured. In this fascinating chapter, [End Page 491] Doney points out that while modernity moved forward, with modern transportation and scientific advancements in health and medicine, Rhenish Catholic culture still held firm to the belief that coming into contact with holy relics could provide the miracle of healing. This chapter flows seamlessly into Chapter Three with its examination of how pilgrims and clergy created Andenken (remembrances) and Abzeichen (badges), which commemorated participation in the pilgrimage. Moreover, Andenken also came to have significant meaning for most pilgrims in that many believed that by coming into contact with the Andenken, physical or spiritual suffering could be healed. No matter how clergy might attempt to counter some of these beliefs, they could not control how pilgrims continued to think about the power Andenken might have after coming into contact with sacred relics. Chapter Four examines one Catholic defrocked priest, Johannes Ronge, who led the charge to rid Catholicism of what he perceived to be superstitions, including pilgrimages to the Holy Coat at Trier. Catholic clergy answered Ronge's challenge by first asserting God's presence in the world made manifest in the Holy Coat, and then later in time, clergy argued that the Holy Coat was symbolically important in the history of Catholicism. For many pilgrims, however, the nuances of these new interpretations did not change their desire to see the sacred items and hope for divine intervention in their world. Chapter Five provides insight into how Catholic clergy, reacting to the call for "modern" interpretations, began consulting outside authorities such as medical professionals to verify pilgrim claims of miraculous cures and bringing in scientists and archaeologists to attest to the authenticity of the relics. Despite the work of clergy to incorporate the work of professionals, many pilgrims continued to ignore the professionals' opinions, stating that where science and medicine had failed them, God could intervene and alleviate their suffering. The final chapter addresses the search for authentication of the holy relics using scientific analysis and the ways in which clergy sought to link pilgrimage with ancient Germanic practices. In spite of some clergy's attempts to separate pilgrimage from Catholic belief, most...
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