Warning: Undefined array key "schedule" in /srv/users/ivinglut/apps/elcalearn/public/wp-content/plugins/ithemes-security-pro/core/lib/class-itsec-scheduler-page-load.php on line 202
Denise Rector, Author at Lutheran Women's Works in Religion (LWWR) - Page 2 of 49

Denise Rector

Posts by Denise Rector

Marguerite of Navarre Breaks Silence about Sixteenth-Century Clergy Sexual Violence

Marguerite of Navarre (1492-1549), queen of the country of Navarre and sister to the king of France, wrote a literary anthology, the Heptameron, which contains numerous stories about priests who abused their office to sexually violate or harass women. In the Heptameron, Marguerite warns laypeople to be cautious in their dealings with priests, and she […]

Read More

Spiritual Friendship in the Vita of Beatrice of Nazareth

Schroeder explores the role of friendship in the life of Flemish Cistercian nun Beatrice of Nazareth (1200-1268). Friendship was a source of spiritual support and encouragement in monastic settings. Spiritual friends would also pray for one another to have visionary experiences on predetermined feast days, creating a climate of expectation surrounding church festivals.

Read More

The Rape of Dinah: Luther‘s Interpretation of a Biblical Narrative

Unlike patristic and medieval commentators who harshly condemned Jacob‘s daughter Dinah (Genesis 34) for her own rape, Martin Luther interprets the story from the perspective of a loving father who is saddened by the grave injury done to his young daughter.

Read More

John Chrysostom‘s Critique of Spousal Violence

In contrast to other church fathers who tolerated wife-beating and encouraged women to remain in abusive marriages, John Chrysostom argued that a man should not use physical violence against his wife for any reason whatsoever.

Read More

A Fiery Heat: Images of the Holy Spirit in the Writings of Hildegard of Bingen

Schroeder shows how Hildegard‘s theological writings about the Holy Spirit were well-integrated with her scientific theories about the four elements (earth, air, fire, and water) and medieval thoughts about the bodily “humors.” The Holy Spirit is described as having—and providing to faithful Christians—the propitious qualities associated with the right combination of air, fire, and water.

Read More