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7 - Double Standards?: Medieval Marriage Symbolism and Christian Views on the Muslim Paradise

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  21 November 2020

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Summary

Abstract

Examining the criticism of the Islamic idea of heaven in medieval Christianity sheds light on the development during this period of the Christian understanding of human marriage as a sacrament of God’s love. For Christians it was marriage that gave full meaning and dignity to sex, and it was precisely the bridal imagery that distinguished their use of sexual imagery from the simplistic sensual renderings of heaven found in Islamic writings. The resemblance between the sacrament of marriage and the divine exemplar was more than a mere analogy: the physical union of a man and a woman within marriage was an actual embodiment of the sacred union between Christ and the Church, Mary and Christ, God and the human soul.

Keywords: Muslim paradise; Christian heaven; Christian marriage; bridal symbolism; Song of Songs; human sexuality

‘Leva eius sub capite meo et dex[t]era illius amplesabit[ur] me.’ ‘Veni electa mea et ponam in te thronum meum.’ These words from ‘the greatest and most beautiful of all songs’, the Song of Songs, and from the Divine Office celebrating the feast of the Assumption of Mary into heaven, are displayed in the apse mosaic of Santa Maria in Trastevere, commissioned by Pope Innocent II, and executed between 1140 and 1143. They feature in the mosaic on a scroll held by the Virgin and in an open codex displayed by Christ to celebrate the intimacy of their divine union. The image of Christ putting his right arm around Mary's shoulders while both are seated on the same throne was chosen as the lead image for the conference entitled ‘Marriage Symbolism, Society and Cognition in the Medieval West’, held in May 2016 at the Norwegian Institute in Rome, and is featured on the cover of the present publication. The depiction of the passionate love felt by Christ (the bridegroom of the Song of Songs) for his Church (the bride, identified with the Virgin Mary) was intended by its twelfth-century commissioners to promote Roman papal authority.

What was the relationship between this kind of bridal imagery and the Christian belief in marriage as a sacrament consecrated by Christ and advocated by the Church?

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Publisher: Amsterdam University Press
Print publication year: 2019

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