Doing It for God: Renaissance Rhetoric and the Beginnings of Spanish Mystical Writing.

By Hispanofila

Doing It for God: Renaissance Rhetoric and the Beginnings of Spanish Mystical Writing. - Hispanofila
  • Release Date: 2008-01-01
  • Genre: Language Arts & Disciplines

Description

LATE medieval and Renaissance Spain's most well known mystical practice was called recogimiento (recollection). (1) Practiced informally since the 1480s, it was not fully explored until the Franciscan friar Francisco de Osuna produced the Tercer abecedario espiritual (2) of 1527. Aside from its formative influence on Teresa of Avila, (3) recogimiento influenced nearly all the major Spanish religious writers from 1527 through to the middle of the 1600s. For over thirty years after his book appeared, Osuna was the most widely read religious writer in Spain. The Tercer abecedario espiritual embraces more than recogimiento, but this topic formed its most important element and was the reason for the book being written at the time it was. Recogimiento referred to a meditative exercise performed in a dark and silent place with the eyes closed or lowered and focused on one point. Three forms of prayer are used. These three prayers form a double symmetry with the Christian stages of the mystical path and with the medieval notion of the three faculties, both in ascending order. The initial mental effort is that of collecting or gathering in (hence, "re-collecting" or recogiendo) the senses, and the first prayer is vocal, preferably the Lord's Prayer. It corresponds to the first stage of the mystical path called the via purgativa (purgation) during which the lowest faculty, the memory, is perfected by means of emptying it of all that distracts from the spiritual ascent. The second prayer is that of the "heart" and consists of meditating on the life and passion of Christ. This is the via illuminitiva (illumination) in which the emotions are directed to the task at hand; the next faculty, the understanding, is perfected by means of this meditation. In this phase the practitioner may experience "spiritual gifts" such as visions, raptures, clairvoyance, telekinesis and other supranormal physical and psychic phenomena. It is the transitional state in which there still exists an awareness of the self, and the intellect continues to function. The third prayer is the "mental" or spiritual prayer which corresponds to the via unitiva (unification). In this final phase the highest faculty, the will, is perfected because the ultimate surrender to God takes place. The highest part of the soul, according to scholastic theology, is raised to God through desire and love. In this third phase, there takes place an interchange of wills with God, although both wills still retain their separate essences. Nevertheless, the sense of the self no longer exists and the intellect ceases to function.