Cities of God: The Religion of the Italian Communes 1125-1325

(Darren Dugan) #1

Chapter Seven


Feasting, Fasting, and Doing


Penance





The liturgical calendar of the medieval Church molded religious sensibilities


and gave believers a living sense of contact with Christ and his saints. It was


one of the most effective forms of popular catechesis.^1 The cycle of feasts


and fasts expressed the realities of repentance and forgiveness. The great


festivals of Christmas, Epiphany, Holy Week, Ascension, and Pentecost not


only commemorated events in the Savior’s life but made them present to the


faithful. Saints’ days punctuated the liturgical and civic calendars, displaying


the varieties of holiness and honoring the city’s glorious intercessors in


heaven. In Bergamo, Vespers of the patronal feasts brought community ban-


quets, sometimes outside under pavilions, sometimes in the church cloister.


All partook of fruit, wine, and fine white bread.^2 The calendar shaped private


religious experience to an extent hard to imagine today. Margherita of Cor-


tona’s mystical visions and locutions, usually after sacramental Communion,


almost always correlated with the feast celebrated at Mass.^3 Oringa Cristiana


had a vision of the Passion every Friday, the weekly day of fast that recalled


that saving event. Oringa’s other visions of episodes from Jesus’ life came


with remarkable regularity on their proper liturgical days.^4 Benvenuta Bojani


enjoyed uncounted visits from the saints, who invariably chose to appear on


their feast days. The Blessed Virgin came to visit, along with Saint John the


Baptist, Saint Catherine of Alexandria, and Saint Agnes, on the Assumption;


Saint Dominic arrived with the Virgin, Saint Catherine, and Saint Margaret


on the feast of the translation of his relics.^5 The saints in heaven knew and


observed this calendar.


1. Enrico Cattaneo, ‘‘La partecipazione dei laici alla liturgia,’’I laici nella Societas Christiana, 420.
2. Valsecchi,Interrogatus, 112 – 14.
3. See Giunta Bevegnati,Legenda... Margaritae de Cortona, 5 – 6 , pp. 241 – 318.
4 .Legenda Beatae Christianae, 39 ,p. 218.
5. Corrado of Cividale,Vita Devotissimae Benevenutae, 8. 68 – 69 ,p. 168.
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