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The Divine Dinner Party: Domestic Imagery and Easter Preaching in Late Medieval England

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  27 January 2016

Holly Johnson*
Affiliation:
Mississippi State University

Extract

When Margery Kempe imagines each member of the Trinity sitting within the chamber of her soul on a cushion of an appropriate color, she uses familiar household furnishings to develop a metaphor that helps explain a complex theological concept, while at the same time creating the sense that these ideas are as natural and easy to accept as the objects from which the metaphor is constructed. Similarly, in an Easter sermon preached in 1431, her contemporary Nicholas Philip, a Franciscan friar of the convent in King's Lynn (Margery's hometown), uses household furnishings to prepare his listeners to receive the Eucharist at Easter. The sermon is built on the metaphor of the body as the house to which Christ has been invited for a feast, and, like Kempe's Trinity image, this house has furnishings — a carpet, a tapestry, a cushion, a seat cover — and the feast itself involves a variety of dishes along with music and entertaining guests. The sermon develops a multifaceted image that becomes a complete sensory experience, focusing not on the meaning of transubstantiation but on the communicant's proper disposition. While Nicholas Philip's Easter sermon may be unusual in using this imagery to shape an entire sermon, many late medieval Easter sermons preached in England employ such domestic imagery to elucidate for their audiences the significance of the Eucharist, the reception of which, for most of the laity living in the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries, took place only on Easter. In a process that can be called the domestication of the divine, such metaphors render this annual reception less distant and abstract, making an event with supernatural implications as natural and familiar as a dinner party. However, the rhetorical purpose of this domestication is not primarily to encourage feelings of comfort and easy familiarity with the theological underpinnings of the sacrament, but to promote virtue and responsibility in the recipient both in preparation for and following this event. Nicholas Philip's Easter sermon thus testifies to a homiletic concern of many late medieval English preachers as well as to the artistic license a preacher might take to effect that concern.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Fordham University 

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References

1 The Book of Margery Kempe , ed. Staley, Lynn (Kalamazoo, 1996), 198–99.Google Scholar

2 For information on this sermon and its manuscript, see below and n. 27. The sermon is edited as Appendix 2. Google Scholar

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12 “Certe ille qui est in mortali peccato vel in proposito redeundi ad mortale peccatum hoc sacramentum presumpserit sumere maius dedicus quantum in se est facit domino suo quam si dominum suum contentum in hoc venerabili sacramento in latrinam vilissimam proiceret” (ibid., fol. 4va).Google Scholar

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24 It is also traditional. See Bynum, Caroline Walker, Holy Feast and Holy Fast: The Religious Significance of Food to Medieval Women (Berkeley, 1987), 4851. Bynum quotes an early Easter hymn (fourth to sixth century) that evokes an image of Christ's body “roasted on the altar of the cross” (ibid., 49).Google Scholar

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36 See Wenzel, , Macaronic Sermons , 1330.Google Scholar

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42 Oxford, Bodleian Library, MS Lat.th.d.1, fol. 173r.Google Scholar

43 See Appendix 1 for an outline of Qui custos est domini sui gloriabitur. Google Scholar

44 Oxford, Bodleian Library, MS Lat.th.d.1, fol. 173v.Google Scholar

45 “Quia nisi homo habuerit pulcram mansionem, cito appetit recedere de loco vbi est” (ibid.).Google Scholar

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47 “Et bene spes comparatur to a cusschyn quia sicut homo dulciter requiescit quando super cussinum sedet, ita non dulciter quiescit anima nisi quando sperat peruenire ad id quod nec oculus vidit nec auris audit, et cetera” (ibid.).Google Scholar

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50 “Nisi homo habeat fercula sufficiencia, cito recedet ab amico; sic et Christus a te nisi cibus suus bene et munde sit paratus” (ibid., fol. 174r).Google Scholar

51 “Set forte queris quomodo cibum suum parare debeas et qualem cibum desiderat. Respondeo et dico quod Christus multiformem cibum vult habere. Non enim carnes grossas vult, set in sewys delicatis multum delectatur” (ibid.).Google Scholar

52 Maumene is, according to the Middle English Dictionary (ed. Kurath, Hans et al. [Ann Arbor, 1956–2001]), a “dish composed of chopped or teased meat (usually chicken or capon), spices, and other ingredients.” The preacher apparently chose the dish for the name's association with the French “malmener,” meaning “to ill-treat, to lead astray,” not for its preparation or appearance. See the etymology for “may-menny” in the Oxford English Dictionary. Google Scholar

53 “Rys per primum intelligo resurreccionem a peccato; maumene per secundum contricionem de peccato; blanmanger per tercium considero contemplacionem supernorum; and a sarsine per quartum contemplacionem inferorum” (Oxford, Bodleian Library, MS Lat.th.d.1, fol. 174r).Google Scholar

54 Blancmange is a dish made of chopped chicken or fish boiled in rice using almond milk. It was associated with expensive feasts, as suggested here. For fifteenth-century recipes for its preparation, see Two Fifteenth-Century Cookery-Books , ed. Austin, Thomas, EETS, o.s., 91 (London, 1888, repr. 1964), 21, 23–24, 85.Google Scholar

55 “Et bene sarsine horrorem in aspectu tamen gustum habet delectabilem et saporem bonum” (Oxford, Bodleian Library, MS Lat.th.d.1, fol. 174v). According to a fifteenth-century cookery book, a sarsine or sareson is a dish that involves almond milk, rice flour, and boiled pork or capon, or “Hennys smale y-grounde,” along with sugar and ginger. See Two Fifteenth-Century Cookery-Books, 19.Google Scholar

56 “Primum ergo ferculum quod facere oportet Christo ad hoc quod tecum maneat est ry3s, et per istos ry3s intelligo resurreccionem a peccato” (Oxford, Bodleian Library, MS Lat.th.d.1, fol. 174r).Google Scholar

57 “Primo accipe amigdala et excoria illa, deinde tere amigdala in mortariolo, eciam tempera cum aqua, et facta est. Moraliter per amigdala intendo opera tua, per ry3s, que sunt genera subtilia, intendo cogitaciones tuas. Accipe ergo amigdala, id est, opera tua, et excoria ista si quid peccati in eis est. Accipe eciam ry3s, id est, cogitaciones tuas, et si quid viciosum est, eice. Vtraque tere in mortariolo cordis tui cum pestello crucis Christi cogitando qualia pro te fecit. Et si cor tuum carnium sit, aquam infunde pro peccatis, et si sic feceris, ry3s habebis optimum cum quibus Christus libenter pascitur” (ibid.).Google Scholar

58 Ibid., fol. 174v.Google Scholar

59 “Nam qualiter aliqui lucrabantur, invenio sic quod aliqui patrum sanctorum vix vnciam panis commederunt propter ipsum, aliqui nec panem nec huiusmodi set solum cortices et radices, alii qui continue per triennium in eodem loco nec mouebant se nec pausabant lacrimis et ieiuniis et vigiliis semper insistentes sic, et alii propter ipsum sunt oculis priuati, alii capite truncati, alii intestinis exinterati vel euicerati, alii crucifixi et flagellati” (ibid.).Google Scholar

60 Ibid., fol. 175r.Google Scholar

61 “Primam habent mercatores de pauperibus quos decipiunt. Secundum est qualem habent domini cum seruis quos sibi subiciunt per seruitutem” (ibid.).Google Scholar

62 “Set queris qualem melodiam sibi facere debeas. Respondeo, accipe cor tuum tamquam instrumentum musicum, et id cum bona contricione et confessione tempera, et sic secure Deo clames” (ibid.).Google Scholar

63 A similar verse prayer concludes the Good Friday sermon immediately preceding this one. See Johnson, , “A Fifteenth-Century Sermon” (n. 34 above).Google Scholar

64 For more elaborate examples of the use of this metaphor, see Johnson, Holly, “God's Music-Making: The Cross-Harp Metaphor in Late-Medieval Preaching,” Medieval Perspectives 22 (2007 [2011]): 4859.Google Scholar

65 The Book of Margery Kempe (n. 1 above), 173.Google Scholar

1 Qui custos … Prouerbiorum 27] Prov. 27:18 Google Scholar

2 suum venit] suum venit repeated Google Scholar

3 pugna] pungna Google Scholar

4 Delicie mee … hominum] Prov. 8:31 Google Scholar

5 infideles] fideles Google Scholar

6 homo] homine Google Scholar

7 mundus] munde Google Scholar

8 spiritualiter] sic, but may be a misreading of specialiter Google Scholar

9 extensam sicud] excensam istud Google Scholar

10 nec oculus … et cetera] cf. 1 Cor. 2:9 Google Scholar

11 He þat] þat written twice Google Scholar

12 habuerit] habuerint Google Scholar

13 Si] set Google Scholar

14 fatuus es … vnde venisti] The scribe skipped a line before recording these verses and so he has marked them for insertion in the proper place with the word hic Google Scholar

15 Finitur … ita] This is an apparent scribal error for the proverbial saying “Finita vita, finit amicus ita”. Google Scholar

16 Omnes qui … paciuntur] 2 Tim. 3:12 Google Scholar

17 horribus] horribus is preceded by horrobilibus Google Scholar

18 Ubi … est] An antiphon chanted during the Holy Thursday liturgy Google Scholar

19 Tercium patet … amicicia] The scribe has switched the second and third explanation Google Scholar

20 sit] i.e., scit Google Scholar

21 homine] appears to be an abbreviation for domino Google Scholar

22 multiples] i.e., multiplex Google Scholar