It's even sadder when you remember that these women actually believed they'd go to hell for these letters.
I think middle age nuns have more nuanced theological beliefs than the average church going American. In the middle ages religion was a philosophical study for nuns, not some sort of dogma handed down by the most charismatic pastor.
Before science, religion was science. Monks and nuns were the ones who sought the truth critically through the lens of religion. Even if they decry it as a sin, it's a bit different than simply "do this and go to hell".
One day our current scientific theories will seem quint and outdated. Just like how Einstein replaced Newton, even things we currently hold to be absolutely true, like the theory of evolution might be supplemented by a more general and advanced theory. When that happens we don't want future generations to think we dogmatically believed in things like evolution right? What we believed in is the pursuit of truth, not any one theory.
Similarly, I think you should rest easy thinking that what these nuns sought was not dogma in religion, but truth in a uncertain world.
That's a funny way of saying they were super religious and dogmatic.
Because that's what they were, no matter what your idea of proto-science may be lol
You seem to be more of an expert on medieval religious practice than people who actually lived during that time and deigned to write down their experiences. Religion is not science. It does not allow for "outdated" and "updated" stuff (the West is just slowly shedding its religious idiocy and that's why all the rules keep loosening). Especially not in the goddamn middle ages.
The truth nuns and priests sought out was all in the name and view of god. Mendel might have laid the foundation for genetic biology, but he also still believed women were inferior, god would punish anyone who ate meat on the Sabbath and judged men for sodomy.
I guess you kind of have a romanticized view of those dark times. There is literally nothing good about the middle ages. You better believe that these nuns knew 100% they would go to hell. They might have justified it away, but not because of some "truth", but because humans always try to escape punishment. Until Martin Luther himself appeared to split the church into two large sects, nobody ever dared to question either the bible nor the way the church did things.
In summary: Religion is all about keeping its followers stupid, gullible and afraid. It is simply unrealistic to believe that nuns were anywhere brave or intelligent enough back then to question their shitty dogma.
EDIT: Why does this always happen to me? At some point one has to wonder if these posts are just voices in my head...
last edited at May 10, 2019 5:01PM