The mystics would like a word Six women who met God and found a spirituality for today

Shannon K. Evans

Book - 2024

"Is there a Christian spirituality that embraces the entire reality of womanhood? The answer, Shannon K. Evans suggests, is an emphatic yes. There is a spirituality that meets us in every part of our lives, developed by the women who came before us. Six mystics-Teresa of Ávila, Margery Kempe, Hildegard of Bingen, Julian of Norwich, Catherine of Siena, and Thérèse of Lisieux-revealed a faith big enough to hold the female experiences of sex and desire, the yearning for bodily autonomy, the challenges of motherhood and identity, as well as life with male authority and-sometimes-violence. These women, self-determining, stubborn, and unapologetically themselves, asked questions in their time that are startlingly prescient today, and foug...ht for women's experiences to be heard, understood, respected, and recognized as holy. In The Mystics Would Like a Word, readers will discover the story of Christian faith and spirituality as told by these extraordinary and wise women, one that speaks directly to today's unique experiences, and leads to wholeness, healing, and spiritual vitality"--

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2nd Floor New Shelf 248.22/Evans (NEW SHELF) Due Dec 8, 2024
Subjects
Genres
Religious materials
Published
New York : Convergent [2024]
Language
English
Main Author
Shannon K. Evans (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
xix, 186 pages : illustrations ; 22 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 185-186).
ISBN
9780593727270
  • Introduction
  • Teresa of Ávila
  • 1. Trusting Yourself Doesn't Make You a Heretic
  • 2. Sensuality, Sexuality, and Living as a Person in a Body
  • Margery Kempe
  • 3. All the Best Prophets Were Mentally Ill
  • 4. How to Become a Virgin Again
  • Hildegard of Bingen
  • 5. Spirituality Demands Environmental Justice
  • 6. The World Is Burning: Why Make Art?
  • Julian of Norwich
  • 7. The Divine Feminine Isn't Just Permissible, It's Necessary
  • 8. Wherein Sin and Hell Lose a Whole Lot of Power
  • Thérèse Of Lisieux
  • 9. Subversive Insignificance in a World Hungry for Fame
  • 10. Nursing the Mother Wound
  • Catherine of Siena
  • 11. Balancing Action and Contemplation
  • 12. Horror, Gore, Death, and the Necessity of Facing Our Shadows
  • Acknowledgments
  • Bibliography
Review by Booklist Review

Dusting off the church history books, Evans (Feminist Prayers for My Daughter, 2023), spirituality and culture editor at the National Catholic Reporter, set out to examine six female mystics without the traditional lens of masculine perspective. Defining mystic as "someone who has experienced a glimpse of the eternal and has chosen to pursue more," and who has left written descriptions of these encounters that inspire a similar longing in their audience, Evans describes their writings as surprisingly forward-thinking--even progressive--lending themselves to an array of modern topics: patriarchy, social justice, and ecology. Evans relates her own life experiences and spiritual journey to these insightful women, whose personal relationships with the divine feminine foster intimacy with a loving God. Evans writes conversationally about these women as friends, not academic philosophers, who carried their faith into the world and put it into practice, sometimes raising eyebrows as they went. Eye-opening and timely, this will appeal to Christian readers who want to go deeper.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Evans (Feminist Prayers for My Daughter), an editor at the National Catholic Reporter, spotlights in this animated survey a half dozen Christian female mystics whose lives inform "questions of faith and liberation in our modern world." Teresa of Ávila sublimated her sexual desires (which landed her in the convent after her father caught her in an "indiscretion with a love interest") into intense spiritual friendships, an approach that Evans contrasts with evangelical "purity ring culture," which constrains female sexuality and prohibits sex before marriage. (Christian notions that separate the physical from the spiritual rely on a false binary, she contends.) Elsewhere, Evans draws on the lives of Margery Kempe (to discuss mental health) and Hildegard of Bingen (to expound on environmental justice). It's sometimes unclear which audience the author is trying to address; she celebrates the progressive views of her subjects alongside questions that seem designed for a more conservative reader ("Consider friends or loved ones who express their sexuality differently than you do. What would it look like to honor those differences?"). Still, Evans makes a solid case for reexamining female Christian thinkers who've been flattened by the historical record into meek models of humility and self-sacrifice. Spiritual seekers will find value in these provocative reconsiderations. (Sept.)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A colloquial look at six European female Christian mystics and their teachings. Evans, the spirituality and culture editor at the National Catholic Reporter and author of Feminist Prayers for My Daughter, dedicates her latest to "every woman whose story merited an examination it never received." She focuses on the lives and work of six women--Teresa of Avila, Margery Kempe, Julian of Norwich, Hildegard of Bingen, Thérèse of Lisieux, and Catherine of Siena--five of whom were nuns, and all of whom Evans describes as "unapologetically themselves" and "more than able to lead." The chapters--bearing titles such as "All the Best Prophets Were Mentally Ill," "Trusting Yourself Doesn't Make You a Heretic," and "The World Is Burning: Why Make Art?"--end with questions "for prayer and reflection." For example, "Do you feel comfortable viewing your soul as a place for light?"; "If you were a flower, which one would you be? How do you feel about that flower?" The author often shares from her own life, including her journey of leaving evangelicalism and conversion to Catholicism, as well as what she views as the most prescient lessons from and summations of each of her subjects. Of Thérèse, Evans writes, "This chick was a feminist if ever there was one." In the chapter about Hildegard, she notes, "arguably her best-known spiritual principle is the idea of the earth as a sacred mirror reflecting our internal reality." The author's impassioned, often quippy, always forthright tone makes for a quick read. "Each of us has a mystic within us," she writes, "waiting to be unlocked." Despite the text's lack of racial representation, the author calls women of color "the prophets of our modern age" before closing with lines from an Alice Walker poem. A well-meaning, resonant set of biographical profiles that will inspire religiously inclined readers. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Chapter One Trusting Yourself Doesn't Make You a Heretic I read the words on the screen with a tightening in my chest. It wasn't uncommon for me to get criticism from fundamentalists on my Instagram, but their words were usually at least coated in something resembling civility. On this day one particular woman had come with claws out. "Stop pretending to be Christian," she rebuked me in the comments on my post. "You are purposefully deceiving people. It's obvious to all of us that you are Wiccan." Spoiler alert: Gentle reader, I am not Wiccan. I don't think I even know any Wiccans. The extent of my familiarity with Wicca comes from the character Willow in the Buffy the Vampire Slayer television series that I watched as a teenager, which is to say, less than exhaustive but pretty witty. And yet, in that moment, my heart raced and my cheeks burned as though I had been found out. I felt publicly exposed and vulnerable, not because I was being correctly outed as a pagan but because, as incorrect as her diagnosis was, this commenter had picked up on something true: I had transgressed the laws of Christian womanhood. My crime? I had written a post that put language to the wild, raw, hungry spirits inside of women, the places in us that marvel at--and sometimes fear--the power of the mysteries within. The last sentence I wrote was "We will never be satisfied with a small God or a small inner flame. We know in our bodies there is more." It was simple, this call to listen to and honor the deepest stirrings within. But the prospect of self-honesty, of attending to the desire to live untamed, terrified this woman. Her terror turned itself onto me, a conflict-averse person for whom that was difficult. But it wasn't about me at all. It was about her consciousness and her cages warring against each other. From behind the bars of patriarchy, women can be downright cruel to those who wander free. This is an extreme example, of course. Most of us are not leaving hateful comments on other women's social media posts. (If you are . . . please stop.) For most of us, the battle is internal. Do we acknowledge the rumbling in our guts or do we continue reading from the script we've been given? Too often, certain issues feel unwelcome in our faith spaces, while our faith might feel unwelcome in spaces of important social critique. When I say, for example, that I am Christian and feminist, I find the Christian part scares the feminists and the feminism part scares the Christians. Like many women today, I have felt pressured to choose between religious fidelity and progressive thinking. I have been there before--and I have no intention of going back. A handful of years ago I was a much-lauded writer for a prominent Catholic women's ministry, where I enjoyed a sense of belonging and friendship. Community has always been an integral part of my spiritual life, and the women in this ministry were my primary community at the time; these were individuals with a spectrum of social, political, and theological beliefs but whose group identity leaned more conservative than my own. Still, I was convinced there was a place for me with them, especially since my writing was so well received. So I censored my more controversial opinions and convictions in order to fit in with the group. Worse, I performed serious mental gymnastics to lie to myself about being okay with some of the things said, done, and taught in the ministry. I didn't feel full permission to trust myself, my own conscience, or the way I understood the Spirit inside me, so I deferred to others instead. Gradually, I began to wake up. Prompted by trials in my personal life that forced me to confront honestly the extent to which I had disconnected from my authentic self, I found the courage to return to my own instincts and voice. I employed small critiques of patriarchy in my writing and advocated for serious leadership positions, including ordination, for women in religious institutions. I criticized the blending of church and state for politicians' personal gain. I spoke openly about my love of yoga and the Enneagram. Even though I expressed these opinions only on my personal blog and social media accounts, my status within the ministry began to crumble. Complaints were lodged against me by longtime readers, which felt as humiliating as it was infuriating. A priest and a bishop worked to shut me up, which opened my eyes to the subtleties of clericalism's harm. When I was told by ministry leadership that I would be required to hide my personal convictions entirely if I wanted to stay on staff, I resigned in what I hoped would be a gracious and amicable fashion. To my shock, the vast majority of women I once counted as friends never spoke to me again. The feeling of having been used and then abandoned hurt more than the censorship. The grief went deep. I lost friendships I had assumed were real. I lost my largest writing platform. I lost my spiritual community and sense of belonging. I mourned this all for months--and, if I'm honest, a part of me still mourns it. And yet, I learned what it felt like to be true to myself. I learned that I could trust myself. It was more than worth it. I know I am not alone in having gone through an experience like this. When you consider how common these pressures are, it's no wonder women are plagued by anxiety and depression. For the sake of maintaining our sense of belonging, we discipline ourselves into staying within the received boundaries of what we are allowed to think, believe, or practice rather than what we actually think, believe, or want to practice. We look to spouses, family members, pastors, and news anchors to tell us what parameters we ought to stay within. We trust the authority of outside voices far more than we trust the guidance of our own souls. In fact, the very idea of trusting ourselves elicits unease: isn't that the very thing the Bible tells us not to do? It's true, there are places in the Bible that discourage us from putting trust in ourselves. When I was a good Baptist kid growing up in Bible Drill competitions, one of the first verses I memorized was Proverbs 3:5-6: "Trust in the Lord with all your heart, and do not rely on your own insight. In all your ways acknowledge him, and he will make straight your paths" (NRSV). I'm not saying this isn't wisdom: trusting in ourselves apart from our union with God can indeed be a recipe for disaster. When we are not attuned to our Life Source, we tend to be pretty selfish and destructive people. But that doesn't mean we throw away our inner compass. If we are sincerely seeking to live in union with the Spirit, then trusting in ourselves as portals of Divine life can be a way to move from spiritual childhood into spiritual maturity. Jesus himself said the kingdom of heaven is not to your left or to your right but is within you (Luke 17:21). If we're honest, that's a frightening prospect. It can feel safer to look for the kingdom of heaven outside of ourselves, to look for it in authority figures, religious culture, or the safety net of orthodoxy. There is a certain kind of felt security that comes with believing someone else knows more than we do, that somehow they have reached transcendent answers we are not even capable of touching. Jesus' words are all well and good, but when it comes down to it, we are more convinced that what he wants is for us to outsource our spiritual lives to a select few. But what if, when Jesus said the kingdom of heaven is within you, what he meant was--and bear with me now--that the kingdom of heaven is within you? I know. Crazy. What if you actually do have a still, small voice to guide you? What if you actually do have everything you need for life and godliness? What if it's not a matter of being taught what to believe but a matter of being taught how to listen deeply to what you already do believe? If you were taught to trust yourself, how might your experience of God be different? How might your entire existence be different? And if such a thing were possible, who would teach you? Excerpted from The Mystics Would Like a Word: Six Women Who Met God and Found a Spirituality for Today by Shannon K. Evans All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.