The eucharist, albeit a recapitulation of Christ’s execution, was not therefore a symbol of death but of life, birth and nursing. As I have argued elsewhere, it stood for Christ’s humanness and therefore for ours. By eating it and, in that eating, fusing with Christ’s hideous physical suffering, the Christian not so much escaped as became the human.
–Caroline Walker Bynum, “Women’s Stories, Women’s Symbols: A Critique of Victor Turner’s Theory of Liminality,” in Fragmentation and Redemption

eta: Oops! “Hideious” was a typo, not a pun….


Browse Our Archives

Follow Us!