In my previous post, I discussed miracle stories, the kind that would be collected at a shrine to extol the power of the local saint in healing the sick. But how about saints like Mary, who were not nearly as closely tied to a specific locale? (Though she too would have special veneration in certain places; the most important healing shrine today, that of Lourdes, is dedicated to Our Lady of Lourdes.)
Miracle stories of the Virgin would be told and retold in many places. Although she was entirely capable of healing, many of her miracle stories involved other sorts of intervention in human affairs. At one time modern scholars tended to be a little embarrassed by some of these stories, and tried to pass them off as the superstitious tales of the unlettered. But these were stories told by monks and clergymen.
They may have been embarrassing (now) because a lot of them lacked what you might call a clear moral lesson. Rather, they emphasized the power of the Virgin in helping those who called on her. In one story, a knight on the way to a tournament stopped at a shrine to Mary to pray, and he prayed so long and so hard that he forgot all about the tournament. In the evening, he proceeded into the town where it had been held to find a place to stay and was shocked to be heralded as winning the tournament! It turned out that Mary had been so impressed by his piety that she put on armor, took his horse and lance, and fought disguised as him, winning the prize.
Okay, you can see why some scholars would rather not talk about this as the product of learned priests. In another story, a criminal, caught and deservedly condemned to death, prayed so hard to the Virgin that she came to the gallows where he was to be hung and, when the trap door opened to drop him and break his neck, she held him up. After a few hours the authorities realized there was a miracle going on (man with a noose around his neck hovering, unhurt, in the air) and carefully lowered him and set him free. In this story at least the criminal was reformed, having learned his lesson, and lived the rest of his life very virtuously.
So what is going on? These were stories both about the power of the saint and stories to tell sinners that anyone can turn to the saints for help. The greatest sin has always been despair, feeling that you are so evil that you are beyond redemption (which of course requires pride in one's wickedness). These stories say that anyone, even knights (routinely branded as sinful) and criminals, could count on mercy if it was sought with a truly contrite heart. Mary took the role especially of the mother who always will love you, no matter what. (That's a medieval wooden statue of her below.)
Other saints would also listen even to sinners. In fact, a lot of miracle stories were quite subversive, with those in authority, both secular lords and church leaders, being given their comeuppance by the saint. For example, at Conques (see previous post), Saint Foy routinely broke the chains of escaped criminals, and when the monks tried to lock the church doors to keep poor pilgrims out, she swung the doors open herself. Not just sinners but the poor and downtrodden were depicted in the miracle stories as helped by the saints.
The New Testament parallels were entirely deliberate.
© C. Dale Brittain 2022
For more on religion, saints, and other aspects of medieval history, see my ebook Positively Medieval, available on Amazon and other ebook platforms. Also available as a paperback.