Brown’s Cult of Saints
The Author’s Argument
The argument that Peter Brown makes in The Cult of the Saints: Its Rise and Function in Latin Christianity is that the “cult of saints” was essentially promoted by the cultural leaders of the time—the bishops and elites of society who had a hand in shaping the perceptions of others. Through them, the Church expressed the idea that Heaven and Earth could be joined through the intercession of the saints,[footnoteRef:2] whose bodies were vestiges of grace and holiness, conduits through which Heaven could bridge the fault above the earth and reach out for Christians interested in making it to the other side, in holiness. As Brown notes, “the joining of Heaven and Earth was made plain even by the manner in which contemporaries designed and described the shrines of the saints.”[footnoteRef:3] The saints and their resting places represented the jointure—the point where the divine and the earthly merged—a point to be honored, revered, and utilized for holy purposes. The Jews, Brown makes clear, believed in no such notion: for the Christians, it was part and parcel of their belief in a God-Man Who had done what no other could do. The fact that the cult of the saints took its rise outside the realm of the Roman world—i.e., “in the great cemeteries that lay outside the cities”—indicates that the cult was an alternative to what the past and present Roman culture offered: it was something distinct, new, unique and outside the main.[footnoteRef:4] This in its own right had a special allure, as journeying to the land of the dead was symbolic in itself of the spiritual pilgrimage the Christian believed himself to be on. It also encapsulated the paradoxical mystery of the faith—that among the dead there could be found the grace of life. [2: Peter Brown, The Cult of the Saints: Its Rise and Function in Latin Christianity (University of Chicago Press, 1981), 6] [3: Ibid 4.] [4: Ibid, 4.]
This idea, this essence of the faith, was what Brown argues inspired the cult of the saints. He rejects the idea of modern historians that the cult came about as the result of a “democratization of culture,” facilitated by the culture elites of late antiquity who allowed the “vulgar” ideas of the masses to become commonplace.[footnoteRef:5] Rather, Brown argues that the “two-tiered model” fails to explain what really transpired because, in fact, there was...
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