Curious Christian

Reflections on culture, nature, and spirituality from a Christian perspective

Religious intollerance is often blamed for “the burning times” … but could scientific intollerance be just as culpuble?

For my counselling course I was reading an interesting article by Heather Gridley, senior lecturer of Social Sciences and Psychology at Victoria University. In the article, “Psychology, Spirituality, Religion and Culture – Harvesting the Gifts of All Our Ancestors”, she made the following remarks in relation to the scientific revolution:

Nature was of course assumed to be feminine and passive, awaiting the gaze and penetration of the male scientist-adventurer. Europe’s first universities were now well established, but the Malleus Maleficarum (hammer of the witches), the manual of the Inquisition on the Middle Ages, had ensured that women took no part in the cultural and scientific Renaissance, except as artist’ models – any women who dared to ‘cure’ without having studied (from which they were banned) was declared to be a witch, and so the healing knowledges of midwives and others fell outside “the academy” of the emerging male profession.

I have heard such suggestions before, that professional rivalry was a contributing factor to the witch burnings, but the full implications of that had not hit home before. Without minimizing the responsibility of the Christian community, it would seem the scientific community needs to do some repenting of its own.

Related Articles

Wiccans and Christians – Some Mutual Challenges

2 responses to “Burning Times as Scientific Pogrom?”

  1. Andrew Avatar
    Andrew

    Hi Matt.
    A few weeks ago Lucy and I attended the International Christian Dance Fellowship (www.icdf.com) conference in St Andrews Scotland.
    St Andrews during the Reformation was a place of many martyrdoms to do with religious conflicts.
    Thought this reflection posted in our network coordinators’ cyberforum about one of those was quite relevant to the topic of religious intolerance:
    “The setting for the conference was absolutely perfect. Well done UK team ! The choice of venue excellent. I was particularly moved that each time we entered the auditorium we were walking over the place, marked by the cobblestones, where a young Martyr had died for his faith at age 24, age of my son. On hearing Lutheran doctrine he returned to University and was killed for his new found faith . St Andrews was not only the place of some of the first missionaries to the UK but also a place of religious discord and persecution. I guess this made the fact that we come together from all over the world with different cultures and doctrines but the same Faith in Jesus so incredible !”
    The young martyr was burned at the stake by a group of his best friends, presumably because they believed that by doing so his body would be condemned to hell, but his soul would be spared/saved, as was the thinking of many in those times.

    Like

  2. Matt Stone Avatar

    I keep thinking of what Jesus said: the truth will set you free. Yet some twisted the truth into a weapon of oppression. How twisted people can be.

    Like

Leave a reply to Matt Stone Cancel reply