Catherine of Siena (1347–1380) contributed important wisdom to Christian spirituality on discernment, yet her own discernment regarding her engagement in papal politics has not been studied. From the perspective of Christian spirituality studies, this article examines the critical text of her letters in relationship with historical events to offer a description of the instances where Catherine’s discernment differed from that of others committed to a spiritual journey and to seeking the good of the church. Catherine’s view of God’s will regarding the papal interdict of Florence controverted that of several ecclesial leaders more likely to be right. Catherine’s advocacy for the crusade differed from the advice Birgitta of Sweden gave Gregory XI, advice corroborated by history. Two of Catherine’s spiritual mentors made decisions they discerned to be right regarding missions on which they were sent by the pope, whereas Catherine reproached them for these choices. Furthermore, Catherine was certain that the election of Urban VI had been blessed by God, whereas another saint considered Clement VII to be the true pope. The above analysis is followed by an examination of influences on Catherine’s experience of seeking and implementing God’s will, seeking to account for the divergence between her discernment and that of others. In conclusion, while Catherine was confident in her union with God and, therefore, God’s guidance, she was also influenced by her unbending beliefs about truth and by the manner these beliefs were conditioned by her personality and sociocultural context.
This article contributes to scholarship in Christian spirituality on the spirituality of Catherine of Siena and on discernment, studying Catherine of Siena’s discernment regarding papal politics where she differed from others whose discernment can be interpreted as more likely to be congruent with God’s will. The reasons for her controversial discernment are explored.
Catherine of Siena’s teaching on discernment,
As context for reading the instances of Catherine’s discernment described in this article, I offer a summary of her wisdom on discernment.
Catherine also describes the transformation needed for discernment as transformation of desire, by which she means that the depth of a person’s motivation and perception, his or her thought, feeling, imagination and all that forms his or her spiritual core, becomes increasingly directed to what is congruent with God’s love and truth and thus God’s will. When desire is transformed, the directionality of all the energies of the person becomes increasingly congruent with what God wants.
Central to transformed desire is the progressive acceptance that following Jesus entails taking up the cross, as God’s will may involve self-denial or suffering. To the extent that one is resistant to undergoing these human experiences, one will be blocked from perceiving and desiring God’s will. Accordingly, transformed love makes one capable of embracing suffering.
I will argue that Catherine’s application of this wisdom in her own life contributed to both her heroic commitment to God’s will and to her unbending interpretations of reality leading to her controversial view of God’s will. In addition, Catherine applied the above wisdom in the reproofs detailed below. She reproached Raymond of Capua, William Flete and Giovanni dalle Celle for failure to live up to the transformation she expected of them, thus failing to accomplish God’s will. From Catherine’s perspective, none had attained the capacity for charity required to act for the good of the church rather than getting caught up in self-centeredness.
In December 1378, Pope Urban VI
When Catherine learned about the mission’s failure, she wrote to Raymond, reproaching the spiritual immaturity that led him to fail in obedience to the pope and thus accomplishing God’s will.
You were not even worthy of staying a bit on the field of battle but as a child were chased back, and you gladly fled, and even rejoiced that God should learn of your weakness. (Letter 333)
Raymond should seek growth beyond his selfish self-love to be able to eat bread – like an adult – with the mouth of holy desire and the teeth of love. Catherine wished he could eat mouldy bread (i.e. be willing to suffer). An adult ready to serve God would take the mouldy bread and dip it into the blood of Christ’s side to be empowered to suffer for the good of others and, therefore, accomplish God’s will:
Dipping the mouldy bread of struggles into this precious blood … they seek to find a way to offer glory and honour to God; they recognize that in time of great struggle … they embrace (literally hug) these struggles knowing that in this way they are better transformed to imitate Christ crucified. (Letter 333)
Furthermore, Catherine lamented that Raymond was sadly not a grown up of the sort she had hoped him to be, ready for martyrdom if necessary to carry out the pope’s mission. She wished he ‘had contributed a stone block to the wall of holy church with your blood [i.e. become a martyr] for love of the Blood!’ (Letter 333). In short, Raymond had failed to make the right choice, namely, going on to France risking martyrdom for the good of the church.
On his second mission in May 1379, Raymond was to deliver a Bull to the King of France arguing for Urban VI’s legitimacy. This time the trip involved crossing into French territory from Barcelona, with a safe conduct from Cardinal Pedro de Luna, now in Spain. The latter had been a friend of Raymond’s and had supported Urban. Unfortunately, when Raymond arrived in Spain, he found that de Luna had changed his allegiance to Clement VII and would not offer safe passage to France. Without safe passage, the trip would risk capture and possible death, so Raymond again returned to Genoa (Catherine of Siena
Catherine again reproached Raymond and expressed her disappointment in him. She couched her critique in concern for his spiritual well-being and a long exhortation about transformation through personal encounter with the Crucified. ‘I reprimand you so that you can be your true self and invite God’s goodness to lead you to greatest perfection’ (Letter 344). Raymond’s fear for his life instead of continuing to France was a sign of lack of charity, a relapse to selfish self-love. Raymond relied too much on his own strength, rather than on God’s capacity to take care of those pursuing his will:
When I don’t love, I don’t trust in him [
After her exhortations, Catherine directly tells Raymond that he discerned incorrectly; he should have gone to France as requested by Urban VI, ‘Christ on Earth’. For the pope’s requests are God’s will.
I realize you let go of what was burdensome due to weakness. … To better accomplish God’s will and that of Christ on earth, pope Urban VI, I wish you had pursued the route and means that was assigned to you. … If you couldn’t go as a monk, then go as a pilgrim, if not on foot then on all fours, if without money, then begging. This would have been faithful obedience to God. (Letter 344)
To remedy his failure, Raymond should pray to be covered in the blood of Christ that would give him the strength to be faithful to God’s plans. Most of all, he should allow God to further transform him so that his desire would become congruent with truth:
I rejoice, and wish you to rejoice as well, that since your desire increases, God will wish to fulfil it, as he welcomes true, holy desires; especially if you open the eye of your intellect with the light of most holy faith, in this manner you will know God’s will. (Letter 344)
Clearly Raymond discerned differently than Catherine. Urban VI understood the predicaments Raymond came up against, as evidenced by the fact he did not reprimand him, but rather offered him alternative missions. In other words, Raymond did not disobey the pope. Common sense would suggest that in both cases Raymond pursued the wise course of action. Losing his life on the way to France would not have advanced Urban VI’s cause and the strengthening of his papacy, which Catherine hoped would allow Urban to focus on reform of the church, a cause dear to Catherine’s heart and certainly God’s will.
Convinced that it was God’s will to advocate for the papacy of Urban VI,
[
William Flete,
In exhorting Flete and his fellow hermit, Antonio of Nice, to go to Rome, Catherine reminded them to embrace the Cross, a sign of transformation and readiness to follow God’s will and serve the church without self-centeredness. She cautioned Flete that he must not stay in the peace and quiet of his hermitage, for this would be a temptation:
Do not seek peace and quiet in anything other than Christ crucified; develop a hunger for the table of the Cross and God’s honour, the salvation of persons and the reform of holy church, which is in such need of this reform. … In truth pursue God’s will and that of his vicar [Urban VI]; leave the woods and come into the battlefield. For if you do not do this you will have alienated yourself from the will of God. (Letter 326)
Flete, as well as several others, refused Urban’s invitation. Catherine was so troubled by this that she would not write to Fleet directly, instead sending her reproach via Antonio:
I didn’t expect Brother William [Flete] to answer with such irreverence for holy obedience. … Obedience to the pope is more perfect, and we should always be subject to his command
Catherine then compared Flete’s disobedience with the obedience of two elderly monks who responded to the pope’s call as Flete and Antonio should have done. These virtuous monks offered the discomforts of their trip and stayed away from their hermitages for the good of the church. If Flete was going to refuse to go to Rome, he should at least have asked the pope to mission him to remain in his hermitage in this way avoiding sinful disobedience.
Flete remained faithful to his vocation as a contemplative hermit devoted to intercession and to offering spiritual counsel, a vocation that would be disrupted by travel to Rome. Indeed, in his prayer Flete had a vision of Urban VI as true pope. Based on this he contacted English ecclesiastical authorities to argue in favour of Urban VI’s papacy (Gardner
In addition, given the fraught state of papal politics, Urban was unlikely to have followed Fleet’s recommendations or those of other monks rather than those of his ecclesiastical and temporal supporters who held positions of power. In other words, Flete’s discernment can be interpreted as faithful to his experience of God’s guidance.
Catherine’s discernment regarding Gregory XI’s
Catherine strongly supported the interdict based on her firm belief that the pope, as Christ on earth, must be obeyed and that any deviation from such obedience was a sin.
I have the great joy of learning of your perseverance and steadfastness. I pray that even
Clergy and religious leaders in Florence differed in their acceptance of the interdict. Some known for their wisdom and holiness supported breaching the interdict to offer the sacraments. One of these was Giovanni dalle Celle, one of Catherine’s spiritual friends and advisors.
When Catherine learned that dalle Celle advocated breaching the interdict, she wrote to correct his view regarding God’s will, although she is less blunt and direct than with Raymond and Flete, perhaps because Catherine was less close to dalle Celle. Her objections were couched in an exhortation about the importance of receptivity to the suffering required to serve God because without this, God’s will cannot be accurately perceived or executed. Catherine informs dalle Celle that she is discouraged by the behaviour of the ‘ministers of the blood’ [priests]. She asserts, ‘my tongue cannot describe so many faults and evils’ (Letter 296). The religious and laity amongst the Florentines were equally hopeless in obeying the pope regarding the interdict. After her lamentation, Catherine states:
Whether they do this [
Dalle Celle’s view that making the sacraments available and offering pastoral care was more important than obeying the pope’s interdicts was more congruent with sacramental theology
For Catherine, the crusades were clearly God’s will. While she was enlisted by ecclesiastical authorities to advocate for this cause,
Yet, another medieval woman mystic and saint who advised ecclesiastical and temporal authorities warned Gregory XI that the crusade was not pleasing to God. Birgitta of Sweden – of noble birth, married and widowed – eventually resided in Rome and became a mystical-prophetic advisor to several popes until her death during Gregory XI’s pontificate.
[
Furthermore, in her
In her passion for the crusade as a path to salvation, an opportunity for martyrdom and an offering pleasing to God, Catherine advised some of her fellow
Catherine saw God’s will in the election of Urban VI and the work of deceit and evil in the election of Clement VII.
While we cannot know whether Catherine’s discernment regarding Urban VI’s papacy was representative of God’s will or not, it is notable that others of holy reputation diverged from her discernment and came to see Clement as the true pope. One was Cardinal de Luna who had initially supported Urban and was reputed as a man of integrity who changed his allegiances in the search for truth.
We have seen that persons with commitments to a relationship with God and the good of the church came to judgements that diverged from those of Catherine and their judgements were more likely to be congruent with God’s will. Flete and Raymond made ordered personal discernments. Those who prioritised offering the sacraments during the Florence interdict followed a more theologically and pastorally accurate path. Birgitta’s revelations about Gregory XI’s crusade seem to better reflect wisdom and truth, for Gregory XI’s crusade never flourished, and the original religious fervour for a holy passage pilgrimage of the early crusades had waned, as Birgitta rightfully pointed out. While judgements about the relative ‘right order’ regarding the papacies of Urban VI versus that of Clement VII are difficult to make, what is relevant here is that persons with exemplary spiritual journeys, including a saint, differed from Catherine’s absolute clarity.
How, then, can we interpret the fact that Catherine came to controversial and probably inaccurate discernments? For, by the time Catherine offered her discernment on papal politics she had journeyed long on the path to union with God and transformation of desire, the transformation central to Catherine’s wisdom regarding capacity to perceive and carry out God’s will.
I propose that Catherine’s deeply held beliefs about what she considered paramount truths became filters through which she interpreted God’s will. These beliefs and the absolute, unbending manner in which she held and applied them in some cases resulted in controversial discernments. In the following paragraphs, I examine these beliefs and the manner in which they influenced Catherine’s judgements.
In the first of this series of articles I showed that salvation was a guiding truth for Catherine’s mission on behalf of papal politics. She was uncompromisingly convinced that the church as an institution and the pope as its head mediated salvation. The pope was Christ on earth irrespective of his personal holiness so that his decisions regarding church policy were God’s will and must be understood as for the good of the church.
You know well that Christ left us his Vicar for the salvation of our souls. We can only obtain salvation in the mystical body of Holy Church whose head is Christ and we the members. Whoever disobeys Christ on earth [the pope], who is in the place of Christ in heaven, will not partake of the blood of the Son of God. For God has ordained it so that through his [the pope’s] hands this blood and all the Holy Church’s sacraments – which receive life through the blood – should be given to us. (Letter 207)
Accordingly, obedience to the pope was an ultimate value and disobedience a serious sin:
Whoever rebels against the church and our Christ on earth [
That Catherine’s belief in obedience to the pope for the good of the church was of ultimate importance and that she applied it in an absolute, unbending manner is evidenced by the fact that it trumped other beliefs important to her. Catherine speaks often about the blood of Christ as a symbol of his life given for us and attests in many letters and
Another overarching, foundational belief that coloured Catherine’s discernments was the ideal of martyrdom. As the ultimate sign of giving of oneself to God and of imitation of Jesus’ dying for us, she was convinced that the desire for martyrdom and the willingness to die as a martyr were God’s will. As we saw, this ideal had caught Catherine’s imagination early on in her journey and continued influencing her thought until her death.
Catherine’s belief in the church as the mediator of salvation, the pope as Christ on earth and martyrdom as the highest of ideals undergirds her certainty about God’s will in several of the situations analysed in this article. Raymond should have gone to France at all costs because the pope ordered it for the good of the church, and he should have been willing to risk his life, that is, become a martyr. Flete should obey the pope’s invitation to go to Rome, which was also for the good of the church and as such a greater good than Flete’s interpretation about his contemplative vocation. The Florence interdict was God’s will because it was Gregory XI’s policy for the good of the church in cementing church authority and moving towards peace.
Catherine’s absolute conviction that the crusade was God’s will was also undergirded by several of her central beliefs. Catherine would have been formed by preaching about the salvific nature of the crusades.
In the letters analysed, we saw that Catherine held her beliefs in an absolute, unbending manner. Once she was convinced that something was true, that truth became an unquestioned guiding value. Context seemed irrelevant to her. A major reason for the absoluteness with which Catherine held these and other beliefs she considered true and therefore God’s will undoubtedly had to do with the manner in which she experienced her relationship with God. She lived the wisdom she taught, in that she acted as someone persuaded of the intimacy of her union with God so that if she understood something to be true then it must be guided by God.
One could say, then, that Catherine had a foundational belief that functioned as an overarching first filter for all her discernments, both those that were prophetic in calling ecclesiastical and temporal authorities to behaviours and policies that promoted salvation and those described in this article, which were contested by others and could be interpreted as not representative of God’s will. This foundational belief was her unquestioned assurance about the depth of her relationship with God. Catherine acted as someone profoundly persuaded of Paul’s own belief, ‘for I have been crucified with Christ; and
This assurance is evidenced in the unequivocal certainty with which she communicated about what she considered God’s will. She – a young, uneducated lay woman – told both lay and ecclesiastical authorities that she was right and they were wrong.
I beg you in the name of Christ crucified, I
This self-assurance about being in tune with God’s will in matters related to the good of the church, however, led to an unbending interpretation of these truths, which in the instances analysed here resulted in controversial discernments.
The above overarching filter was intertwined with Catherine’s personality characteristics and sociocultural context. Catherine was drawn in an unnuanced manner to heroic spiritual values. From her childhood she longed to imitate the martyrs and was attracted to those idealised holy persons who lived alone in the desert and those who were said to practise extreme penances and severe fasts for love of God. While these legends of spiritual heroism were undoubtedly part of the popular spirituality of her day, Catherine had a penchant for taking these literally and tried to live them. She escaped as a child to a cave – to be a hermit – and then lived in solitude in her own home while practising physical penances and severe fasting. While in the Tuscany of the late 14th century a spirituality of martyrdom formed part of pious formation, the ideal invited persons to be willing to give their life to God – in service, not literally – and be willing to suffer in order to serve God’s church. Yet Catherine interpreted martyr spirituality literally, personally desired to die as a martyr,
I propose this attraction to heroic ideals, which persisted until Catherine’s death, contributed to the absoluteness with which she held beliefs, especially her ideal of martyrdom and the supremacy of belief in obedience to the pope: two beliefs which are present in the examples examined here. Thus, her understanding of Raymond’s and Flete’s disobedience of the pope reflected a highly idealistic and absolute view of such obedience. As we saw, neither Raymond nor Flete interpreted their choices as disobedience to the pope; neither did Florentine clerics or the devout monk dalle Celle, who believed offering the sacraments was more important than obedience to the papal interdict. Her belief in the crusade was highly idealised, as evidenced both in her expectation that her followers – including single women – would go on a crusade pilgrimage, and in her lack of appreciation of the political realities in Europe that made a crusade impracticable at that time. The expectation that her followers and correspondents would be persuaded to seek martyrdom in a crusade pilgrimage was also highly idealistic, indeed, quite unrealistic.
Catherine’s lack of formal education and worldly experience are sociocultural factors, which also influenced her discernment.
Catherine’s wisdom on discernment has biblical roots in the teachings of Paul as noted above. As we are transformed in Christ, we are better able to perceive and carry out God’s will. Undoubtedly this wisdom on discernment makes a significant contribution to Christian practice. The above analysis, however, shows that even a person as fully transformed as Catherine, someone as exceptional in her complete openness to God dwelling within her and uncompromisingly desirous of doing God’s will could misperceive or misinterpret this will. This vulnerability suggests that Catherine’s wisdom regarding discernment must be modified by conscious attention to contextual influences. We are all limited and sinful and therefore vulnerable to misinterpretations; even the most holy mystic is vulnerable to personality and contextual influences in the interpretation of even the most sublime spiritual experience – for interpretation of the Spirit’s movement within us is filtered through our human reality, which includes our profoundest beliefs. Indeed, beliefs deeply root the way we seek to uncover the transcendent meaning of our lives, and the practices we pursue on this journey of discovery and growth.
55 | September 1377 |
132 | December 1375 |
144 | July 1375 |
196 | February 1376 |
207 | April 1376 |
213 | October 1378 |
242 | October 1377 |
284 | April 1378 |
295 | June 1378 |
296 | October 1377 |
310 | September 1378 |
322 | December 1378 |
326 | December 1378 |
328 | January 1379 |
333 | January 1379 |
344 | August 1379 |
347 | May 1379 |
The author declares that she has no financial or personal relationships that may have inappropriately influenced her in writing this article.
D.L.V. is the sole author of this research article.
This article followed all ethical standards for research without direct contact with human or animal subjects.
This research received no specific grant from any funding agency in the public, commercial or not-for-profit sectors.
Data sharing is not applicable to this article as no new data were created or analysed.
The views and opinions expressed in this article are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the official policy or position of any affiliated agency of the author.
This spiritual practice described in the history of spirituality since patristic times involves sorting out God’s guidance and will. For a detailed treatment of discernment, see McIntosh (
This is the third of a series of three articles on Catherine of Siena’s spirituality and her political engagement; the first examined the spirituality guiding such engagement (Villegas
When I refer to Catherine’s beliefs, I do not refer primarily to intellectual assent to doctrines, but to that which is held to be true by a person and as such guides their acts and choices.
Catherine’s wisdom on discernment is not found in one treatise but must be culled from passages scattered throughout many of her 383 letters and
Citations and my translations of Catherine’s letters are based on A. Volpato’s critical edition of the letters and the Tommaseo (T) numbering used by Volpato (Catherine of Siena
For further details about Catherine’s wisdom on transformation, see McDermott (
Italian elected in April 1378.
See Villegas (
Clement VII (1342–1394), ‘anti-pope’ residing in Avignon was supported by the French during the schism that began with his election in September 1378.
Gardner’s work offers still relevant detail not easily found elsewhere regarding Catherine of Siena’s political engagement citing her letters extensively; it is acknowledged as a mostly accurate history by contemporary scholars such as Luongo (
Over time, Catherine became a close friend who challenged Raymond’s own spiritual practice (see Coakley
As stated in note 5, translations are mine based on A. Volpato’s critical edition (Catherine of Siena
One of Catherine’s beliefs to be discussed here.
Pontificate April 1378–October 1389.
See Letter 323 to Bartolomeo Serafini, Carthusian Prior, urging him to find others to go to Rome and to do so with urgency.
Cambridge theologian and Augustinian monk who had moved to a monastery outside of Siena to follow a vocation as a hermit; he was known as a holy hermit and valued as a spiritual director.
Catherine uses the word
Pontificate: 1370–1378.
On the interdict against Florence, see Luongo (
See, for instance, Letter 284 where Catherine complains to Cardinal de Luna asserting clerics are preaching heresy encouraging people to receive the sacraments; this is heresy because it violates the pope’s command. See also letter 207 to Florentine leaders who are against the interdict.
See Noffke’s introduction to Letter 242 (Catherine of Siena
Referring to martyrdom. My emphasis. See Villegas (
Dalle Celle was a Florentine nobleman who started as a parish priest, but after conversion from a less than exemplary life became a hermit living in Vallombrosa just outside Florence.
The date and context of the letter make clear that Catherine is referring to the interdict although it is not explicitly named. See also comments by Noffke (Catherine of Siena
Catholic sacramental thelology—at least since Thomas Aquinas—asserted the importance of the sacraments for salvation.
In Villegas (
Catherine’s crusade letters to Gregory XI were analysed in Villegas (
For a description of Birgitta’s involvement in advising popes, see Falkeid (
Women belonging to the penitentiary lay order to which Catherine belonged. Under Dominican direction, these women did not take vows.
Dalle Celle’s letter is cited in Viglione (
For example, Catherine affirms ‘he [Urban VI] is true pope, in whom are entrusted the keys of the Blood [salvation]’ (Letter 347). By contrast, Catherine refers to Clement VII as ‘the anti-pope, devil incarnate’ (Letter 322).
See Letter 310 to three cardinals who changed their allegiance to Clement VII. Other letters include 312, 313, 317, 322, 347 and 357 (not an exhaustive list).
See Noffke’s introduction to Letter 284 (Catherine of Siena
Guillaume had collaborated inviting clerics to Urban’s Council of the Wise; see section on Flete.
See Villegas (
There is a long treatise on the Eucharist, the body of Christ, in Catherine of Siena (
On Catherine’s compassion for the Florentines, see Letter 207 and Luongo (
See Letter 226 to Raymond. See Villegas (
Based most likely on Bernard of Clairvaux’s sermons, which had great influence on early crusade theology and spirituality. Bernard argued that the ‘holy passage’ (crusade) was God’s will, so much so that if a crusade were unsuccessful it was because of the sinfulness of the crusaders and not an error in the pope’s call for such a holy pilgrimage (Flood
See, for instance, Letter 235 to the King of France, and Letter 140 to a mercenary soldier.
See, for instance, Letter 374 to a knight she was persuading to join the crusade.
For instance, see the discussion of letters 133 and 143 to Queen Giovanna of Naples and Letter 235 to King Charles V of France in Villegas (
For instance, Catherine expresses her deep disappointment to Raymond, ‘my desire to give my life for the truth and for the sweet bride of Christ [the church] was not fulfilled’, when the Florentines rebelling against the interdict attacked a house where Catherine was staying, and she was spared death (Letter 295). For a discussion of this incident, see Luongo (
See the analysis of Catherine’s crusade letters where she invites persons as disparate as the Queen of Naples, professional warriors, a worldly enemy of the Papal states and others, to desire martyrdom and go on crusade and seems to expect this invitation would be accepted (Villegas
Suzanne Noffke, expert Catherinian scholar, suggests Catherine was naïve regarding politics. The lack of education and worldly experience together with a highly idealistic personality are congruent with this characterisation (Noffke
Raymond was a theologian and canon lawyer, Flete a theologian from Cambridge University and dalle Celle a Florentine nobleman and ordained priest.
See the definition of spirituality in Villegas (