• Media type: E-Article
  • Title: "ECCLESIA", "ANIMA", AND SPIRITUAL PRIESTHOOD IN AEMILIA LANYER'S "SALVE DEUS REX JUDAEORUM"
  • Contributor: D'ARCY, ANNE MARIE
  • imprint: Oxford University Press, 2015
  • Published in: The Review of English Studies
  • Language: English
  • ISSN: 1471-6968; 0034-6551
  • Origination:
  • Footnote:
  • Description: <p>It has frequently been suggested that Aemilia Lanyer's Salve Deus Rex Judaeorum challenges the Anglican consensus that women could not participate in the priesthood. This article argues that the poem is compatible with Anglican orthodoxy. Lanyer is careful to present the authority of the Church as inhering not immediately in her patron, Margaret Clifford, but in Clifford's soul, which is an allegorical personification of the Church as the bride of Christ. This representation of Clifford draws upon the Song of Songs and the veneration of Mary as a spiritual priest, descended from the line of Aaron. By projecting the spiritual priesthood of Mary as the Church, who is the bride of Christ, onto Clifford's soul, Lanyer presents Mary's spiritual priesthood as open to her female readers. This distinguishes her concept of Mary's spiritual priesthood from contemporary Roman Catholic traditions, where the unique nature of the Virgin's sacerdotal role is particularly associated with her Immaculate Conception. However, Lanyer treads a careful line in relation to the highly contentious matter of the ecclesiological role of women in the Church of England. Anglican apologists maintained that a woman might hold civil, if not spiritual, jurisdiction as a monarch; Roman Catholic polemicists, on the other hand, argued that the Elizabethan Act of Supremacy was heretical. Anglicans were frequently derided as Peputiani—a pejorative term ascribed to Montanists who held that women could participate in Church government—in sixteenth- and seventeenth-century polemic. Through adroit use of sapiential and Mariological imagery, Lanyer sidesteps these controversies concerning Church government.</p>