For contemporary women who are disenchanted with the institutional church and who seek spiritual direction, models deeply rooted within the tradition may not be the most helpful. The author explores the value of exemplars from the fringes, ushering Hadewijch of Brabant, Mechthild of Magdeburg, and Marguerite Porete into the spotlight. The contemporary women studied developed a relationship with the beguines that transformed and influenced their own journeys. Their encounters underline the importance of re-membering the beguine mystics, the value of contemplative engagement with historical mystics, and the need for explicit validation of the richness of the edges of tradition within spiritual direction.
Dissident Women, Beguines, and the Quest for Spiritual Authority will be of particular interest to scholars of mysticism and spirituality as well as practical, pastoral, and feminist theology.
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Bernadette Flanagan, leader of the research group Spirituality in Society and the Professions (SpirSoP) at the South East Technological University, Waterford Campus, Ireland
'Catherine Lambert's study of contemporary women's spiritual engagement with medieval beguine mystics is fascinating and insightful at so many levels. It sheds light on the lives of contemporary women spiritual seekers on the edges of the church and demonstrates how ancient mystical texts and the lives of ancient mystical women can be a source of enlivening and sustenance for them. It employs creative research methods and is beautifully written. It will be of great interest to feminist practical theologians, researchers of contemporary faith, and spiritual accompanists as well as scholars of medieval mysticism. I warmly commend it.'
Nicola Slee, Professorial Research Fellow at The Queen's Foundation for Ecumenical Theological Education and Professor of Feminist Practical Theology at Vrije Universiteit, Amsterdam
'With sensitivity and perception, Catherine Lambert listens deeply to three women of the thirteenth century and brings their voices into dialogue with women "on the edge" of the contemporary church. Here and now, Hadewijch of Brabant, Mechtild of Magdeburg, and Marguerite Porete inspire and enable new stories of courage. Read on!'
Katharine Massam, University of Divinity, Australia