|
Women's
Section
THEME
OF JULY-AUGUST 2010
(archive)
The
Desert Mothers
Nuria Calduch-Benages,
MN
Flaminia Giovannelli, the first lay women to be appointed
under-secretary of the Pontifical Council for Justice and
Peace, made the following statement recently for the Osservatore
Romano: “There are certain ecclesial areas in which
women excel. I am thinking in particular of spiritual direction.
If receiving the sacrament of Reconciliation is essential
for Christians because it reconciles them with God, spiritual
direction is of fundamental importance for their life: to
know rationally that sin has been forgiven us is not always
equivalent to feeling forgiven. How important is someone’s
help in recognising and supporting the plan the Lord has
for each one of us. And how often does this help come to
us from a woman, precisely because of her own sensitivity
and affectivity” (L’Osservatore Romano weekly
edition in English, Wed. 4 August 2010).
When I read this, I immediately remembered the amma of
the desert, Christian women of the 4th and 5th centuries
who founded some of the earliest communities of women so
that their wisdom could reach a wider public. Amma, a term
used to describe a “spiritual mother”, is the
equivalent of abba, the name given to a “spiritual
father”. According to Mary Forman, “amma refers
to the ability one had to become a spiritual guide for another
and is not explicitly associated with the role of abbess
or superior”.
The lives of these desert mothers have come to light quite
recently, and their biographies and stories are jewels of
wisdom that reveal the important role they had in the foundation
of monasticism. Their names are Mary of Egypt, Sarah, Theodora,
Syncletica, Melanie, Pachomius’ sister Mary, Gregory
of Nyssa’s sister Macrina, and many others. They were
women of wisdom, bearers of the Spirit and Scripture scholars.
These amma of the desert placed their qualities and gifts
at the service of others. They were in love with God, the
desert and prayer, and they proved to be authentic spiritual
guides for everyone, men and women, who felt this need.
The women of today have been bequeathed this heritage,
a heritage that we should preserve because it is part of
our history as well as a stimulus for the future.
|