Julian's Sixteen Showings

1109 Words3 Pages

This essay will look at chapters one to ten of Julian of Norwich’s Showings of Love. In Showings of Love, Julian describes the visions that she has on her deathbed and the “sixteen showings” of Christ’s passion that she develops from them. It will explore Julian’s visions and how she relates them to Christ’s love. This essay will also examine how Julian’s “sixteen showings” influence her understanding of the relationship between God and humanity.

Julian desired three graces to be gifted to her by God; “mind of the Christ’s passion”,” bodily sickness in youth at thirty years of age”, and “God’s gift three wounds”. Her belief was that if she was given these three graces she would be able to better understand God’s love and that she would be able to love him unconditionally in return. The reason she yearned for the first grace, “mind of the Christ’s passion”, was in order to better comprehend the sacrifice that Jesus Christ made for humanity. She desired to see the passion that he had, and to understand and feel his suffering. She wanted to be able to see and feel his pain as he did and to feel the same compassion as “our Lady and all of his true lovers who were living and who saw that time his pains”. She believed that if God gave her this grace she would understand and see the true meaning of the “Passion of Christ”.

The second grace that she wished to be gifted by God was “bodily sickness in youth at thirty years of age”. She wanted to be bestowed a sickness so serious that she would believe herself to be dying. This sickness would allow her to “be purged by the mercy of God, and after live more to the worship of God”. She hoped that by being so close to death she would be tested by evil, but would ultimately retain streng...

... middle of paper ...

...escribes two different aspects of God’s Love. The first is that God’s love can be very commanding, resulting in a sovereign relationship between man and God. The second being that God’s love is everything, all around and forever present. There is nothing that was not made by God, and without his love nothing would continue to exist. Julian implies that it is humanity’s duty to observe these “sixteen showings” and to make it their goal to work towards that oneness with God. Once man is able to obtain this ultimate unity with God, he will be able to understand the true passion of God.

Works Cited

Julian of Norwich. Showings of Love. Westminster, Paris, Sloane, Amherst, Gascoigne and Upholland Manuscripts. Translated by Julia Bolton Holloway. U.S.A., Darton, Longman and Todd, U.K: Liturgical Press, accessed February 14, 2012, http://www.umilta.net/showinglove.html.

Open Document