Thursday, April 3, 2025

A Bit of Theology Thursday: A Pelican in Her Piety


Recently my nephew Kameron went on a tour to visit The Painted Churches. “The "Painted Churches" of Texas are a unique collection of churches, primarily built by Czech and German immigrants in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, that feature stunning, hand-painted interiors. These churches, often appearing unassuming from the outside, were built by immigrants seeking to recreate the look and feel of their homelands, particularly the Gothic structures they were familiar with.” He took many pictures which I was later able to explicate for him, from the Stations of the Cross to a peculiar bit of stained glass with a rather odd but once popular bit of religious imagery.

(Could be bewildering)

This was a representation of “a Pelican in her Piety”, a formerly widespread religious symbol, popularized and disseminated through a Second Century bestiary, the Physiologus and its successors. 

“The Physiologus is a strange hybrid of genres, … [it] is neither quite natural history nor entirely a collection of just-so-stories. … the Physiologus is the earliest known bestiary—compendium of beasts—that staple of medieval literature. Like many of its inheritors, the Physiologus contains information about a variety of animals, and in each case, a theological interpretation of it. It is difficult to appreciate how, for early Christians, the Bible and the natural world really did make up “two books” to be read and interpreted and mined for meaning. Concerning the pelican, the Physiologus says that

it is an exceeding lover of its young. If the pelican brings forth young and the little ones grow, they take to striking their parents in the face. The parents, however, hitting back kill their young ones and then, moved by compassion, they weep over them for three days, lamenting over those whom they killed. On the third day, their mother strikes her side and spills her own blood over their dead bodies (that is, of the chicks) and the blood itself awakens them from death.

It does not take a subtle mind to see how one might theologise this ornithological observation.”  - https://www.theschooloftheology.org/posts/essay/symbols-the-pelican-in-her-piety

Shakespeare refers to this legend in King Lear. In Act 3, Scene 4, Lear refers to his two daughters, Goneril and Regan, as "pelican daughters," implying that they are feeding off his lifeblood with their greed and cruelty. Shakespeare also uses the imagery in The Two Gentlemen of Verona and Henry VIII.

[A bit of a technical note: the Pelican, in wounding itself, is said in heraldry to be vulning, that is, making itself vulnerable.]

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