Hildegard of Bingen
By Christian Jenkins
Hildegard of Bingen was a mystic born in 1098 who had visions from God
which were verified by Pope Eugenius during her lifetime.
Her
visions were written down in her first and most famous work Scivias which
she did not write, but merely wrote down what the Lord told to her during these
visions. This was the same with her music which is still performed and recorded
around the world today which has a simple line of song meditating on different
prayers and scripture and has shaped our understanding of music at that time.
Her moral play Ordo Virtutum (Order of the Virtues) is the
oldest surviving play and her letters, works, and music provide us a glimpse of
cloistered life in the Middle Ages.
I first encountered St Hildegard in 2022 when I was cycling through
Germany. Taking the ferry across the River Rhein from Bingen to Rudesheim, you
can’t help but admire the scenery and notice the imposing abbey at Eibingen on
the top of the hill (Hildegard’s second abbey foundation), surrounded by grape
vines creeping across the side of the valley. Her original convent at the
Rupertsberg was demolished in the 19th century to make way for the railway,
however her writings and relics were carefully guarded by the nuns throughout
the periods of European upheaval to the present.
A small, unimposing and rather bland (unlike Hildegard herself) church
houses her reliquary, but the experience was like no other and she has remained
as my Saint and companion ever since.
Looking down to the river from the top of the abbey, little has changed
except the railways and roads which now sweep down by the river. However, this
was where Hildegard founded two abbeys for nuns, experienced her visions, wrote
her works, preached, composed music, was briefly excommunicated, and compiled
books on natural health and natural remedies (a lot of which is now backed up
by mainstream science).
She often starts her works humbling herself as a poor woman of God with
a frail frame, a humility which emphasises her point that God is the Lord and
creator of all, not humans. Whilst she is a great saint and a doctor of the
church, she always emphasises the point that her visions and music are to lead
people to the Almighty and not to her.
Hildegard’s music can be described as ‘ethereal’, ‘other worldly’, or
intensely spiritual. She claimed that these chants were given to her in a
series of visions, and they align with St Augustine and St Thomas Aquinas’
views on ‘celestial music’, music in harmony with the rotation of the planets
and the energies of the universe, music which is in union with creation. By
making use of certain intervals, motifs, and notes, the music creates a sense
of calm which resonates with all who hear it.
On this years feast of St Hildegard of Bingen, find some of her music on
YouTube and listen to it in a moment of calm, or maybe have it quietly playing
in the background as you pray your rosary.
Saint Hildegard of Bingen, Ora pro nobis
Christian Jenkins is a professional singer who
trained at the Royal Welsh College of Music. He was part of the music team at
the Diocesan Lourdes Pilgrimage and regularly sings with the Southwell Consort
at Corpus Christi Maiden Lane, and at St Dominic’s Priory, Haverstock Hill. He
has performed a number of Hildegard’s works and is hoping to make another
cycling pilgrimage to Bingen in 2025.
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