Category: Music

  • What was Saint Hildegard the Patron Saint of? Culinary arts? Creativity?

    Culinary arts?  Creativity? Arts?  This question of what was Saint Hildegard the Patron Saint of came up recently when I was asked where I had first heard or came to know Saint Hildegard as The Patron Saint of Creativity?  In my documentary of The Unruly Mystic: Saint Hildegard, I invited many of the interviewees to respond if they thought of her as the patron saint of creativity, and that became the gold standard in the final film.   While I would find it hard to believe that I alone coined that phrase at the time I started making the film,  I do see that everything she did could fall under what I call the pursuit of creativity.

    “Actually she is not an official patron saint of anything, which may be a good thing because to think of Hildegard merely as a “patron saint” is to gloss over her profound capabilities and influence” states The Loyola Press.  However the same author encourages that she should be the pantheon of other saints known for their culinary arts for  “St. Hildegard’s recipe for “Cookies of Joy” is still used today. She encouraged bakers to eat the cookies often: “They will reduce the bad humors, enrich the blood, and fortify the nerves,” she wrote.”  So is Saint Hildegard the Patron Saint of Culinary Arts too?

    While asking the question slightly differently, for instance, who is the patron saint of the arts, we get another nun a few centuries later, St. Catherine of Bologna: who was a fifteenth-century cloistered nun who lived and died in relative obscurity doesn’t seem the most obvious choice to be Patron Saint of Artists. Yet a closer look at the life of St. Catherine of Bologna shows that she is indeed a saint worthy to intercede for and inspire artists. Her creative spirit, talents, visions, and struggle with doubts make her a saint even modern-day artists can relate to.

    Scholars and religious have shown a renewed interest in the guide she wrote for novices, The Seven Spiritual Weapons. One of the “weapons” she describes in that treatise might inspire Catholic artists today: in exhorting her sisters to trust in God, she tells them, “to believe that alone we will never be able to do something truly good.”

    Along with my etsy.com example, I like how the intersection of faith and arts can lead to some surprising destinations.  St. Catherine of Bologna Arts Association of Ringwood, New Jersey holds an annual photo, art, and poetry exhibition called “A Little Bit of Soho in Ringwood.” The exhibition, held each year on the weekend nearest St. Catherine’s March 9th feast day, features hundreds of artists and draws thousands of visitors.  On the 600th anniversary of the birth of St. Catherine, the theme was “Celebrating the Light That We Are.”

    Pope Benedict recently spoke eloquently of this humble saint:

    “From the distance of so many centuries she is still very modern and speaks to our lives. She, like us, suffered temptations, she suffered the temptations of disbelief, of sensuality, of a difficult spiritual struggle. She felt forsaken by God, she found herself in the darkness of faith. Yet in all these situations she was always holding the Lord’s hand, she did not leave him, she did not abandon him. And walking hand in hand with the Lord, she walked on the right path and found the way of light.”

    All of which takes us back to St. Hildegard as being the patron saint of creativity, so what not ask that saint for support in your own work?

    Here is a prayer that I found that invokes her inspiration for one’s own creativity:

    Dearest St. Hildegard, let thy gracious prayer be for this: that in all things, we serve God in bringing souls, including our own, to Him, and delightfully so. Let righteousness enfold hearts moving in and moved by the arts. Let thanks be our joyous cry, our victory shout, our honoring trumpet blast, with gratitude that our Creator gave us the sensibility to know and love Him; that He let us love as He loves, forgive as He forgives; and leads us to be as perfect in purity as He is. Actualize all our divinely-granted potential, St. Hildegard, for the chief end of uniting as the flock of our Good Shepherd, wisely using every gift He has given us. Thanks. AMEN

    I would ask you to watch my movie yourself, and make your decision based upon what the following people have to say if you don’t trust me.

    Who is the patron saint of creativity?
  • Remembering Linn Maxwell Keller

    Linn Maxwell Keller was indeed an embodiment of Saint Hildegard in both spirit and talent, truly worthy of being her own version of a patron saint of creativity

    Linn Maxwell KellerAn interesting  connection

    On how I first heard of Linn Maxwell Keller occurred during the spring of 2013 when I was researching Saint Hildegard online in Boulder for my film, The Unruly Mystic: Saint Hildegard.  I found out that Linn Maxwell was performing that very next night in Denver at DU, and while I couldn’t see her in concert as I was teaching that night, I called her the next day to introduce myself.  You never know how someone will take your call or if they will make themselves available to your requests of filming them.  Besides inviting me to Jackson Hole later that year, she opened up a whole new perspective for me on Hildegard’s music and was kind enough to allow me to use clips of her work in my final film.  She also introduced me to other people in her community, most notably Dr. Beverly Kienzle who was a professor at Harvard Divinity School at that time.  Sadly she passed away, way too soon a couple years after I released my film with her in it.

    Linn Maxwell Keller
    Linn Maxwell Keller during her interview for The Unruly Mystic at her summer home in Jackson Hole

    Remembering Linn Maxwell Keller (Dec 6, 1943 -June 18, 2016) 

    “On St. Hildegard’s feast day I and many others remember a beloved friend, Linn Maxwell Keller, an internationally acclaimed mezzo soprano. As The Times of London review proclaimed (August 2010) and many of us experienced at her performances, “Hildegard is reborn as mezzo Linn Maxwell”.  Linn performed with world-class orchestras, was featured in many international opera companies, and played recital halls across the United States and in twenty-five other countries. On April 19, 2015,  Linn performed her play, Hildegard of Bingen and the Living Light, to a spellbound audience at St. Peter’s Episcopal Church, Cambridge, MA. From Boston, she departed for a tour of Australia, performing in several cities. She completed a second play, St. Hildegard: Trumpet of God, also available on CD. Linn and her ensemble,The Hildegard Singers, recorded two CDs of Hildegard’s music: O Greenest Branch: Songs of St. Hildegard of Bingen, and Hildegard of Bingen: Songs from the Abbey. Her other recordings range from opera to cabaret.”*

    Linn is deeply missed by all of us who knew her–family, friends, fans, and the communities she supported.  

    Her work lives online with the interviews and selected scenes from her film, Hildegard of Bingen and the Living Light. You can see more about this amazing woman in The Unruly Mystic: Saint Hildegard.

    *Thank you to Dr. Beverly Kienzle for this memory.