PLAČ I ŽALOST U APOKRIFU HOD BOGORODICE PO MUKAMA
Date
2019
Authors
Anđelković, Maja
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
University of Kragujevac, Faculty of Philology and Arts
Abstract
Medieval literature determines its creation by a co-relationship with theology and didactics,
and finds its source in a dominant interrelationship of biblical, church-fathers, liturgical
and folklore singularities. In the wholeness of its thematic and synoptic foundations there
essentially lies a symbolic image of the relationship of God and man, assuming a frequent
mention of the discrepancy between virtue and passion, of the attainment of passionlessness
and God’s blessings, or yet of the domination of the bodily which emanates the impossibility
of the recognition of bliss in eschaton. Thus both canonical and apocryphal literature regard
sin and guilt consideration as especially significant and relate them to to moral principles.
The analysis of the phenomena of weeping (tears) and mourning (sadness) exemplified
by the longer and shorter versions of the Serbian transcription of the apocrypha Theotokos’
Walking on Hot Coals showed that the aforementioned phenomena had different qualifications
depending on their sample.
The weeping of sinners suffering for their sins shows that their weeping has nothing to do
with the genesis of repentance, yet that it directly derives from the despair caused by immeasurable
suffering. Hence their mourning represents „passion sadness”, and their prayers and
praise are not ascended for a man’s inner transformation and healing, thus failing to reflect the
essence through its form.
On the other hand, the weeping of Theotokos, angels and the holy comes from the mourning
for the fall of the Other. Hence their mourning represents the expression of a true love, and
their tears are the tears of mediators, the tears of man’s representatives before God.
Furthermore, the analysis showed that unlike other pieces where weeping was expressed
via developed poetic images, here such a literarization is found in the examples of the interrelationship
of weeping (yelping) with prayer and praise, because the weeping is mostly expressed via various emotional expressions whose simplicity does not decrease their symbolic significance.
Description
Keywords
"Theotokos’ Walking Through the Torments", apocrypha, mourning, weeping, sin, torture, prayer