Theology Made Podcast
In the twelfth century, a nun with no formal authority, no official platform, and no institutional power began writing down what she saw. Kings wrote back. Emperors wrote back. The pope read her work aloud to a room full of bishops and told her to keep going. Hildegard of Bingen shouldn’t have had the influence she had. By every rule her world recognized, she was outside the circle of people who got to speak. She had no theological degree, no political office, no inherited title. She had visions she’d been quietly carrying since childhood—and eventually, she stopped keeping them to herself. What followed was one of the strangest careers in church history: composer, scientist, preacher, prophet, and one of the most widely consulted voices in medieval Europe. This episode is about Hildegard—but it’s really about influence. How it moves. Where it comes from. And why the people who aren’t supposed to be heard are sometimes the ones nobody can stop listening to. Theology Made explores the ideas, figures, and moments in Christian history that still have something to say. New episodes every week. Theology Made is a listener/ reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber. Get full access to Theology Made at substack.theologymade.com/subscribe [https://substack.theologymade.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]
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