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Chapter 6 - The Library of Iberian Resources Online

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them to translate His laws into everyday behavior. When they wanted to ask something <strong>of</strong> God, the<br />

traditional prayers and rituals <strong>of</strong> the Church helped them to present their petitions in the proper form<br />

and language. Latin, the language <strong>of</strong> the priest before the altar, was <strong>of</strong> course unintelligible to most<br />

people in the congregation, but they believed that the priest could use it to speak to God for them.<br />

People <strong>of</strong>ten turned to the Church to explain disasters and to advise them what to do. A religious<br />

procession led by an image [118] <strong>of</strong> our Lady <strong>of</strong> the Water in 1605 helped the people <strong>of</strong> Seville feel<br />

less impotent in time <strong>of</strong> drought. Later in that century, Church authorities explained an epidemic as<br />

divine punishment for loose morals, and they urged the city to prohibit all drama and comedies in order<br />

to avoid another plague. (3) <strong>The</strong>se intermediaries <strong>of</strong>fered the security <strong>of</strong> clear-cut answers in uncertain<br />

times. <strong>The</strong>y promoted unity by <strong>of</strong>fering a single interpretation <strong>of</strong> the causes <strong>of</strong> all ills and the best<br />

remedies for them. A community that looked to a priestly intercessor did not fall apart so readily into<br />

quarreling factions.<br />

Underworld people awaiting execution in the city's prisons <strong>of</strong>ten turned from past cynicism and<br />

sinfulness to the monks and priests who could act as intermediaries. Pedro de León, the Jesuit chaplain<br />

<strong>of</strong> the Royal Prison in Seville between 1578 and 1616, described the prisoners' warm reception <strong>of</strong> his<br />

sermons and prayers. Many would kiss his hand and tell him with tears in their eyes how much his<br />

words meant to them. (4) <strong>The</strong>re is no doubt that some lifelong thugs repented at the end and were<br />

sincerely grateful for the priests who walked and prayed with them and helped them to mount the steps<br />

to the scaffold, strengthened in spite <strong>of</strong> their quaking knees.<br />

Not all condemned prisoners looked to the Church as intermediary. Pedro de Leon wrote that it was<br />

very difficult to pierce the tough exterior <strong>of</strong> some prisoners, and another firsthand account <strong>of</strong> the Royal<br />

Prison <strong>of</strong> Seville describes how the prisoners would mock priests, playing at saying Mass or<br />

performing as dramatic penitents. At night they would call for the penitential brotherhood <strong>of</strong> the prison,<br />

not out <strong>of</strong> devotion but for the [119] horrifying delight <strong>of</strong> watching them punish themselves. (5) To<br />

these people the concept <strong>of</strong> the Church as intermediary was a joke.<br />

One reason for underworld cynicism was that the Church also acted as intermediary between them and<br />

the secular law. People <strong>of</strong> the underworld clearly recognized the close alliance between the institutional<br />

Church and political authority. Prisoners <strong>of</strong>ten tried to exploit this alliance, confessing to the prison<br />

chaplain in such a way that the priest would be moved to intervene on their behalf and get a last-minute<br />

reprieve. On the other hand, secular authorities tried to persuade priests to force prisoners to confess to<br />

crimes so that they could use their confessions as evidence against them. <strong>The</strong>y sometimes condemned a<br />

prisoner to death without sufficient pro<strong>of</strong> <strong>of</strong> his guilt, refused his appeals, and then assigned a confessor<br />

who would insist that the prisoner must confess to the crimes in order to "die a good Christian." (6)<br />

Priests who helped condemned men go to their death as "good Christians" undoubtedly provided<br />

comfort for many, but they also helped to sanctify this ritualized act <strong>of</strong> violence by secular justice<br />

against those accused <strong>of</strong> breaking its laws. One view <strong>of</strong> the priest with a condemned man at the gallows<br />

is that he was returning a stray sheep to the flock; another view is that he was mesmerizing the sheep,<br />

so that the creature would accept its fate as a sacrificial victim.<br />

Churchmen frequently used underworld people to personify evil to the people <strong>of</strong> Seville. <strong>The</strong> preacher<br />

who thundered against immorality in the city warned <strong>of</strong> sins committed by the "gente de mal vivir"<br />

(bad people), the "rufianes" (thugs), and the "mujeres perdidas" (prostitutes). Because city residents<br />

saw these underworld people on their own streets, they could understand the priests' admonitions.<br />

<strong>The</strong> secular government <strong>of</strong> Seville could use morality as a pillar <strong>of</strong> its legitimacy, but it lacked enough<br />

sheriffs and judges [120] to enforce its moral legislation without Church assistance. <strong>The</strong> parish priest<br />

railed against immorality from his pulpit, and he used the confessional to hear individual cases <strong>of</strong>

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