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KEN CHITWOOD

Religion | Reporting | Public Theology
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“The person who knows only one religion, knows none”
— Max Müller

Image via Patheos.

If Piety Is Always Political, Who Then Is A Saint?

February 11, 2025

On the outskirts of Naples, in the shadow of Mount Vesuvius, lies the sanctuary of Madonna dell’Arco in Sant’Anastasia.

The walls of the shrine are covered in painted, votive tavolette — little, painted boards given as an offering in fulfillment of a vow (ex voto) and featuring devotional scenes and images of the Virgin Mary holding the infant Christ.

One of my favorites features a man in bed, with a heavily bandaged leg, his small children and wife praying to the Virgin and Child as they appear amidst a veil of clouds from their throne in heaven.

It is, in many ways, a visual embodiment of traditional notions of piety, defined as dutiful devotion to the divine.

But as I teach in my religious studies courses, piety can take a variety of forms.

It can be visual and sartorial, both highly personal and politically charged. More than an individual’s particular practice of religious reverence, piety is a socially defined and structured response to one’s emotional, social and material context. And in a time of political upheaval, social uncertainty and ecological anxiety, it might do well to revisit piety and its varieties.

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In #MissedInReligion, Religion, Religion and Culture, Religious Literacy, Religious Studies Tags Piety, Culture, Political piety, Visual piety, Madonna dell'Arco in Sant'Anastasia, Virgin and Child, Devotional piety, Devotion, Religious studies, Patheos
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RELIGION | REPORTING | PUBLIC THEOLOGY