100 år siden Sigrid Undset ble katolikk
Også First Things skrev om Sigrid Undsets opptakelse i Den katolsk kirke på 100-årsdagen sist fredag:
One hundred years ago today, at the age of forty-two, Norwegian novelist Sigrid Undset entered the Catholic Church. It was a quiet affair: just her godmother—photographer and fellow convert Mathea Bådstø—and a few others gathered in the recently-completed St. Torfinn’s chapel in Hamar, on the shores of Lake Mjøsa in eastern Norway. The next day, the Feast of All Souls, Undset received her First Communion in the same chapel, alongside two other village children—an experience she described as “like being in Paradise.” …
… the date of her entrance into the Church, the Feast of All Saints, must have held profound significance for her. The recognition of a host of hidden “friends,” which Undset had absorbed from her vast and sympathetic reading of medieval literature, comes through on nearly every page of her masterful trilogy, Kristin Lavransdatter. Completed before her conversion, the saga introduces us to a number of Norway’s heavenly intercessors: St. Sunniva, St. Hallvard, and, most significantly, Norway’s patron saint, the great St. Olav Haraldsson, Rex Perpetuus Norvegiæ. Kristin develops a particular devotion to him: “He was the one she had heard so much about that it was as though she had known him while he had lived in Norway and had seen him here on earth. …”
Bildet er av Aage Remfeldt – klikk på det for å se en større utgave.