In medieval art, it was common to depict the Blessed Virgin Mary with breasts exposed, manually expressing milk from them. On occasion there would be a saint on the receiving end of the milk, such as St Bernard of Clairvaux.
St Bernard was a devout Cistercian monk during the 12th century who had a deep love of the Virgin Mary. According to various medieval stories of his life, St Bernard had a vision of the Virgin Mary. Author Richard Storrs recounts the story in his book about St Bernard.
The Holy Virgin had appeared to him, attended by saints, in his sore sickness, and with gentle touch had relieved his distress, removed his disease, and checked the fierce flow of saliva from his lips, it was that those lips might freely speak the wisest and most commanding words then heard in Europe.
A more extreme form which the legend subsequently took has been immortalized by Murillo in a celebrated picture in the Royal Gallery at Madrid, where the Virgin Mother is represented as appearing to Bernard while seated among his books, and causing milk from her breast to drop upon his lips, not only to heal them but to endow them with celestial eloquence, while cherubs surround her in an effulgence of heavenly glory.
This episode is often called “The Lactation of St Bernard,” and is usually depicted as a stream of milk going into Bernard’s mouth, though sometimes the stories relate that the Virgin Mary gave him three drops of her milk.
The story and its subsequent depiction was not strange for medieval Christians, as breastfeeding was a common fact of life and traditionally associated with a person being fed both physically and spiritually. Having the Virgin Mary expose her breasts to feed Christian faithful was not scandalous in any way and was meant to signify a deeper spiritual reality.
St Paul in the New Testament similarly links breastfeeding with the passing on of the Christian faith. In recent years Pope Francis has encouraged women to breastfeed their children, linking it to giving children a gift of themselves.
The image of St Bernard nursing at the breasts of the Virgin Mary is a piece of artwork that has much history and beauty with a spiritual symbolism behind it that reminds us of the dignity of the human body.
Philip Kosloski, August 20, 2019
Adapted from Aleteia