Christianity has long revered saints who would be called ‘transgender' today
Several Republican-led states have restricted transgender rights: Iowa has signed a law removing civil rights protection for transgender people; Wyoming has prohibited state agencies from requiring the use of preferred pronouns; and Alabama recently passed a law that only two sexes would be recognized. Hundreds of bills have been introduced in other state legislatures to curtail trans rights.
Earlier in the year, several White House executive orders pushed to deny trans identity. One of them, 'Eradicating Anti-Christian Bias,' claimed that gender-affirming policies of the Biden administration were 'anti-Christian.' It accused the Biden Equal Employment Opportunity Commission of forcing 'Christians to affirm radical transgender ideology against their faith.'
To be clear, not all Christians are anti-trans. And in my research of medieval history and literature, I found evidence of a long history in Christianity of what today could be called 'transgender' saints. While such a term did not exist in medieval times, the idea of men living as women, or women living as men, was unquestionably present in the medieval period. Many scholars have suggested that using the modern term transgender creates valuable connections to understand the historical parallels.
There are at least 34 documented stories of transgender saints' lives from the early centuries of Christianity. Originally appearing in Latin or Greek, several stories of transgender saints made their way into vernacular languages.
Of the 34 original saints, at least three gained widespread popularity in medieval Europe: St. Eugenia, St. Euphrosyne and St. Marinos. All three were born as women but cut their hair and put on men's clothes to live as men and join monasteries.
Eugenia, raised pagan, joined a monastery to learn more about Christianity and later became abbot. Euphrosyne joined a monastery to escape an unwanted suitor and spent the rest of his life there. Marinos, born Marina, decided to renounce womanhood and live with his father at the monastery as a man.
These were well-read stories. Eugenia's story appeared in two of the most popular manuscripts of their day – Ælfric's 'Lives of Saints' and 'The Golden Legend.' Ælfric was an English abbot who translated Latin saints' lives into Old English in the 10th century, making them widely available to a lay audience. 'The Golden Legend' was written in Latin and compiled in the 13th century; it is part of more than a thousand manuscripts.
Euphrosyne also appears in Ælfric's saints' lives, as well as in other texts in Latin, Middle English, and Old French. Marinos' story is available in over a dozen manuscripts in at least 10 languages. For those who couldn't read, Ælfric's saints' lives and other manuscripts were read aloud in churches during service on the saint's day.
A small church in Paris built in the 10th century was dedicated to Marinos, and relics of his body were supposedly kept in Qannoubine monastery in Lebanon.
This is all to say, a lot of people were talking about these saints.
In the medieval period, saints' lives were less important as history and more important as morality tales. As a morality tale, the audience was not intended to replicate a saint's life, but learn to emulate Christian values. Transitioning between male and female becomes a metaphor for transitioning from pagan to Christian, affluence to poverty, worldliness to spirituality. The Catholic Church opposed cross-dressing in laws, liturgical meetings and other writings. However, Christianity honored the holiness of these transgender saints.
In a 2021 collection of essays about transgender and queer saints in the medieval period, scholars Alicia Spencer-Hall and Blake Gutt argue that medieval Christianity saw transness as holy.
'Transness is not merely compatible with holiness; transness itself is holy,' they write. Transgender saints had to reject convention in order to live their own authentic lives, just as early Christians had to reject convention in order to live as Christians.
Literature scholar Rhonda McDaniel explains that in 10th-century England, adopting the Christian values of shunning wealth, militarism and sex made it easier for people to go beyond strict ideas about male and female gender. Instead of defining gender by separate male and female values, all individuals could be defined by the same Christian values.
Historically and even in contemporary times, gender is associated with specific values and roles, such as assuming that homemaking is for women, or that men are stronger. But adopting these Christian values allowed individuals to transcend such distinctions, especially when they entered monasteries and nunneries.
According to McDaniel, even cisgender saints like St. Agnes, St. Sebastian and St. George exemplified these values, exhibiting how anyone in the audience could push against gender stereotypes without changing their bodies.
Agnes' love of God allowed her to give up the role of wife. When offered love and wealth by men, she rejected them in favor of Christianity. Sebastian and George were powerful Roman men who were expected, as men, to engage in violent militarism. However, both rejected their violent Roman masculinity in favor of Christian pacifism.
Although most saints' lives were written primarily as morality tales, the story of Joseph of Schönau was told as both very real and worthy of emulation by the audience. His story is told as a historical account of a life that would be attainable for ordinary Christians.
In the late 12th century, Joseph, born female, joined a Cistercian monastery in Schönau, Germany. During his deathbed confession, Joseph told his life story, including his pilgrimage to Jerusalem as a child and his difficult journey back to Europe after the death of his father. When he finally returned to his birthplace of Cologne, he entered a monastery as a man in gratitude to God for returning him home safely.
Despite arguing that Joseph's life was worth emulating, the first author of Joseph's story, Engelhard of Langheim, had a complicated relationship with Joseph's gender. He claimed Joseph was a woman, but regularly used masculine pronouns to describe him.
Even though Eugenia, Euphrosyne and Marinos' stories are told as morality tales, their authors had similarly complicated relationships with their gender. In the case of Eugenia, in one manuscript, the author refers to her with entirely female pronouns, but in another, the scribe slips into male pronouns.
Marinos and Euphrosyne were also frequently referred to as male. The fact that the authors referred to these characters as male suggests that their transition to masculinity was not only a metaphor, but in some ways just as real as Joseph's.
Based on these stories, I argue that Christianity has a transgender history to pull from and many opportunities to embrace transness as an essential part of its values.
This article is republished from The Conversation, a nonprofit, independent news organization bringing you facts and trustworthy analysis to help you make sense of our complex world. It was written by: Sarah Barringer, University of Iowa
Read more:
Supreme Court's one-sentence order closes the door to Catholic charter school – but leaves it open for future challenges
Ancient texts depict all kinds of people, not just straight and cis ones – this college course looks at LGBTQ sexuality and gender in Egypt, Greece and Rome
Transgender people of color face unique challenges as gender discrimination and racism intersect
Sarah Barringer does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organization that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
36 minutes ago
- Yahoo
US Senate Republicans seek to limit judges' power via Trump's tax-cut bill
By Nate Raymond (Reuters) -U.S. Senate Republicans have added language to President Donald Trump's massive tax and spending bill that would restrict the ability of judges to block government policies they conclude are unlawful. Text of the Republican-led U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee's contribution to the bill released by its chair, Senator Chuck Grassley, late on Thursday would limit the ability of judges to issue preliminary injunctions blocking federal policies unless the party suing posts a bond to cover the government's costs if the ruling is later overturned. The bond requirement in the Senate's version of the One Big Beautiful Bill Act is different from the provision the Republican-controlled House of Representatives included when it passed the bill last month that would curb courts' power in a different way. The House version curtails the ability of judges to enforce orders holding officials in contempt if they violate injunctions. Judges use contempt orders to bring parties into compliance, usually by ratcheting up measures from fines to jail time. Some judges who have blocked Trump administration actions have said officials are at risk of being held in contempt for not complying with their orders. Congressional Republicans have called for banning or curtailing nationwide injunctions blocking government policies after key parts of Trump's agenda have been stymied by such court rulings. The House in April voted 219-213 along largely party lines in favor of the No Rogue Rulings Act to do so, but the Senate has not yet taken up the measure. A White House memo in March directed heads of government agencies to request that plaintiffs post bonds if they are seeking an injunction against an agency policy. Such bonds can make obtaining an injunction a cost-prohibitive option in cases concerning multi-billion-dollar agenda items. Grassley's office said in a statement the language the Judiciary Committee proposed would ensure judges enforce an existing requirement that they make a party seeking a preliminary injunction provide a security bond to cover costs incurred by a defendant if a judge's ruling is later overturned. Judges rarely require such bonds when a lawsuit is not pitting two private parties against each other but instead challenging an alleged unlawful or unconstitutional government action. Several judges have denied the Trump administration's requests for bonds or issued nominal ones. Republicans, who control the Senate 53-47, are using complex budget rules to pass the One Big Beautiful Bill Act with a simple majority vote, rather than the 60 votes needed to advance most legislation in the 100-seat chamber. The Senate Judiciary Committee's piece of the bill would also provide the judiciary funding to study the costs to taxpayers associated with such injunctions and provide training for judges about the problems associated with them. A spokesperson for Senator Dick Durbin, the Senate Judiciary Committee's top Democrat, criticized the Republican-drafted legislative text, saying "Republicans are targeting nationwide injunctions because they're beholden to a president who is breaking the law — but the courts are not."
Yahoo
37 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Here are the Broome County primary candidates on the ballot June 24
Broome County Republicans will have the chance to vote to appoint five nominees for local government positions in late June. This year, only Republican primary elections will take place in Broome County, and only registered Republican voters in designated towns are eligible to vote, with no other parties holding primary elections within Broome County. Voters will have the chance to decide their party's nominee for Broome County clerk, Windsor town council member, Windsor town justice and two Johnson City trustees. More: When is the first day of summer? Events, rituals to celebrate solstice in Binghamton Voting will take place on Tuesday, June 24, with poll sites open from 6 a.m. to 9 p.m. The winners of each primary race will become the Republican candidate on the ballot in the general election, held in November. Here are the Republican primary races in Broome County on June 24. Candidates: Aaron M. Martin, Richard C. David Candidates: James E. Conrad, Daniel H. Colwell Candidates: Paula A. Hashem, Richard R. Blythe Candidates (vote for any two): John J. Walker, Clark A. Giblin, Tim Bidwell, Jeanine Bowers Early voting for primary elections will take place June 14-22. Registered Broome County voters can vote early at the Broome County Public Library in Binghamton or George F. Johnson Memorial Library in Endicott. This article originally appeared on Binghamton Press & Sun-Bulletin: Broome County NY primary election: Who's on the ballot
Yahoo
37 minutes ago
- Yahoo
British investors face £5bn blow from Trump's ‘big, beautiful bill'
British investors are facing a $7bn (£5bn) tax blow from Donald Trump's 'big, beautiful bill', analysts have warned. The UK Government alone could have to pay $400m a year as part of the 'revenge' tax outlined in the Republican tax and spending bill that has recently been passed by the House of Representatives. Mr Trump's bill is set to charge a retaliatory tax on some foreign investments made by entities from countries that the US deems to have 'unfair' tax systems – which includes the UK. The tax, known as Section 899, would levy a 5pc rate on gains made by UK investors – a rate that will increase by five percentage points each year up to a maximum rate of 20pc. Crucially, analysts have warned the wording of the policy documents open the door to taxing interest earned on holdings of US Treasuries, which are usually tax-exempt. The UK will be hit particularly hard if America starts charging a new tax on yields from US Treasuries because of its vast ownership of this debt. Britain recently overtook China as the world's second largest holder of US Treasuries, behind only Japan. UK entities, such as pension funds and private investors, hold a total of $779bn in US government bonds. The UK receives about $35bn a year in earnings, assuming an average interest rate of 4.5pc, according to analysis by the National Institute of Economic and Social Research (Niesr). If these yields are taxed at 5pc, this will cost $1.8bn – rising to $7.2bn as the tax rate increases to 20pc in the fourth year. Duncan Hardell, international tax specialist at NYU's Tax Law Centre, said that although it was unclear whether exemptions on Treasuries would still apply, there is a risk the tax rate will go up. 'The statute itself is not clear on this point,' he said. Section 899 has triggered widespread fear across Wall Street and prompted a huge lobbying drive, with dozens of international executives travelling to Washington DC to meet with members of Congress earlier this month to discuss the measure. The UK Government alone holds $55bn in US Treasuries. Niesr estimates yields on these holdings would be liable for a $100m tax charge in the first year, rising to $400m in the fourth year. Stephen Millard, Niesr's deputy director, warned that if this measure was imposed it would likely trigger a fire sale. He said: 'The big thing, of course, is how people would respond if it becomes clear that this income was taxable. You might expect to see holders of US Treasuries try to get out of them as much as they possibly can.' This would mean market turmoil, as a sell-off would drive down the value of the bonds dramatically. In turn, this would trigger a surge in US government borrowing costs as investors demanded higher returns to cover their costs. 'That whole idea of the US as being a safe currency or US Treasuries as being safe assets suddenly changes,' Mr Millard said. Even if Section 899 does not apply to holdings of US Treasuries, economists have warned the measure risks turning the president's trade war into a capital war and would trigger enormous market disruption. Mr Hardell added: 'It could cause chaos. The risk is you're creating a new front in the ongoing tariff war and extending that to taxes and investment. 'There's a real possibility that the US will be fighting the rest of the world all at once, on multiple fronts. Investment, business and talent could just flee to other countries.' Kim Clausing, a tax academic at the UCLA School of Law, said: 'What we're going to do is tax foreign investors at an accelerating rate based on things beyond their control, and we're going to be doing that in a context where we're issuing a lot of debt, erecting trade barriers and eroding a lot of sources of US strength. 'I find it deeply disturbing. It's a big overreach, and it's one that will backfire. We're basically going to shoot ourselves in the foot by making the US a much less attractive place to invest.' The bill is being scrutinised by the Senate and Mr Trump has set a deadline of July 4 to get a finalised version. Errore nel recupero dei dati Effettua l'accesso per consultare il tuo portafoglio Errore nel recupero dei dati Errore nel recupero dei dati Errore nel recupero dei dati Errore nel recupero dei dati