Published online by Cambridge University Press: 20 November 2018
After the Reformation, Catholics developed new ways to express interior religious experiences, including mystic visions. This article considers the epistemological impasse that arose when the Spanish Inquisition, created to prosecute covert Judaizers, was charged with discernment of mystical experiences. Close linguistic study of interrogations shows how a nondialogue between mystical and legal discourse pointed to a broader conflict between a newly interiorized religion and the public space of the law. Practically, these cases weakened the Inquisition; conceptually, they undermined the idea of an Inquisition. If Enlightenment reformers were able to argue for a secularization of the law, it was because a group of mystics and Inquisitors had made such thought possible.
I would like to thank Andrew Keitt for providing me with his notes and partial transcriptions of the procesos for Mateo Rodríguez, María de la Encarnación, Isabel de Briñas, and María Bautista. All translations are my own, except where noted. Punctuation has been added to unpunctuated manuscript sources for the sake of readability.