Friday 30 September 2011

Saint Jerome in His Study (1475), Art Essay


   St. Jerome in His Study (Antonello da Messina)





Saint Jerome in His Study (1475)
Antonello da Messina (1430-1479),
National Callery, London, Englan
d.
THIS PAINTING OF SAINT JEROME by Antonello da Messina is a picture puzzle waiting to be decoded. The objects and creatures represented are placed in particular positions that are both meaningful and didactic. Veiled religious mysteries lurk here. They invite the viewer to discover them by penetrating their symbols.
At the centre of the picture is a study carrel bathed in light. There sits Saint Jerome reading and reflecting. It is to this great Father of the Church that we owe the translation of the Bible into Latin, the common language (Vulgate) of the fourth century. He wears the red robes of a cardinal, an honour given to him posthumously because he exercised many functions for the pope in his day that cardinals in later centuries performed. Jerome's personality was cantankerous and he did not shy away from speaking his mind. The decadent clergy of Rome could not abide him, but women flocked to him seeking spiritual instruction, some even dedicating themselves to a life of chastity and monastic discipline. It was to one of these female disciples that Jerome addressed his twenty­second Epistle, the source of inspiration, some think, for this painting. In that letter Jerome extols the virtues of virginity, withdrawal from the world and all its allurements, and points to the Blessed Virgin Mary as a model of perfection. On either side of the seated saint are windows opening up to a landscape. That on the left shows a distant city with people engaged in various activities. That on the right shows only the unpopulated countryside. The windows above Jerome and above the quiet landscape on the right show birds in flight There are no birds on the left flying over the city. Since antiquity, flying birds have symbolised the elevated soul, and this is the key to interpreting the scene: for his female disciple to reach perfection, she must withdraw from the distractions of the city and instead seek solitude in the more contemplative countryside. Jerome himself had spent many years as a penitent and a solitary in the deserts of the Middle East, so he spoke with authority. In 385 he left Rome and traveled through Egypt and the Holy Land, finally settling in Bethlehem where he lived in a cave and established a monastery within sight of Emperor Constantine's Basilica of the Nativity.
If this whole painting is a veiled representation of Jerome's spiritual admonitions, then interpretations can be drawn from its various geometric sectors. Vertically the painting is tripartite with left, middle, and right sectors. Likewise, it is horizontally divided into top, middle, and bottom. As found in ancient tradition, the right side contains all good things while the left side tsinistra in Latin, from which we get the word "sinister") features the bad. The left side of the middle ground is shrouded in darkness. But we can see in those shadows an unlit lamp, a hanging soiled cloth, and beneath it a crouching cat. The soiled cloth is a symbol of impurity, and this is fortified by the cat which was viewed in the Middle Ages as a promiscuous animal associated with witches and the devil. Just as a cat was known to wait patiently and pounce upon its prey, so likewise did the devil plot to capture souls. The unlit lamp is a direct reference to the parable of the Wise and Foolish Virgins found in the Gospel of Matthew. Jerome's disciple must have her spiritual lamp lit, ever ready for the arrival of Christ, her bridegroom. Furthermore, she must be constant in her dedication and protect her virginity for in that state she can experience a foretaste of heaven. Marian symbolism is subtly introduced here, for the potted plants at Jerome's feet invoke in miniature the walled garden thortus cone/usus), a common iconographic reference to the virginity of the Blessed Mother. Furthermore, on the shelves above Jerome in the middle section of the painting are two oval pyxes, containers for hosts, and a carafe of clear water, a reference to Mary's womb where her divine Son was formed while at the same time her virginity was miraculously maintained.
On the right of Jerome is a corridor of illuminated arches. There a lion stands guard. This is a reference to the legend that Jerome healed and befriended a lion with a thorn stuck in its paw, and thereafter made him a sentry for his monastery. The lion is a symbol of courage, but it may also represent the ferociousness of Jerome's own firebrand faith.
A partridge, a peacock, and a silver water bowl cryptically decorate the bottom foreground of the painting. The partridge was a bird considered promiscuous, like the cat, and a thief besides, condemned even in the Old Testament (Jr 17: 11). Known for stealing eggs and raising chicks not her own, this bird became a symbol of the devil stealing God's children. The partridge and the peacock have their backs to each other. While the gorgeous plumage of the peacock could often be associated with vanity, a glance at his ugly feet kept him humble. It was thought that the flesh of peacocks was incorruptible, and so the bird became a symbol of eternal life. In early Christian symbolism two peacocks were often depicted drinking from the fountain of life: hence the meaning of the water bowl placed before it. These figurations representing a choice between damnation and eternal life are placed on the sill of the framing stone portal, a porta caeli, which is another Marian title meaning "gate of heaven". As a model and guide, the Virgin leads us to her Son. And so she inspired Jerome whose shoes have been noticeably left at the bottom of the stairs of his elevated study. For in the reading and contemplation of Scripture the saint has indeed tread upon holy ground and climbed the sacred mountain, gaining wisdom and understanding from which he can earnestly instruct others .
Father Michael Morris, O.P.
Professor, Dominican School of Philosophy & Theology, Berkeley, CA, U.S.A.
To view this masterpiece in greater detail, visit: www.magnificat.com
Detail window - Antonello da Messina
Further detail:



Pope Madrid WYD debit account


----- Forwarded Message -----
From: father patrick ...
Sent: Wednesday, 28 September 2011, 13:44
Subject: Madrid Profits from WYD

Madrid profits over $200 million from WYD


.- The Spanish capital city of Madrid came away with over $200 million in profits after World Youth Day 2011 held this past August, officials said.
The WYD Madrid press office reported Sept. 26 that the Confederation of Businessmen of Madrid calculated that the capital took in some $216 million during the visit of Pope Benedict XVI.
The Community of Madrid estimated that WYD produced an increase of $199 million in the region’s Gross Interior Product. The contribution made by WYD was also recognized by the Madrid Consistory, which awarded the event with the Tourism Prize of the City of Madrid for promoting the city internationally. It also classified WYD as a National Patrimony.
Cardinal Antonio Maria Rouco Varela of Madrid, who received the prize, said, “The hospitality of Madrid was crucial to the success of World Youth Day. The kindness and friendliness with which the pilgrims were welcomed shows the human reflection of the city, which is what surprised WYD attendees the most,” he said.
After WYD, Madrid experienced an historic increase of 42 percent in the number of foreign visitors compared to August of 2010, according to government statistics.
The Commerce Confederation of Madrid said this has helped boost the city’s image as one of great “hospitality and capacity to host large events.”
Attendees of WYD said their experience in the Spanish capital was very positive.  A poll carried out by GAD3 revealed that the level of satisfaction towards the city was very high.  Around 80 percent of those surveyed said gave high marks to the streets and monuments of Madrid.  Over 75 percent said they would recommend to their friends a trip to Spain and 47 percent said the event improved their image of the country.
WYD Madrid 2011 also stood out for its impact in the media. More than 12 million followed the specials broadcast on the Spanish television networks.  Some 5,000 journalists were given credentials for covering the event.

St Jerome, patron of Scripture scholars

St Jerome - Durer
A pope is said to have remarked, on seeing a picture of Jerome striking his breast with a stone, "You do well to carry that stone, for without it the Church would never have canonized you" (Butler's Lives of the Saints).



----- Forwarded Message -----
From:
Nivard ...
Sent:
Friday, 30 September 2011, 10:28
Subject:  
St Jerome, 20 09 2011

St Jerome: Memorial
 
Jerome is the patron of scripture scholars and all who read the Bible on a regular basis.
 
Pope Benedict’s greatest priority is to enable the people of our time to encounter God

Benedict quotes with approval the words of St Jerome. Jerome taught that we should approach the word of God with the same attention that we receive the Eucharist. "If a crumb falls to the ground we are troubled. God's Word and Christ's flesh and blood are being poured into our ears yet we pay no heed. We are in great peril and we don’t know it."
  
Benedict XVI wants us to grow in understanding of the Bible, not only for our own sake but also for the sake of others. It is the Pope's intuition that we will not succeed in leading the people of our own day to God if we have not first encountered Him in Scripture.
  
Above: Highlights from Catholic Herald Issued Nov 11th, 2010, Verbum Domini, Apostolic Exhortation on the Bible..Extracts from Editorial: Below:
 
What is Benedict XVI's top priority? Is it the clerical abuse scandal or perhaps reforming the liturgy? Might it be fighting the "dictatorship of relativism" or seeking Christian unity? These are all major concerns of this pontificate. Yet there is another priority which Pope Benedict considers even more pressing. He explains what it is in the Apostolic Exhortation Verbum Domini, released last Thursday. "There is no greater priority," he writes, "than this: to enable the people of our time once more to encounter God, the God who speaks to us and shares his love so that we might have life in abundance." Benedict XVI has written this new document to inspire each of us ­bishops, clergy, consecrated persons, lay faithful and seekers - to meet the God who speaks in the Bible.
   
It is sometimes said that the liturgy is for Catholics and the Bible is for Protestants. This could not be further from Pope Benedict's vision in Verbum Domini. He quotes with approval the words of St Jerome, patron of Scripture scholars, who taught that we should approach the word of God with the same attention that we receive the Eucharist. "If a crumb falls to the ground we are troubled," the saint wrote. "Yet we are listening to the word of God and God's Word and Christ's flesh and blood are being poured into our ears yet we pay no heed, what great peril should we not feel?"
   
St Jerome's words indicate that the struggle to appreciate the word of God is not a new feature of Catholic history. Benedict XVI wants us to grow in understanding of the Bible, for our own sake but also for the sake of others. It is the Pope's intuition that we will not succeed in leading the people of our own day to God if we have not first encountered Him in Scripture. 

Thursday 29 September 2011

FEAST OF MICHAEL, GABRIEL AND RAPHAEL, ARCHANGELS- (2) The Song of Songs by Richard of Saint Victor


 29 September


THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 29



JOHN 1:47-51


FEAST OF MICHAEL, GABRIEL AND RAPHAEL, ARCHANGELS


Second Reading

From a commentary on the Song of Songs by Richard of Saint Victor (Cap 4 PL 196, 417-418)

God defends his chosen ones in the Church, in troubled times he is himself their shield, and through the watchful care of angels he protects them. He presents the angels to his own as servants and messengers, to further their salvation, to report their needs, and to carry their prayers. Even though he himself sees and understands the situation of each person, he still wishes to be told of it by his angels, in order to make known and show more clearly his love and consideration for humankind by his use of such worthy and beloved messengers.

Do we realize how much they desire our salvation and long to have us as their companions? Who can have any idea of the love and care with which they keep watch over those entrusted to them; how they stir up the listless and urge to greater zeal the fervent and attentive; how they make excuses for sins so as to bring only good deeds to God's notice? And when they see a soul burning with great desire and longing for God with pure intention, do we realize how they love that soul, rejoice with it, visit it, and hasten to and fro between that soul and God?

The angels are friends of the bridegroom, so they listen to the soul's words, and make them known to the bridegroom. The soul's words are its desires, which the friends, that is the angels, listen to and delight in. They make them known, and they invite the soul to come; they console it, and advise it to seek and knock, because anyone who seeks finds, and to anyone who knocks the door is opened.

Meanwhile, until the bridegroom comes, they frequently visit such a fervent soul, and by an increase of grace prepare it more fully for his arrival. They draw its thoughts toward a perception of their presence, and an awareness of their friend¬ship, so that through this knowledge it may advance to divine knowledge.

Thus the soul searching for God is found by the blessed angels, and after going round the city in its quest, deserves to be approached by them. It sees them coming to meet it and is taken in charge by them. In fact, they come before the bride¬groom, manifesting their presence and revealing themselves, for being angels of light they accompany the Light, and the soul, flooded with light, is both illuminated and moved, so that it perceives their coming and is conscious of their presence.  
A Word in Season, Monastic Lectionary pp. 185-6

RICHARD OF SAINT VICTOR (d.1173) was a Scottish or Irish canon known for his piety and zeal who became prior of Saint Victor at Paris under a lax and spendthrift English abbot. As the author of Benjamin minor and Benjamin major he was one of the great mystical writers of the middle ages, so that the originality of his treatise on the Trinity, which influenced Alexander of Hales, tends to be overlooked. The bulk of his writing was connected with contemplation and shows traces of Pseudo-Denis. He influenced Bonaventure and the Franciscan school.


Wednesday 28 September 2011

Night Office Saint Macarius of Egypt



26th Week Ord Time Wedneday
From a homily attributed to Saint Macarius of Egypt
  • Those who approach the Lord must first of all force them­selves to do good, even against the inclination of their hearts. Then, when God sees them engaged in that struggle, and constraining themselves by force even though their hearts are reluctant, he will grant them the true prayer of the Spirit, and give them real love, true gentleness, deep compassion, genuine kindness, and in a word fill them with the fruits of the Spirit.
  • However, if any, being unable to pray, strive only to obtain the grace of prayer, making no effort to be gentle, humble, loving, and to observe the rest of the Lord's commandments, not caring or toiling or struggling to gain these virtues as far as determination and free-will may do so, then although the grace of prayer may at times be given them with some of the refresh­ment and joy of the Spirit, according to their request, in charac­ter they remain as they were before. They are not gentle because they have shirked the toil and preparation necessary to become so. They have no humility because they have not asked for it or made any effort to obtain it. They do not love everyone because they have not tried to do so, asking for this love in prayer. Even while they are praying they have no faith or confidence in God since, not knowing themselves, they are unaware of their lack of it and do not strive by self-denial to obtain from the Lord firm faith in him and real confidence.
  • For just as they have to force, to compel themselves to pray when their hearts are reluctant, so they should do the same to gain trust in God, humility, love, gentleness, sincerity and sim­plicity, and all fortitude and patience with joy as scripture says. They should make every effort to think little of themselves, to regard themselves as poor and least of all; they should avoid speaking of. unprofitable matters, but always meditate on the things of God and then speak of what is in their hearts. So also they should restrain themselves from anger and shouting, ac­cording to the Apostle's admonition: Do not nurse grudges, lose your temper, raise your voice, slander anyone, or do evil of any kind. They should force themselves to follow all the ways of the Lord, to practice every virtue, to live a good and noble life, to be well behaved, and to have the deep humility that is shown in gentleness. Never should they exalt themselves, be proud, conceited, or speak ill of anyone.

Responsory          Is 55:6-7; Zep 2:3
Seek the Lord while he may still be found; call to him while he is near; let the wicked abandon their ways and the unrighteous their thoughts. + Let them return to the Lord who will take pity on them;
to our God who will freely forgive.
v. Seek the Lord, all you the humble of the land, who obey his commandments; seek righteousness, seek humility. + Let them
return ...