Part 1 - The lover is in the garden, the lover is the garden. How do you paint the love of God? The answer for many who wish to represent the greatest virtue has been to look for inspiration in the greatest allegorical account of God's love in the Song of Songs.
Football, Rejection, and Failure
A Classic Book on Art and Beauty to Be Republished: The Beauty of Holiness and the Holiness of Beauty
The Camel, the Space Opera, and the Miraculous
How the Core of the Imagery in Your Domestic Church Should Be Different From the Parish Church
In the book (co-written with Leila Lawler) called The Little Oratory, we describe the traditional layout for images at the core of those in an icon corner or domestic church. The schema is as follows: Our Lady with Our Lord on the left, Christ on the Cross in the center, and the Risen Christ (a Mandylion, Christ in Majesty or Blessing Christ, for example, on the right).
The one above uses traditional iconographical art. Although it is called an icon (or 'image') corner it doesn't have to be icons. A standing crucifix and art in any of the Western traditional styles will work just as well. The logic as that we have a summary of salvation history symbolized here: the historical Christ on the left, with his mother from whom he was given his humanity, then the passion and death of Our Lord, and then Christ in heaven. We live with him, die with him and are raised up with him by 'putting on Christ' as St Paul refers to it in Galatians, through baptism, confirmation, and communion.
I first found about this when I read a book called Earthen Vessels - The Practice of Personal Prayer According to Patristic Tradition written by Gabriel Bunge who was a Swiss Benedictine monk. I had always assumed that this should be the basic layout in our parish churches too. To a certain extent, this is correct. However, I noticed that even in Eastern Rite/Byzantine Catholic churches, which are typically more concerned about following this tradition than Roman Catholic churches, the schema is not always followed precisely. Sometimes, in the icon screen, the central cross is absent, or if it is there at all it is tiny, barely noticeable and sometimes even with Christ not present on the cross.
I had often wondered why, given the evident importance of the passion, which it seemed to be downplayed so much. Recently it was explained to me. When the Royal Doors are opened for Divine Liturgy the altar will be visible and the liturgy will be taking place.
The death and resurrection is being played out in front of us, in other words, the transitionary events that link the left image to the right are happening before our eyes. The altar represents not just the place of sacrifice but the body of Christ being sacrificed too.
In the Roman Rite, we have more of a tradition of churches with crucifixions of course, but if done well this can be used to reinforce our understanding of what is happening in front of us. If the crucifixion is placed so to as to connect very obviously and visually with the celebration of Mass at the altar, the same message is communicated.
What we are seeing here is that both Rites are concerned with the communication of the importance of the Passion visually, but choose to emphasize its importance in different ways.
In the domestic church, there is no celebration to observe, we are the ones praying the liturgy so there is great merit to having a crucifixion prominently placed.
Ron Gaudio's blogpost on Pythagoras and his lasting influence on Western Civilization
For Pythagoras and many other Greek philosophers, the beauty of the cosmos reflected not only a harmonious order but divinity itself. That is why they were also a community that worshipped. Pythagoras’s legacy reached even to the United States, being responsible for the architectural beauty of Monticello, Harvard Hall, and the Capitol Building.