Beauty: A Necessity, Not a Luxury
Just when I am about to succumb to the sadness and living death of
nihilism, some piercing ray of beauty breaks open my heart, and the breath
of possibility returns.
I recently visited the Botanical Garden in St Louis. Amid the sights and
smells, the colors and creatures, the sun, the architecture, and the sheer
gratuity of so much botanical diversity, I felt happy to be alive. Drinking it
in, I turned to a friend and said, “How could we live without this?” He
replied, “We couldn’t.”
I’ve been thinking about this little exchange. Upon reflection, I am
becoming certain that they are not just sentimental words, but the truth.
And with this conviction, I’m not alone.
whose cause for canonization has just begun), insisted throughout his
great life on our need for beauty; for beautiful, real things which have the
power to awaken our hearts. During Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger’s homily
for Fr Giussani’s funeral in 2005, two months shy of his unsuspected
elevation to the papacy, he said that Fr Giussani was “wounded by the
desire for beauty.” He noted how much Fr Giussani loved music, and said
that, in looking for Beauty itself, he was looking for Christ.
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Read more: www.imaginativeconservative.org
Letter to Artists
On the Place and Significance of Art (April 4, 1999)
"God saw all that He had made, and it was very good" (Gn 1:31)
The artist, image of God the Creator
None can sense more deeply than you artists, ingenious creators of beauty that you are, something of the pathos with which God at the dawn of creation looked upon the work of His hands. A glimmer of that feeling has shone so often in your eyes when -- like the artists of every age -- captivated by the hidden power of sounds and words, colors and shapes, you have admired the work of your inspiration, sensing in it some echo of the mystery of creation with which God, the sole creator of all things, has wished in some way to associate you.
That is why it seems to me that there are no better words than the text of Genesis with which to begin my Letter to you, to whom I feel closely linked by experiences reaching far back in time and which have indelibly marked my life. In writing this Letter, I intend to follow the path of the fruitful dialogue between the Church and artists which has gone on unbroken through two thousand years of history, and which still, at the threshold of the Third Millennium, offers rich promise for the future.
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Read more: www.adoremus.org
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