Cardinal Ratzinger to CL Meeting in Rimini: 24-30 August
In August, Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger sent a message to the Communion
and Liberation (CL) meeting at Rimini 24-30 August on the theme,
'The Feeling of Things, the Contemplation of Beauty'. Cardinal Ratzinger
commented on the need for the Church to restore the beautiful to a
central place. "I have often affirmed my conviction that the true
apology of Christian faith, the most convincing demonstration of its
truth against every denial, are the saints, and the beauty that the
faith has generated. Today, for faith to grow, we must lead ourselves
and the persons we meet to encounter the saints and to enter into
contact with the Beautiful. Now however, we still have to respond to an
objection. We have already rejected the assumption which claims that
what has just been said is a flight into the irrational, into mere
aestheticism. Rather, it is the opposite that is true: this is the very
way in which reason is freed from dullness and made ready to act".
Here is a translation of his message.
Truth of Christ: beautiful among men, the man of sorrows
Every year, in the Liturgy of the Hours for the Season of Lent, I am
struck anew by a paradox in Vespers for Monday of the Second Week of the
Psalter. Here, side by side, are two antiphons, one for the Season of
Lent, the other for Holy Week. Both introduce Psalm 44 [45], but they
present strikingly contradictory interpretations. The Psalm describes
the wedding of the King, his beauty, his virtues, his mission, and then
becomes an exaltation of his bride. In the Season of Lent, Psalm 44 is
framed by the same antiphon used for the rest of the year. The third
verse of the Psalm says: "You are the fairest of the children of
men and grace is poured upon your lips". Naturally, the Church
reads this psalm as a poetic-prophetic representation of Christ's
spousal relationship with his Church. She recognizes Christ as the
fairest of men, the grace poured upon his lips points to the inner
beauty of his words, the glory of his proclamation. So it is not merely
the external beauty of the Redeemer's appearance that is glorified:
rather, the beauty of Truth appears in him, the beauty of God himself
who draws us to himself and, at the same time captures us with the wound
of Love, the holy passion (eros), that enables us to go forth together,
with and in the Church his Bride, to meet the Love who calls us.
On Monday of Holy Week, however, the Church changes the antiphon and
invites us to interpret the Psalm in the light of Is 53,2: "He
had neither beauty, no majesty, nothing to attract our eyes, no grace to
make us delight in him". How can we reconcile this? The
appearance of the "fairest of the children of men" is so
wretched that no one desires to look at him. Pilate presented him to the
crowd saying: "Behold the man!", to rouse sympathy for the
crushed and battered Man, in whom no external beauty remained.
Two trumpets of the same Spirit
Augustine, who in his youth wrote a book on the Beautiful and the
Harmonious [De pulchro et apto] and who appreciated beauty in
words, in music, in the figurative arts, had a keen appreciation of this
paradox and realized that in this regard, the great Greek philosophy of
the beautiful was not simply rejected but rather, dramatically called
into question and what the beautiful might be, what beauty might mean,
would have to be debated anew and suffered. Referring to the paradox
contained in these texts, he spoke of the contrasting blasts of
"two trumpets", produced by the same breath, the same Spirit.
He knew that a paradox is contrast and not contradiction. Both quotes
come from the same Spirit who inspires all Scripture, but sounds
different notes in it. It is in this way that he sets us before the
totality of true Beauty, of Truth itself.
The beauty of truth embraces a love that is faithful to the end
In the first place, the text of Isaiah supplies the question that
interested the Fathers of the Church, whether or not Christ was
beautiful. Implicit here is the more radical question of whether beauty
is true or whether it is not ugliness that leads us to the deepest truth
of reality. Whoever believes in God, in the God who manifested himself,
precisely in the altered appearance of Christ crucified as love "to
the end" (Jn 13,1), knows that beauty is truth and truth beauty;
but in the suffering Christ he also learns that the beauty of truth also
embraces offence, pain, and even the dark mystery of death, and that
this can only be found in accepting suffering, not in ignoring it.
Plato shows that beauty entails the pain of discontent
Certainly, the consciousness that beauty has something to do with
pain was also present in the Greek world. For example, let us take
Plato's Phaedrus. Plato contemplates the encounter with
beauty as the salutary emotional shock that makes man leave his shell
and sparks his "enthusiasm" by attracting him to what is other
than himself. Man, says Plato, has lost the original perfection that was
conceived for him. He is now perennially searching for the healing
primitive form. Nostalgia and longing impel him to pursue the quest;
beauty prevents him from being content with just daily life. It causes
him to suffer. In a Platonic sense, we could say that the arrow of
nostalgia pierces man, wounds him and in this way gives him wings, lifts
him upwards towards the transcendent. In his discourse in the Symposium,
Aristophanes says that lovers do not know what they really want from
each other. From the search for what is more than their pleasure, it is
obvious that the souls of both are thirsting for something other than
amorous pleasure. But the heart cannot express this "other"
thing, "it has only a vague perception of what it truly wants and
wonders about it as an enigma".
Nicholas Cabasilas: the wound of the beauty of the Spouse
In the 14th century, in the book, "The Life in Christ"
by the Byzantine theologian, Nicholas Cabasilas, we rediscover
Plato's experience in which the ultimate object of nostalgia,
transformed by the new Christian experience, continues to be nameless.
Cabasilas says: "When men have a longing so great that it surpasses
human nature and eagerly desire and are able to accomplish things beyond
human thought, it is the Bridegroom who has smitten them with this
longing. It is he who has sent a ray of his beauty into their eyes. The
greatness of the wound already shows the arrow which has struck home,
the longing indicates who has inflicted the wound" (cf. The Life
in Christ, the Second Book, § 15).
The beautiful wounds, but this is exactly how it summons man to his
final destiny. What Plato said, and, more than 1,500 years later,
Cabasilas, has nothing to do with superficial aestheticism and
irrationalism or with the flight from clarity and the importance of
reason. The beautiful is knowledge certainly, but, in a superior form,
since it arouses man to the real greatness of the truth. Here Cabasilas
has remained entirely Greek, since he puts knowledge first when he says,
"In fact it is knowing that causes love and gives birth to it....
Since this knowledge is sometimes very ample and complete and at other
times imperfect, it follows that the love potion has the same
effect" (cf. ibid.). He is not content to leave this
assertion in general terms. In his characteristically rigorous thought,
he distinguishes between two kinds of knowledge: knowledge through
instruction which remains, so to speak, "second hand" and does
not imply any direct contact with reality itself. The second type of
knowledge, on the other hand, is knowledge through personal experience,
through a direct relationship with the reality. "Therefore we do
not love it to the extent that it is a worthy object of love, and since
we have not perceived the very form itself we do not experience its
proper effect". True knowledge is being struck by the arrow of
Beauty that wounds man, moved by reality, "how it is Christ himself
who is present and in an ineffable way disposes and forms the souls of
men" (cf. ibid.).
Being struck and overcome by the beauty of Christ is a more real,
more profound knowledge than mere rational deduction. Of course we must
not underrate the importance of theological reflection, of exact and
precise theological thought; it remains absolutely necessary. But to
move from here to disdain or to reject the impact produced by the
response of the heart in the encounter with beauty as a true form of
knowledge would impoverish us and dry up our faith and our theology. We
must rediscover this form of knowledge; it is a pressing need of our
time.
Pastoral need of Theological Aesthetics
Starting with this concept, Hans Urs von Balthasar built his Opus
magnum of Theological Aesthetics. Many of its details have passed
into theological work, while his fundamental approach, in truth the
essential element of the whole work, has not been so readily accepted.
Of course, this is not just, or principally, a theological problem, but
a problem of pastoral life, that has to foster the human person's
encounter with the beauty of faith. All too often arguments fall on deaf
ears because in our world too many contradictory arguments compete with
one another, so much so that we are spontaneously reminded of the
medieval theologians' description of reason, that it 'has a wax nose':
in other words, it can be pointed in any direction, if one is clever
enough. Everything makes sense, is so convincing, whom should we trust?
The arrow of the beautiful can guide the mind to the truth: Bach,
Rublėv
The encounter with the beautiful can become the wound of the arrow
that strikes the heart and in this way opens our eyes, so that later,
from this experience, we take the criteria for judgement and can
correctly evaluate the arguments. For me an unforgettable experience was
the Bach concert that Leonard Bernstein conducted in Munich after the
sudden death of Karl Richter. I was sitting next to the Lutheran Bishop
Hanselmann. When the last note of one of the great Thomas-Kantor-Cantatas
triumphantly faded away, we looked at each other spontaneously and right
then we said: "Anyone who has heard this, knows that the faith is
true". The music had such an extraordinary force of reality that we
realized, no longer by deduction, but by the impact on our hearts, that
it could not have originated from nothingness, but could only have come
to be through the power of the Truth that became real in the composer's
inspiration. Isn't the same thing evident when we allow ourselves to be
moved by the icon of the Trinity of Rublėv? In the art of the icons, as
in the great Western paintings of the Romanesque and Gothic period, the
experience described by Cabasilas, starting with interiority, is visibly
portrayed and can be shared.
Beauty of the icon: fasting of sight
In a rich way Pavel Evdokimov has brought to light the interior
pathway that an icon establishes. An icon does not simply reproduce what
can be perceived by the senses, but rather it presupposes, as he says,
"a fasting of sight". Inner perception must free itself from
the impression of the merely sensible, and in prayer and ascetical
effort acquire a new and deeper capacity to see, to perform the passage
from what is merely external to the profundity of reality, in such a way
that the artist can see what the senses as such do not see, and what
actually appears in what can be perceived: the splendour of the glory of
God, the "glory of God shining on the face of Christ "
(II Cor 4,6). To admire the icons and the great masterpieces of
Christian art in general, leads us on an inner way, a way of overcoming
ourselves; thus in this purification of vision that is a purification of
the heart, it reveals the beautiful to us, or at least a ray of it. In
this way we are brought into contact with the power of the truth. I have
often affirmed my conviction that the true apology of Christian faith,
the most convincing demonstration of its truth against every denial, are
the saints, and the beauty that the faith has generated. Today, for
faith to grow, we must lead ourselves and the persons we meet to
encounter the saints and to enter into contact with the Beautiful.
Now however, we still have to respond to an objection. We have
already rejected the assumption which claims that what has just been
said is a flight into the irrational, into mere aestheticism. Rather, it
is the opposite that is true: this is the very way in which reason is
freed from dullness and made ready to act.
Counterfeit of beauty: falsehood, seduction, evil
Today another objection has even greater weight: the message of
beauty is thrown into complete doubt by the power of falsehood,
seduction, violence and evil. Can the beautiful be genuine, or, in the
end, is it only an illusion? Isn't reality perhaps basically evil? The
fear that in the end it is not the arrow of the beautiful that leads us
to the truth, but that falsehood, all that is ugly and vulgar, may
constitute the true "reality" has at all times caused people
anguish. At present this has been expressed in the assertion that after
Auschwitz it was no longer possible to write poetry; after Auschwitz it
is no longer possible to speak of a God who is good. People
wondered: where was God when the gas chambers were operating? This
objection, which seemed reasonable enough before Auschwitz when one
realized all the atrocities of history, shows that in any case a purely
harmonious concept of beauty is not enough. It cannot stand up to the
confrontation with the gravity of the questioning about God, truth and
beauty. Apollo, who for Plato's Socrates was "the God" and the
guarantor of unruffled beauty as "the truly divine" is
absolutely no longer sufficient.
True beauty of Christ who loves us to the end
In this way, we return to the "two trumpets" of the Bible
with which we started, to the paradox of being able to say of Christ:
"You are the fairest of the children of men", and:
"He had no beauty, no majesty to draw our eyes, no grace to make
us delight in him". In the Passion of Christ the Greek
aesthetic that deserves admiration for its perceived contact with the
Divine but which remained inexpressible for it, in Christ's passion is
not removed but overcome. The experience of the beautiful has received
new depth and new realism. The One who is the Beauty itself let himself
be slapped in the face, spat upon, crowned with thorns; the Shroud of
Turin can help us imagine this in a realistic way. However, in his Face
that is so disfigured, there appears the genuine, extreme beauty: the
beauty of love that goes "to the very end"; for this reason it
is revealed as greater than falsehood and violence. Whoever has
perceived this beauty knows that truth, and not falsehood, is the real
aspiration of the world. It is not the false that is "true",
but indeed, the Truth. It is, as it were, a new trick of what is false
to present itself as "truth" and to say to us: over and above
me there is basically nothing, stop seeking or even loving the truth; in
doing so you are on the wrong track. The icon of the crucified Christ
sets us free from this deception that is so widespread today. However it
imposes a condition: that we let ourselves be wounded by him, and that
we believe in the Love who can risk setting aside his external beauty to
proclaim, in this way, the truth of the beautiful.
Manipulation by presenting a false and deceptive beauty
Falsehood however has another stratagem. A beauty that is deceptive
and false, a dazzling beauty that does not bring human beings out of
themselves to open them to the ecstasy of rising to the heights, but
indeed locks them entirely into themselves. Such beauty does not
reawaken a longing for the Ineffable, readiness for sacrifice, the
abandonment of self, but instead stirs up the desire, the will for
power, possession and pleasure. It is that type of experience of beauty
of which Genesis speaks in the account of the Original Sin. Eve saw that
the fruit of the tree was "beautiful" to eat and was "delightful
to the eyes". The beautiful, as she experienced it, aroused in
her a desire for possession, making her, as it were, turn in upon
herself. Who would not recognize, for example, in advertising, the
images made with supreme skill that are created to tempt the human being
irresistibly, to make him want to grab everything and seek the passing
satisfaction rather than be open to others.
Avoid cult of the ugly or fear of deception with the redeeming beauty
of Christ in the saints, Christian art
So it is that Christian art today is caught between two fires (as
perhaps it always has been): it must oppose the cult of the ugly, which
says that everything beautiful is a deception and only the
representation of what is crude, low and vulgar is the truth, the true
illumination of knowledge. Or it has to counter the deceptive beauty
that makes the human being seem diminished instead of making him great,
and for this reason is false.
Is there anyone who does not know Dostoyevsky's often quoted
sentence'. "The Beautiful will save us"? However, people
usually forget that Dostoyevsky is referring here to the redeeming
Beauty of Christ. We must learn to see Him. If we know Him, not only in
words, but if we are struck by the arrow of his paradoxical beauty, then
we will truly know him, and know him not only because we have heard
others speak about him. Then we will have found the beauty of Truth, of
the Truth that redeems. Nothing can bring us into close contact with the
beauty of Christ himself other than the world of beauty created by faith
and light that shines out from the faces of the saints, through whom his
own light becomes visible.
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