Noli Me Tangere in latin means "touch me not", coming from the passage in the Bible where Mary goes to the tomb and the angels tell her not to weep for her Lord has Risen! Jesus appears to the weeping Mary and says "touch me not, for I have not yet ascended to the father. But go to my brothers, and tell them that I am ascending to my Father and your Father, to my God and your God." John 20:17-18.
Thursday, April 21, 2011
Easter is here!
Noli Me Tangere in latin means "touch me not", coming from the passage in the Bible where Mary goes to the tomb and the angels tell her not to weep for her Lord has Risen! Jesus appears to the weeping Mary and says "touch me not, for I have not yet ascended to the father. But go to my brothers, and tell them that I am ascending to my Father and your Father, to my God and your God." John 20:17-18.
Holy Week: Holy Saturday
The Lamentation (Mourning of Christ), 1305-6
This is one of the most moving pieces. My heart aches and cries to see this grieving mother stare into the lifeless eyes of her Son. See the mother, see his friends, see the angels.
The tree that stands leafless, watching, perhaps symbolizes the the Tree of Knowledge and origiona sin. Notice, Jesus Christ, suspended between heaven and earth, a broken yet dignified body, broken for you and me.
Come see His hands and His feet,
The scars that speak of sacrifice,
Hand that flung stars into space,
To cruel nails surrendered.
Yet, while there is great sorrow, Sunday is coming...
What Sister Wendy said about this artist:
"Everyone who saw 'The Lamentation of Christ' on the chapel walls would have known the story well - that Jesus died on the cross and that a profound sorrow ensued. Giotto took that intellectual conviction and made it throb in the nerves." Sister Wendy
Holy Week: Good Friday
Holy Week: Maundy Thursday
Giotto is one of my favorite painters. In this painting I am captured by the weighty representation of the figures, the golden halo of Christ, and the concerned and uneasy looks of his followers. The time of pain and death is drawing near, yet Christ has a look of acceptance of what is about to come. Giotto has captured it well. As Sister Wendy said: "Giotto brought to life the mysteries of faith, and art was never the same again."