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The Beauty of Holiness: Sacred Art and The New Evangelization

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Te Beauty of Holiness:

Sacred Art and the


New Evangelization
Jem Sullivan
catholic information service
Masterpieces of sacred art reect the new dimension of beauty
that entered the world in Jesus Christ, the image of the invis-
ible God (Colossians 1:15). As works of art lead us from seeing to
contemplation to adoration, they allow us to encounter the divine
beauty of Trinitarian love revealed in the human face of Christ.
catholic information service
Works of art always speak, at least
implicitly of the innite beauty of God.
Pope Benedict XVI
Catholic Information Service
Knights of Columbus Supreme Council
PO Box 1971 203 752 4276
New Haven, CT 06521 203 752 4018 (fax)
cis@kofc.org www.kofc.org/cis
418 9-12
Te New Evangelization Series Tools for the New Evangelization
Appendix A
Te New Evangelization Series Tools for the New Evangelization
Appendix A
general editor
Michelle K. Borras, Ph.D.
Director of the Catholic
Information Service
photography
Tomas Seran
Copyright 2012, Knights of Columbus.
All rights reserved.
Quoted works are copyright their respec-
tive authors.
Scripture citations adapted from the
Revised Standard Version, Catholic Edition
(San Francisco: Ignatius, 1994).
cover image
Detail of the Virgin Mary bending over the infant Christ. From the Wall
of the Nativity, Chapel of the Holy Family, Knights of Columbus Supreme
Council, New Haven Connecticut. Te chapel mosaics were completed by
Fr. Marko Ivan Rupnik, SJ and the artists of Centro Aletti in 2005.
nihil obstat
Susan M. Timoney, S.T.D.
Censor Deputatus
imprimatur
Donald Cardinal Wuerl
Archbishop of Washington
Archdiocese of Washington
September 4, 2012
Te nihil obstat and imprimatur are ofcial
declarations that a book or pamphlet is
free of doctrinal or moral error. Tere is no
implication that those who have granted
the nihil obstat and the imprimatur agree
with the content, opinions, or statements
expressed therein.
The New Evangelization Series
1 What Is the New Evangelization?
part i For God so loved the world
2 I Believe in You: Te Question of God in the Modern World
3 Te Mysteries of the Life of Jesus
4 A God Who Is Treefold Love
5 We Have Come to Adore Him: Benedict XVI Speaks to
Young People about Prayer
part ii called to love...
6 Called to Love: John Paul IIs Teology of Human Love
7 In the Image of Love: Marriage and the Family
8 Following Love, Poor, Chaste, and Obedient:
Te Consecrated Life
part iii ...In the church, the bride of the lamb
9 Let It Be Done to Me: Mary, the Origin of the Church
10 With the Heart of the Bridegroom: Te Ministerial Priesthood
11 Te Transguration of the World: Te Sacraments
12 Light and Silence: A Eucharistic Diary
part iv Loving in Deed and in Truth
13 What is Freedom For?
14 Justice: On the Dignity of Labor
15 Justice: Te Gospel of Life
part v He Loved Us to the End
16 Te Dignity of the Sufering Person
17 Behold, I Died, and Now I Live: Death and Eternal Life.
Appendices: tools for the new evangelization
A Te Beauty of Holiness: Sacred Art and the New Evangelization
B Technology and the New Evangelization: Criteria for Discernment

The Beauty of Holiness:
Sacred Art and the New Evangelization


Jem Sullivan
Contents
From Seeing to Contemplation to Adoration
2 From the Visible to the Invisible
4 Seeing with the Eyes of Faith
5 Te Challenge of a Sensory Dissonance
Four Reasons to Place Sacred Art at the Service
of the New Evangelization
9 Jesus Christ, the Icon of God
10 Te Witness of Christian Art History
11 Responding to the Beauty of Faith
13 A Culture of Images and the New Evangelization
Toward another Way of Seeing
15 Awakening the Spiritual Senses
17 Lectio Divina Adapted to Art at the Service
of the New Evangelization
20 Purifying the Senses for God
22 Te Beauty of Holiness

24 Sources
26 About
Contents
From Seeing to Contemplation to Adoration
2 From the Visible to the Invisible
4 Seeing with the Eyes of Faith
5 Te Challenge of a Sensory Dissonance
Four Reasons to Place Sacred Art at the Service
of the New Evangelization
9 Jesus Christ, the Icon of God
10 Te Witness of Christian Art History
11 Responding to the Beauty of Faith
13 A Culture of Images and the New Evangelization
Toward another Way of Seeing
15 Awakening the Spiritual Senses
17 Lectio Divina Adapted to Art at the Service
of the New Evangelization
20 Purifying the Senses for God
22 Te Beauty of Holiness

24 Sources
26 About
Detail of St. Joseph, sleeping.
Wall of the Nativity, Chapel of the Holy Fam-
ily. Knights of Columbus Supreme Council,
New Haven, Connecticut.
1
From Seeing
to Contemplation
to Adoration
Pope Benedict XVI has called attention to the relevance of
sacred art for the new evangelization on numerous occa-
sions. One such occasion was the presentation of the Com-
pendium of the Catechism of the Catholic Church to the universal
Church. The Compendium, among the rst publications of this
ponticate, contains some fourteen works of sacred art. In
introducing the Compendium, the Holy Father noted, Works
of art always speak, at least implicitly, of the divine, of the
innite beauty of God. Sacred images, with their beauty,
are also a Gospel proclamation and express the splendor of
the Catholic truth. They urge one and all, believers and
non-believers alike, to discover and contemplate the inex-
haustible fascination of the mystery of Redemption, giv-
ing an ever new impulse to the lively process of its incul-
turation in time.
1
As the Church reects on the call and the challenges of
the new evangelization, we are invited to reect anew on
the relationship of sacred art to evangelization and cat-
echesis. What is the catechetical value of sacred images?
How might sacred art serve to aid formation in the con-
2
tent of Christian faith? And might artistic masterpieces
serve as powerful tools of the new evangelization in our
own day and age?
From the Visible to the Invisible
The Catechism of the Catholic Church notes that sacred art is
true and beautiful when its form corresponds to its particu-
lar vocation: evoking and glorifying, in faith and adoration,
the transcendent mystery of God the surpassing invisi-
ble beauty of truth and love visible in Christ, who reects
the glory of God and bears the very stamp of his nature, in
whom the whole fullness of deity dwells bodily. Genuine
sacred art draws man to adoration, to prayer and to the love
of God, Creator and Savior, the Holy One and Sanctier.
2
It follows that the role of sacred art in the new evange-
lization is to lead the faithful from seeing to contemplation to
adoration of God. For as Pope Benedict XVI has noted, great
works of art are all a luminous sign of God and there-
fore truly a manifestation, an epiphany of God.
3
A sacred
image of Christ, the Blessed Virgin Mary, Mother of God, or
a Christian saint provides an earthly glimpse into eternal
realities, a head start to heaven, so to speak.
The Catechism describes the goal of liturgical catechesis
(mystagogy) as initiation into the mystery of Christ by pro-
ceeding from the visible to the invisible, from the sign to
the thing signied, from the sacraments to the myster-
ies.
4
Instituted by Christ, the sacraments are the privileged
means by which the faithful participate in his saving mys-
3
tery through the ministry of the Church. Within this sac-
ramental economy, sacred art that predisposes one to the
sacramental presence of God may serve as a pre-sacrament, a
phrase used by Blessed John Paul II to describe the sacred
art and architecture of the Sistine Chapel.
To limit the function of sacred images to mere deco-
rative or aesthetic representations of socio-cultural ide-
als, as is often the case, is to miss a high note in the litur-
gical symphony composed of sacred images, architecture,
music and rites. Sacred images obviously express human,
social, and cultural realities, and they add aesthetic value
to the interior and exterior spaces of cathedrals, chapels
and churches. But sacred images are also an indispensable
means to instruct the faithful in the content of divine reve-
lation, and reawaken and nourish their faith. With the help
of sacred art, catechists, preachers and teachers of faith echo
the divine pedagogy of salvation history wherein the wit-
ness of Gods words and deeds are inextricably linked.
Blessed John Paul II drew attention to the pedagogical
value of sacred images in his 1999 Letter to Artists when he
wrote, In a sense, art is a kind of visual Gospel, a concrete
mode of catechesis.
5
Which is to say that each Sunday, as
the faithful hear the truth of the Gospel proclaimed and
respond by professing their faith in the Creed, those same
truths of faith are revealed in the sacred art that surround
them. Church teachings and doctrines condensed onto a
page of a Catechism nd complementary forms of expres-
sion in sacred art and architecture. In this way, sacred art
paintings, mosaics, stained glass, sculpture, sacred music
4
become a visual Gospel, by which the faithful see, hear,
and touch the mysteries of faith so as to incarnate its truths
in holiness of life and Christian witness.
Seeing with the Eyes of Faith
One of the rst to afrm this role of sacred images was
Pope Saint Gregory the Great. In a letter to Serenus, Bishop
of Marseilles in AD 599, he wrote, Painting is employed
in churches so that those who cannot read or write may at
least read on the walls what they cannot decipher on the
page.
6
The movement from seeing to contemplation to adora-
tion of God is realized through written or spoken words and
through sacred images.
For centuries sacred images were created with catechesis
in mind. Of course, the appropriation of signs and symbols
in sacred images relied on efective preaching and teach-
ing in communion with the seeing faith of the Church.
But the whole pedagogical point of a sacred image is not to
engage viewers in an intellectual or didactic exercise alone.
It is to lead them to awe and wonder, perhaps even to a
ravishing of the soul by a glimpse of divine beauty, in the
hope that they entrust their lives to this beauty and pur-
sue a life of holiness. As the Preface for Christmas (I) reads,
In the mystery of the Word made esh a new light of your
glory has shone upon the eyes of our mind, so that, as we
recognize in him God made visible, we may be caught up
through him in love of things invisible.
5
The whole point is to lead the faithful to perceive the
Invisible in the visible, to learn a new way of seeing and
hearing that leads to contemplation, worship and adoration
of God. In this way, sacred art serves the new evangeliza-
tion for the transmission of the Christian faith in our time.
Pope Gregorys assertion, cited above, would take distinct
visible form in the outpouring of Christian art and archi-
tecture during the Middle Ages. A Gothic cathedral, such
as Chartres cathedral, served, in efect, as a catechism in
stone, a homily in stained glass, expressing for the faith-
ful in art and architecture the faith they professed in the
Creed and heard proclaimed in the Scriptures. As medieval
craftsmen set stone upon carved stone in a building visible
from miles away and luminous through colored glass, they
were, in fact, sculpting and painting the saving message of
biblical history explicit and beautiful as their faith. Thus
a pilgrim entering Chartres cathedral was drawn into a
reading of past biblical history made visible in its sacred
art and architecture. At the same time, he was inserted
through his seeing and hearing into a sacramental present,
fully realized in the liturgy.
The Challenge of a Sensory Dissonance
Over the Christian centuries, sacred art served as a means
of evangelization as it expressed, communicated and nour-
ished the faith of Christians. In ages past, moments from
the life of Christ, the Virgin Mary, the saints, and biblical
events and gures were an unending source of inspiration
6
for art, architecture, music and literature. In the words of
Blessed John Paul II, Sacred Scripture thus became a sort of
immense vocabulary (Paul Claudel) and an iconographic
atlas (Marc Chagall) from which both Christian culture
and art have drawn.
7

Today the sacred artistic heritage of the West barely res-
onates in the common religious imagination. The visual
deposit of faith in Christian art has only a negligible place
in pastoral planning, liturgy, catechesis and evangelization.
For younger generations the loss of familiarity and ready
access to the Christian tradition of sacred art is particularly
real. Born and educated in the so-called Information Age
and immersed in internet and communications technolo-
gies, young people instantly recognize images and sounds
from popular movies, music, commercials and advertizing.
Unlike previous generations, they are saturated, consciously
and unconsciously, with values conveyed through the visual
and sensory culture that surrounds them. We have even
begun to speak of sensory overload and sensory addic-
tions in those immersed in todays media culture.
As we respond to the call for a new evangelization, we
are led to wonder could not the vast heritage of Christian
art and the beauty of holiness it expresses in sensory forms
also shape and inuence these generations?
We are also led to consider a striking paradox that remains
a challenge for the new evangelization. This paradox takes
the form of a sensory dissonance that marks the relationship of
Christian art to contemporary culture. The diminishing role
and place of Christian art in liturgy, catechesis and evange-
7
lization has occurred precisely at the moment when pop-
ular media culture, in content and medium, has become
increasingly sensory and visual. Everyday life is infused with
images, words and sounds aimed at engaging the mind, will,
senses and emotions, while the daily or weekly experience
of liturgy, catechesis and evangelization is often bereft of
beauty. While the surrounding culture appeals constantly
to visual and sensory experiences, the place and role of sen-
sory expressions of faith within the Christian community
have decreased signicantly.
This sensory dissonance ofers one among many challenges
for the new evangelization. For clearly the sensory disso-
nance between the immersive experience of a visual cul-
ture on the one hand, and the Churchs life of faith on the
other, touches the very heart of the Churchs mission to
evangelize the culture.
Detail of the infant Jesus wrapped in swad-
dling clothes, his arms outstretched as they
will be on the cross.
Wall of the Nativity, Chapel of the Holy Fam-
ily. Knights of Columbus Supreme Council,
New Haven, Connecticut.
9
Four Reasons to Place
Sacred Art at the Service
of the New Evangelization
In order efectively to re-propose the Gospel message to
those shaped by a sensory culture, can we aford to over-
look sacred art as a tool of the new evangelization? Might
artistic masterpieces serve to form the men and women
of today, just as they did past generations of the faithful?
We consider here four reasons for a recovery of the beauty
of holiness in sacred art, at the service of the Churchs task
of evangelization.
Jesus Christ, the Icon of God
A rst defense for the place of sacred art in the new evan-
gelization is, of necessity, theological. Saint John Dama-
scene, defender of sacred images against the iconoclasts
of the eighth century, wrote, In former times God, who
is without form or body, could never be depicted. But now
when God is seen in the esh conversing with men, I make
an image of the God whom I see. I do not worship matter;
I worship the Creator of matter who became matter for
my sake, who worked out my salvation through matter.
8

10
Saint Paul sums up the Incarnational principle that
inspires genuine sacred images in his hymn of praise as
he afrms in faith, Christ is the image (eikon) of the invis-
ible God (Colossians 1: 15). When God entered human his-
tory in the person of his Son, Christ lled our sensible world
with his presence. The world, which already reected Gods
beauty, was rendered transparent to him. Images of beauty,
through which the invisible mystery of God becomes vis-
ible, are now an essential part of Christian worship. Now
matter really matters.
As Joseph Cardinal Ratzinger, later Pope Benedict XVI,
notes in the Spirit of the Liturgy, The complete absence of
images is incompatible with faith in the Incarnation of
God.
9
And as Blessed John Paul II observed, In becoming
man, the Son of God has introduced into human history
all the evangelical wealth of the true and the good, and
with this he has also unveiled a new dimension of beauty,
of which the Gospel message is lled to the brim.
10
Mas-
terpieces of Christian art that speak the language of the
Incarnation become instruments of the new evangeliza-
tion, at the heart of which stands the incarnation of God
in Jesus Christ.
The Witness of Christian Art History
Secondly, there is the cumulative and undeniable wit-
ness of history. From the art of the early Christian cata-
combs to Romanesque basilicas and Byzantine iconogra-
phy, from soaring Gothic cathedrals to the creative torrent
11
of the Renaissance and beyond, the history of Christianity
is inextricably linked to its artistic heritage. To overlook or
altogether ignore this accumulated treasury of Christian
artistic and architectural history fails to resound with the
most basic of human experiences that of imagination
rooted in memory.
In speaking of sacred icons, the Second Council of Nicea
afrmed, We preserve intact all the written and unwrit-
ten traditions of the Church which have been entrusted
to us. One of these traditions consists in the production of
representational art, which accords with the history of the
preaching of the Gospel.
11

Responding to the Beauty of Faith
Thirdly, there is a human or anthropological basis for the
use of sacred images in faith formation. The Catechism speaks
of faith as a response of the whole human person, engag-
ing intellect, heart, senses, emotion, memory and will. A
systematic formulation may lead one to notional assent (in
Cardinal Newmans terms) to the mystery of the Incarna-
tion, but faith does not and should not stop there. Efec-
tive evangelization is directed to an all-encompassing real
assent of intellect, heart and will. Sacred architecture and
art engages the senses so that evangelization and catechet-
ical formation involves the whole human being, moving him
to lifelong conversion and discipleship.
Divine revelation shapes not only the content of evan-
gelization and catechesis, but the methods by which that
12
revelation is shared Divine revelation, understood as the
self-communication of God in human history transmitted
in Sacred Scripture and Sacred Tradition, unfolds gradually
in a divine pedagogy that is, in the concrete means by
which God communicates, teaches, and nurtures a cove-
nant relationship with humanity.
The Catechism of the Catholic Church describes this divine
pedagogy when it notes that even before revealing him-
self to humanity in words of truth, God reveals himself
through the language of creation, the work of his Word, of
his wisdom. Thus, from the greatness and beauty of cre-
ated things comes a corresponding perception of their Cre-
ator, for the author of beauty created them.
12

In the Incarnation, the divine pedagogy unfolds in human
history in the person of Jesus Christ, the Word made esh.
The Word of God, Jesus Christ, is the icon, the image of the
unseen God. This divine pedagogy is disclosed in a sym-
phony of words and deeds that engages the whole
human person in the response and relationship of faith.
This divine pedagogy will also shape the various means by
which the Church bears witness to the Gospel in the new
evangelization.
A Culture of Images and the New Evangelization
A fourth and nal reason for placing art and architecture
at the service of evangelization is cultural. Few will argue
that we live in the midst of a global culture in which mul-
tiple images dominate, shape and dene peoples values
13
and identity. Television commercials, billboard advertis-
ing, the Internet, blogs, video games these visual media
communicate the content and values of culture, for good or
ill. This sensory culture daily presents fragmented images
that subtly and not so subtly trivialize and denigrate the
dignity of the human person, create supercial and con-
sumerist needs and estrange us from spiritual realities.
How is the Church to make belief believable, in the
words of the American writer Flannery OConnor, to the
YouTube, Twitter, and Facebook generations? In order efec-
tively to engage the faithful who are shaped by this sensory
culture, can the Church aford to dispense with sacred art
and architecture as tools of catechesis and the new evan-
gelization? Might sacred images serve to heal, transform
and elevate the very sensory experiences that inundate
our visual culture?
Pope Benedict XVI speaks of the challenge posed by a
culture of images when he notes:
The centuries old conciliar tradition teaches us that images are
also a preaching of the Gospel. Artists in every age have ofered
the principal facts of the mystery of salvation to the contempla-
tion and wonder of believers by presenting them in the splendor
of color and in the perfection of beauty. Today, more than ever,
in a culture of images, a sacred image can express much more
than what can be said in words, and can be an extremely efec-
tive and dynamic way of communicating the Gospel message.
Sacred images proclaim the same Gospel message that the Sacred
Scriptures transmit through words and they help reawaken and
nourish the faith of believers.
13

Wall of the Nativity, Chapel of the Holy Family.
Knights of Columbus Supreme Council, New
Haven, Connecticut.
15
Toward another Way of
Seeing
Awakening the Spiritual Senses
Human beings are created for beauty. The human person,
created in the image and likeness of God, is a being at once
corporeal and spiritual, an embodied spirit. As a unity of
body and spirit, human beings express and perceive spiritual
realities through tangible signs, most especially through
sacramental signs and symbols. The embodiment of the
human person is not an accident of nature or a byproduct
of random molecular combinations. Rather, our embodi-
ment, as creatures willed by God, is a necessary pre-con-
dition for receiving Gods revelation and for the human
response of faith.
The human person, created by God out of love, is a gift
of love to be given to others in love. And the way God com-
municates with humanity corresponds to the way he cre-
ated us. This Christian anthropology shapes the methods
and means of the new evangelization.
From a Christian anthropology that views the human
person as an embodied spirit ows an understanding of
the act of faith itself. Christian faith is the free response of
the whole human person intellect, will, memory, emo-
16
tions and senses to the God who reveals himself. In other
words, the human person, created by God as a unity of body,
soul, and spirit, responds in faith to divine Revelation from
that same embodied unity.
The patristic doctrine of the spiritual senses, or ve
senses of the soul, highlights the fact that the human
person possesses faculties or powers by which we experi-
ence the invisible reality of God. Masterpieces of sacred art
engage these spiritual senses as we contemplate, hear,
touch, taste and see the beauty of his holiness. As a per-
son encounters a masterwork of Christian art, his spiri-
tual senses are engaged in a way that leads him from the
visible to the invisible, from the sign to the reality signi-
ed, from sensory perceptions to the mysteries of faith.
In the words of the Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew I,
Listening to Gods Word, beholding Gods Word and touch-
ing Gods Word are all spiritual ways of perceiving the
unique divine mystery. Furthermore, the Patriarch noted,
Icons are a visible reminder of our heavenly vocation; they are
invitations to rise beyond our trivial concerns and menial reduc-
tions of the world. They encourage us to seek the extraordinary
in the very ordinary, to be lled with the same wonder that char-
acterized the divine marvel in Genesis: God saw everything that
he made, and, indeed, it was very good (Genesis 1: 30-31). Icons
underline the Churchs fundamental mission to recognize that
all people and all things are created and called to be good and
beautiful. Indeed, icons remind us of another way of seeing
17
things, another way of experiencing realities, another way of
resolving conicts.
14

Among the primary goals of the new evangelization is to
lead people to this other way of seeing things, as well as
to reawaken and nourish the faith of those who have lost
the practice of faith in a secularized society. A recovery of
the patristic doctrine of the spiritual senses will be vital
in eforts to renew and nurture faith in our times.
Lectio Divina Adapted to Art at the Service of the New
Evangelization
The practice of lectio divina has received renewed attention
in our day. Pope Benedict XVI has spoken on several occa-
sions of the need to recover this ancient spiritual practice.
In the Holy Fathers words, The diligent reading of Sacred
Scripture accompanied by prayer makes that intimate dia-
logue possible in which the person reading hears God who
is speaking, and in praying, responds to him with trusting
openness of heart. If it is efectively promoted, this prac-
tice will bring to the Church I am convinced of it a new
spiritual springtime.
15

Might the practice of lectio divina adapted to the appreci-
ation of works of Christian art serve as a concrete means of
engaging the faithful in the new evangelization?
A hurried, even frantic pace of reading, hearing and see-
ing has become a given in a sensory culture. With ever new
and improved information and communications technol-
18
ogies, the way most people experience the world today has
changed dramatically. At best, we now have instantaneous
access to large amounts of news, opinion and information
about the world, together with sophisticated and efcient
means of communication unthinkable in previous times.
At worst, the innate human capacity for reection, recep-
tivity, interior silence and the docility of contemplation has
steadily eroded. In the attempt to keep pace with the inces-
sant trafc of information, images and sounds, the ability
to listen attentively, to see meditatively and to read prayer-
fully diminishes. As our physical senses, through which we
experience the world, are overloaded with multiple images
and relentless sound, our spiritual senses, through which
we experience God, are increasingly deprived of exercise,
nourishment and light.
In contrast to a high-speed sensory culture, the Chris-
tian spiritual tradition of lectio divina ofers a distinctly dif-
ferent way of reading and hearing. This ancient approach
to Sacred Scripture also is distinct from biblical exegesis,
hermeneutics and the theological study of Gods Word. Lectio
divina is a spiritual reading of Sacred Scripture that attunes
the spiritual senses to listening to God silently, to read-
ing Gods word meditatively and to resting in his presence.
The Christian advances, with the Holy Spirit, in union with
Jesus Christ, the living Word made esh, through the Pas-
chal mystery of his life, death and Resurrection.
When applied to works of Christian art, the practice of lec-
tio divina can foster a prayerful seeing that integrates prayer,
faith and daily life. While upholding the unique and priv-
19
ileged place of Sacred Scripture as the inspired Word of
God, the practice of lectio divina can transform the way we
see the world as Gods handiwork, as well as how we come
to recognize and uphold the dignity of each human per-
son, made in Gods image, as the crown of creation.
The practice of lectio divina adapted to works of Christian
art might also serve as a practical aid in the new evange-
lization as it leads the faithful to acquire the capacity for
childlike wonder, to see with the eyes of faith and to
hear with the ears of the heart. Following the pattern
of lectio divina, the faithful are invited to integrate intellect,
emotions, will and senses in a response of faith to the God
who reveals himself. Finally, a way of seeing and hearing
informed by lectio divina provides a Christian alternative
to the dehumanizing and multiple distractions of a fast-
paced, sensory culture.
In the new evangelization, the Church ofers Christian
traditions of prayer as an antidote to the excesses of a visual
culture. The goal of lectio divina is prayerful contemplation
of the mysteries of faith. Simply being in Gods presence,
rather than doing, is the aim of contemplation, the nal stage
of lectio divina. The one who is immersed in Gods Word is
challenged to overcome the temptation to spiritual activ-
ism that tends to equate growth in the spiritual life with
multiplication of prayers or spiritual activities. Receptivity
to Gods grace and openness to the healing power of Gods
Word replaces anxious, self-sustained efort in the spiritual
life. In contemplation, ones spiritual gaze is simply xed
on the face of Jesus Christ. Growth in holiness and ongoing
20
conversion of life is experienced as a pure gift that ows
from contemplating the One who reveals Gods eternal love.
For contemplation, as the Catechism teaches, is a gaze of
faith, xed on Jesus this focus on Jesus is a renunciation
of self. His gaze puries our heart; the light of the counte-
nance of Jesus illumines the eyes of the heart and teaches
us to see everything in the light of his truth and his com-
passion for all. Words in this prayer are not speeches; they
are like kindling that feeds the re of love.
16

Through the stages of lectio divina that includes lectio
(prayerful reading), meditatio (meditation), oratio (prayer),
and contemplatio (contemplation), the faithful enter into the
mysteries of faith conveyed in masterpieces of Christian art.
Through lectio divina, they may even be led to an encounter
with the divine beauty of Trinitarian love revealed in the
human face of Jesus Christ, the Word made esh.
Purifying the Senses for God
Blessed are the pure in heart, says Jesus, for they shall
see God (Matthew 5:8). To see God is both a supernatural
gift of grace and the vocation of every Christian.
17
But what
does it mean to purify ones heart in order to see God? How
might masterpieces of Christian art serve the new evange-
lization as they call forth a purifying of the senses for God?
To see God is a desire placed by God in every human
heart. This common human desire for transcendence draws
each person to the One who alone can fulll it. As the Cat-
echism teaches, The Beatitudes teach us the nal end to
21
which God calls us: the Kingdom, the vision of God, par-
ticipation in the divine nature, eternal life, liation and
rest in God.
18

However, seeing God is not simply a promise to be ful-
lled in the future, in eternal life and nal rest in God.
Growing in purity of heart transforms us in the present as
well. In the here and now, the one who puries the heart
through a cleansing of the senses seeing, hearing, touch-
ing is given an earthly and partial glimpse of God.
This is the promise of the beatitude and this is where
Christian art comes in. For contemplation of divine beauty
and the beauty of faith expressed in masterpieces of Chris-
tian art provide a concrete way to purify our senses in antic-
ipation of the promised eternal vision of God. Genuine mas-
terpieces of art ofer privileged means by which we may
purify our vision and our heart so as to see God, now and
in the life to come.
Joseph Cardinal Ratzinger afrmed this capacity of Chris-
tian art to purify the senses when he observed:
To admire icons and the great masterpieces of art leads us on an
inner way, a way of overcoming ourselves; thus in this puri-
cation of vision that is a purication 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 truth. The true apology of Chris-
tian 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.
19

22
The Beauty of Holiness
The lives of the saints Cardinal Ratzinger mentions exem-
plify the beauty of holiness. The saints hold up for us a liv-
ing image of beauty in a harmonious life, graced by the Holy
Spirit and perfected in divine love. It is in this sense that
it is often said that the saints are like masterpieces of art
human beings whose openness to the Holy Spirit allowed
them to be puried and molded into unique icons of Christ
Jesus in the world. Perhaps that is why so many people,
even those shaped by a secularized and rationalistic worl-
dview, are attracted to, even compelled by the lives of the
saints. No wonder, too, that artists through the centuries
have chosen the lives of the saints for inspiration and con-
tent. Their holiness and virtue are apprehended as beautiful.
So just as one delights in the cadence of a sonnet by
Shakespeare, or is drawn into the intense visual drama of
light and shadow in a Caravaggio painting, or is moved by
a treasured piece of sacred music by Bach, the Christian
stands in awe of the beauty of a saintly life puried and
lived completely for God.
In admiring the virtues of a saints life, expressed in artis-
tic forms, the Church invites the faithful to imitation in
a life of Christian discipleship and the pursuit of holiness.
Blessed John Paul II observed, As Genesis has it, all men
and women are entrusted with the task of crafting their
23
own life; in a certain sense, they are to make of it a work
of art, a masterpiece.
20

The lives of the saints and the art that depicts the beauty
of their holiness can attract those who have fallen away
from the practice of the faith and reinvigorate the faith
of those who believe. It can guide all of us in the spiritual
life, in imitation of the saints. The beauty of holiness that
radiates from the lives of the saints thus becomes a pre-
eminent path for the new evangelization.
In the Ratzinger Report interview given decades ago, Joseph
Cardinal Ratzinger drew us to the place of Christian art in
the new evangelization when he observed, The only really
efective apologia for Christianity comes down to two argu-
ments, namely the saints the Church has produced and the
art which has grown in her womb. Better witness is borne
to the Lord by the splendor of holiness and art which have
arisen in communities of believers. If the Church is to con-
tinue to transform and humanize the world, how can she
dispense with beauty in her liturgies, that beauty which
is so closely linked with love and with the radiance of the
Resurrection?
21
24
Sources
1 Benedict XVI, Presentation of the Compendium of the Catechism
of the Catholic Church, June 28, 2005, 7.
2 Catechism of the Catholic Church (=CCC), 2502.
3 Meeting of the Holy Father Benedict XVI with the Clergy of
the Diocese of Bolzano-Bressanone, August 6, 2008.
4 CCC, 1075.
5 John Paul II, Letter to Artists, 5.
6 Gregory the Great, Epistulae IX, 209.
7 Letter to Artists, 5.
8 St. John Damascene, On the Divine Images, 17.
9 Joseph Ratzinger, The Spirit of the Liturgy, trans. John Saward
(San Francisco: Ignatius, 2000), 131.
10 Letter to Artists, 5.
11 CCC, 1160.
12 CCC, 2500.
13 Joseph Cardinal Ratzinger, Introduction to the Compendium of
the Catechism of the Catholic Church, March 20, 2005.
14 Patriarch Bartholomew I, Intervention at the Synod on the
Word of God in the Life and Mission of the Church, October
2008.
15 Benedict XVI, Address to the International Congress Com-
memorating the Fortieth Anniversary of Dei Verbum, Septem-
ber 16, 2005.
25
16 CCC, 2715-2717.
17 Cf. CCC, 1716-1728.
18 CCC, 1726.
19 Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger, The Feeling of Things, the Contempla-
tion of Beauty, Message of His Eminence Card. Joseph Ratzinger
to the Communion and Liberation Meeting at Rimini, August
2002.
20 Letter to Artists, 2.
21 Joseph Ratzinger with Vittorio Messori, The Ratzinger Report: An
Exclusive Interview on the State of the Church (San Francisco: Igna-
tius Press, 1985), 129-130.
26
About the Author
Jem Sullivan, Ph.D. is the author of The Beauty of Faith: Christian
Art and the New Evangelization from Our Sunday Visitor. She serves
various new evangelization initiatives at the Blessed John Paul II
Shrine, Washington, DC.
About the Catholic Information Service
Since its founding, the Knights of Columbus has been involved in
evangelization. In 1948, the Knights started the Catholic Informa-
tion Service (CIS) to provide low-cost Catholic publications for the
general public as well as for parishes, schools, retreat houses, mil-
itary installations, correctional facilities, legislatures, the medical
community, and for individuals who request them. For over 60 years,
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of people have enrolled in its catechetical courses.
Catholic Information Service is a registered trademark of the Knights of Columbus.
general editor
Michelle K. Borras, Ph.D.
Director of the Catholic
Information Service
photography
Tomas Seran
Copyright 2012, Knights of Columbus.
All rights reserved.
Quoted works are copyright their respec-
tive authors.
Scripture citations adapted from the
Revised Standard Version, Catholic Edition
(San Francisco: Ignatius, 1994).
cover image
Detail of the Virgin Mary bending over the infant Christ. From the Wall
of the Nativity, Chapel of the Holy Family, Knights of Columbus Supreme
Council, New Haven Connecticut. Te chapel mosaics were completed by
Fr. Marko Ivan Rupnik, SJ and the artists of Centro Aletti in 2005.
nihil obstat
Susan M. Timoney, S.T.D.
Censor Deputatus
imprimatur
Donald Cardinal Wuerl
Archbishop of Washington
Archdiocese of Washington
September 4, 2012
Te nihil obstat and imprimatur are ofcial
declarations that a book or pamphlet is
free of doctrinal or moral error. Tere is no
implication that those who have granted
the nihil obstat and the imprimatur agree
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expressed therein.
The New Evangelization Series
1 What Is the New Evangelization?
part i For God so loved the world
2 I Believe in You: Te Question of God in the Modern World
3 Te Mysteries of the Life of Jesus
4 A God Who Is Treefold Love
5 We Have Come to Adore Him: Benedict XVI Speaks to
Young People about Prayer
part ii called to love...
6 Called to Love: John Paul IIs Teology of Human Love
7 In the Image of Love: Marriage and the Family
8 Following Love, Poor, Chaste, and Obedient:
Te Consecrated Life
part iii ...In the church, the bride of the lamb
9 Let It Be Done to Me: Mary, the Origin of the Church
10 With the Heart of the Bridegroom: Te Ministerial Priesthood
11 Te Transguration of the World: Te Sacraments
12 Light and Silence: A Eucharistic Diary
part iv Loving in Deed and in Truth
13 What is Freedom For?
14 Justice: On the Dignity of Labor
15 Justice: Te Gospel of Life
part v He Loved Us to the End
16 Te Dignity of the Sufering Person
17 Behold, I Died, and Now I Live: Death and Eternal Life.
Appendices: tools for the new evangelization
A Te Beauty of Holiness: Sacred Art and the New Evangelization
B Technology and the New Evangelization: Criteria for Discernment
Te Beauty of Holiness:
Sacred Art and the
New Evangelization
Jem Sullivan
catholic information service
Masterpieces of sacred art reect the new dimension of beauty
that entered the world in Jesus Christ, the image of the invis-
ible God (Colossians 1:15). As works of art lead us from seeing to
contemplation to adoration, they allow us to encounter the divine
beauty of Trinitarian love revealed in the human face of Christ.
catholic information service
Works of art always speak, at least
implicitly of the innite beauty of God.
Pope Benedict XVI
Catholic Information Service
Knights of Columbus Supreme Council
PO Box 1971 203 752 4276
New Haven, CT 06521 203 752 4018 (fax)
cis@kofc.org www.kofc.org/cis
418 9-12
Te New Evangelization Series Tools for the New Evangelization
Appendix A
Te New Evangelization Series Tools for the New Evangelization
Appendix A

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