Mary and Child from "Song of the Angels" by Bouguereau
 

THIS ROCK

2008

2007

2006

2005

2004

2003

2002

2001

2000

1999

1998

1997

1996

1995

1994

1993

1992

1991

1990

Subscribe

Permissions

LIBRARY

God & Christ

Scripture & Tradition

Church & Papacy

Mary & the Saints

Faith & Science

Morality & Ethics

Sacraments

Salvation

Last things

Non-Catholic groups

Anti-Catholicism

Practical Apologetics

Fathers Know Best

Permissions

OUR SPONSORS


Sponsor: CatholicSingles.Com - The Site for Catholic Singles on the Web
Sponsor: EpiphanyFund.com - quality investment services thru faithful stewardship

Please support our sponsors

BOOKLETS

PillarofFire

Pure Love

12WaystoEvangelize

Permissions

SPECIAL OFFERS


Catholic Answers Live - Special Offers


R  e  a  s  o  n  s    f  o  r    H  o  p  e



The Gospel in Full Color

By Cherie Peacock



This Rock
Volume 18, Number 5
  May-June 2007  

 Reasons for Hope
By Cherie Peacock
 Letters
 Peasant Girl to Battlefield Commander: St. Joan of Arc and the Hundred Years’ War
By Christopher Check
 Henry V: Not the Branagh Version
 Brutality Replaces Chivalry as Church’s Influence Wanes
 Further Reading
 The Church Militant or the Church Belligerent?: How Fighting for the Faith Can Destroy Charity
By Fr. Paul Scalia
 So Should Your Lips be Sweetened with Your God
 Further Reading
 Love and the Skeptic
By Carl E. Olson
 If We "Create Our Own Meaning," Is Love Real?
 Further Reading
 How Do We Know It’s the True Church? Twelve Things to Look For
By Fr. Dwight Longenecker
 Damascus Road
Drug Dealer to Catechist
By Russell L.Ford
 By the Book
How Do We Explain the Passover "Discrepancy"?
By Tim Staples
 Eyes to See
What Has Art to Do with Apologetics?
By Michael Schrauzer
 Truth be Told
The Five Most Influential Anti-Catholic Books
By Robert P. Lockwood
 Quick Questions
 Last Writes
By Karl Keating

  Subscribe
  Permissions

"Man’s ability to see is in decline," wrote the Thomist philosopher Josef Pieper. "We do not mean here, of course, the physiological sensitivity of the human eye. We mean the spiritual capacity to perceive the visible reality as it truly is" (Only the Lover Sings: Art and Contemplation, Ignatius).

Pieper was concerned that the assault of constant images on billboards, movie screens, and television were deadening our ability to see things as they really are. He was writing in 1952: long before billboard-sized home theater systems, music videos on cell phones, and DVD players in SUVs. The volume of visual noise has increased exponentially, and our sight isn’t getting any better. As a society, we have eyes to see but do not see (cf. Ezekiel 12:2, Mark 8:18).

Our failing sight is a concern of Pope Benedict XVI. The remedy he proposes is not just to fast from the junk food of coarse and vapid images, but to feast on a wholesome diet of the Church’s great treasury of art. To that end, he included fourteen sacred images in the Compendium of the Catechism. The fourteen images are all in full color. That is surprising: Reproducing full-color images is expensive. Most publishers would cut the artwork to keep the price down.

But what others might consider an extravagance or a decoration, our Holy Father considers essential. He selected the images himself, and he insists that those same fourteen images be placed in every edition. Moreover, each image must always be positioned in the same place in relation to the text. Why go to so much trouble and expense over pretty pictures? In the introduction to the Compendium, he writes:

Images are also a preaching of the Gospel. Artists in every age have offered the principal facts of the mystery of salvation to the contemplation and wonder of believers by presenting them in the splendor of color and in the perfection of beauty. It is an indication of how today more than ever, in a culture of images, a sacred image can express much more than what can be said in words, and be an extremely effective and dynamic way of communicating the Gospel message.
Over the last two years, we have made a concerted effort to include in This Rock images that preach the Gospel. Many of those images were worthy of a full essay of explanation rather than the quick caption that yours truly could cobble together. Now, providentially, we can do better. We are adding a department dedicated to art and apologetics. Michael Schrauzer, a gifted artist and writer (see his work at http://home.znet.com/mshroud), will help us to develop Eyes to See.

* * *

Please don’t miss Fr. Paul Scalia’s excellent article, to my mind the most important piece of writing we will publish this year.

This Rock -- Free Offer

[BACK][TOP]

Home | Seminars | Library | Radio | Magazines | Catalogue | Support | Chastity | Search