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“Let him who is thirsty come!”
Pierre-Marie Dumont
Christ in Gethsemane (1416)
Paul de Limbourg (c. 1386/1387–1416)
A medieval prayer book lies open, and gilding gleams as shadowy figures emerge from the painted page. Domine labia mea aperies… “Lord, open my lips…” The first words of the Invitatory break the stillness. Et os meum annunciabit laudem tuam. “And my mouth will proclaim your praise.”
This hauntingly beautiful Christ in Gethsemane -introduces the nighttime office of Matins in the Très Riches Heures of the Duke of Berry, an illuminated Book of Hours intended for use by the laity. Rendered by Paul de Limbourg in 1416, this particular episode from Christ’s arrest is seldom depicted in the history of art, often overlooked in favour of the Agony or the Kiss of Judas. John’s Gospel alone relays the event: Jesus, knowing everything that was going to happen to him, went out and said to [the soldiers], “Whom are you looking for?” They answered him, “Jesus the Nazorean.” He said to them, “I AM.” Judas his betrayer was also with them. When he said to them, “I AM,” they turned away and fell to the ground (18:4-6).
Christ’s pronouncement of the divine name confounds his captors; he is the very same who instructed Moses: Tell the Israelites: “I AM has sent me to you” (Ex 3:14). The encircling band falls thunderstruck—not forward in adoration but backward, unyielding to the last. With the breath of his mouth Christ lays waste to the wicked (cf. Is 11:4); their bodies twist in a rhythmic tangle at his feet, like the serpentine devil that strikes at the heel. This figural arrangement alludes to sin and death. The same foreshortened, fallen torsos and unnaturally angled limbs are used elsewhere by Limbourg to depict plague victims and men struck down by divine fire. Spiritually lifeless, entirely earthbound, only one of the soldiers opens his eyes. Yet even he stares blankly, groping in the darkness with an extended arm.
Christ stands above the tumult in majestic solitude. The gentle s-curve of his posture is echoed by trees rising from the slopes of Olivet, suggesting harmony with the created order. These strong verticals draw the eye aloft, beautifully balancing the weight of the figures below.
The power of darkness
Preceded only by Gaddi’s Annunciation to the Shepherds (1328), Christ in Gethsemane is one of the earliest nocturnal scenes in Western art. In the midst of a manuscript bursting with riotous reds, intense lapis blues, and demure pinks, the viewer’s eye must adjust to perceive the exquisite subtleties of this illumination. With extraordinary naturalism, it convincingly captures the muting effect of darkness on the nature of colour.
Stripped of decorative elements and boisterous hues, the scene’s visual silence sets a meditative tone. Besides Christ, all figures are rendered mostly in gray. Even Peter blends with the shadowy soldiers, though he is crowned with a dim silver halo. Standing to Christ’s right in an imitative yet deferent pose, he represents the Church—-mediator of grace and power—conformed to the divine Bridegroom.
Natural light sources fade before the otherworldly brilliance of Christ’s halo, and the Saviour’s already sombre form appears darker still by contrast. It was folly to light torches by which to seek the Sun; scattered on the ground, their flames scarcely penetrate the heavy pall of night. One pointedly reveals the face of Judas, whose twisted neck foreshadows his imminent suicide. The sound of Christ’s voice—an arrow to his conscience—was more terrible to the traitor than to the lawless mob. Darkened within, he falls headlong away from the Light.
Fixed and falling stars
Overhead, the sky scintillates with pinprick stars. It was not until 1609, with the invention of the telescope, that a detailed rendering of the Milky Way in Elsheimer’s Flight into Egypt surpassed the precocious realism of Limbourg’s night sky. Though stylistically ahead of its time, it reflects an ancient cosmology—one favoured by Ptolemy and Aristotle and later adapted to the medieval worldview. The viewer gazes into the Stellatum, a firmament of fixed stars beyond the wandering planets. The predictable procession of these celestial bodies governs the cycle of time.
The Très Riches Heures begins with twelve calendar pages depicting the labours of the months. Arable farming and animal husbandry—harvests and hunts—the rhythms of medieval life emerge with great vibrancy. Above each illumination, a starry arch bears the appropriate constellations—steady and sure beacons in the immutable heavens—alongside the monthly liturgical feasts and feriæ.
This context allows the modern viewer to share the visceral disquiet of the medieval audience at the disturbance of the stars. Three gilded trails of light streak above Gethsemane. These falling stars signify fundamental disorder and disorientation; they portend disaster (from the Latin pejorative dis- and astrum, star). The universe is shaken on the eve of cosmic chaos: the death of the Creator.
Prefiguration
Silhouetted against the darkened landscape, the Word stands silent as the night. Once prostrate and pleading in agony, he rises to meet his hour with noble resolve: No one takes [my life] from me, but I lay it down on my own (Jn 10:18). Though Christ’s foes are disabled, he forgoes the opportunity to flee.
Christ’s downcast gaze veils the weighty anguish he bravely bears within. He moves through his Passion toward a death that bears the signs of emptiness and division. Pioneer (“trailblazer” in Greek) and perfecter of faith (cf. He 12:2), Christ enters the bottomless pit and defines its depths; he enters the endless darkness and sets its limits with his radiant light. Christ enters the death that is emptiness and fills it with himself, thereby forging a glorious path for his saints to follow.
In Gethsemane, though black grief and terror surge on every side, even the hour of the Prince of Darkness contains a glimmer of this Paschal joy. Within three days, a band of soldiers will once again fall to the ground like dead men (Mt 28:4) at the force of Christ’s majesty. This time, however, their bodies will encircle the entrance of an empty tomb.
Amy Giuliano
Holds degrees in art history from Yale and theology from the Angelicum, Rome
Christ in Gethsemane (1416), Très Riches Heures du Duc de Berry, folio 142v., Paul de Limbourg (c. 1386/1387–1416), Condé Museum, Chantilly, France. © GP-RMN / Michel Urtado.
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The Basilica of Saint Mark in Venice—consecrated in 1094—was erected to house the relics of Saint Mark that were brought back by Venetian merchants from Alexandria in Egypt, where the evangelist had suffered martyrdom.
The shrine has been nicknamed the “Golden Basilica” because of its mosaics against a gold background. Entering it for the first time, one has the impression of being received into a magnificent casket of precious metal. According to Eastern symbolism, gold is the colour of divinity, and therefore in this basilica the Divine Liturgy unfolds its splendours at the heart of the divine light—which is God himself. With this end in view, each of the millions of golden tiles was made of transparent Murano glass, encasing a leaf of pure gold.
The mosaic that adorns the cover of this month’s issue of Magnificat is located on the wall of the south transept. It was produced in the 13th century and partially redone in the 15th century. The scene depicts the moment when the disciples, represented here by Peter and John, return to Jacob’s well and are astonished to find Jesus conversing with a Samaritan woman (Jn 4:4-30).
At the centre, Jacob’s well is stylised in the form of a cross-shaped baptismal pool. Such pools were dug into the ground of the baptisteries where the early Christians practised baptism by immersion.1
Behind the well stands the Tree of Life; its single trunk branches off into three great boughs. It thus symbolises God who is One and Triune. According to the account in Genesis, the fruit of the tree of life gives access to eternal life: Then the Lord God said, “Behold, the man has become like one of us, knowing good and evil; and now, lest he put forth his hand and take also of the tree of life, and eat, and live for ever”—therefore the Lord God sent him forth from the garden of Eden, to till the ground from which he was taken. He drove out the man; and at the east of the garden of Eden he placed the cherubim, and a flaming sword which turned every way, to guard the way to the tree of life (3:22-24).
“Let him who desires take the water of life!”
“Through the Tree, humanity fell; through the Tree, humanity will be saved” (Saint Irenaeus)—for access to the Tree of Life will be restored to humanity when the cross of Christ, made of its wood, is set up over the world: from the pierced heart of the Beloved Son of the Father there will spring the source of the living water, the lustral water of baptism, so that we can all be reborn of water and the Spirit, for the new life of the children of God. This is why, above the baptistery, at the foot of the tree of the cross, a red pool represents the blood of Christ, poured out for us; it sprang from his pierced heart at the same time as the living water.
Certainly along these lines the Lord Jesus is depicted to the left of the baptismal pool sitting on his throne as Pantocrator, Ruler over All. He holds in his left hand the scroll of the Gospel, and with his right hand he makes the gesture of the Almighty who blesses the water, so that it may become the living water, the cleansing water of baptism:
God, our Father,
by the grace of your Beloved Son,
may the power of the Holy Spirit descend upon this water,
so that everyone who is baptised,
buried in death with him,
may rise again with him for life,
for he lives for ever and ever.
And that is the moment when, within us, the Spirit and the Bride say, “Come.” And let him who hears say, “Come.” And let him who is thirsty come, let him who desires take the water of life without price (Rv 22:17).
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1 Click here to see an image of the baptistery in Kelibia (Tunisia) with a very similar baptismal pool, dating back to the 6th century (National Museum of Bardo).
Pierre-Marie Dumont
Christ and the Samaritan Woman, mosaic, 15th c., Saint Mark’s Basilica, Venice. © akg-images / Cameraphoto.
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