September is back-to-school month, which means parish religious education programmes are about to resume. Christian mothers in particular will be requested to assume with their own feminine genius—in a way that is not exclusive but irreplaceable—the responsibility for handing on knowledge and faith that is central to their vocation. To experience this start of the school year with joy and serenity, they can find help and inspiration by reconnecting with the traditional devotions to Saint Anne, the mother of the Virgin Mary—and the patron saint of women teachers and catechists.
Wasn’t Saint Anne a good mother?
Neither the New Testament nor the apocryphal gospels tell us how Saint Anne educated her daughter, the blessed among all women. This particular devotion—which has inspired so many artists—was neither revealed nor even suggested by an ancient tradition: It sprang from a deduction which, all things considered, is quite logical. Indeed, history teaches us that among the Jewish people at the time Mary was born, mothers were the ones who educated their daughters. And in particular they taught them to read by having them learn by heart verses from the Torah and the Psalms and then decipher them. Next, by having them transcribe the verses, they taught them to write. It is legitimate to think that, from this perspective, Saint Anne was a good mother, especially inspired by the Holy Spirit to raise little Mary in a suitable way, until her ineffable vocation was completely fulfilled. And in fact, Mary, as she is revealed to us by the Gospels—a young married woman, about fifteen or sixteen years old—appears to us not only full of grace, but also thoroughly instructed, to the point where she finds in Scripture the words of spontaneous praise that she lifted up to heaven in response to the greeting of her cousin Elizabeth (see Lk 1:39-55)1. With good reason, then, the very logical devotion to Saint Anne as a model for teaching mothers and catechists has been approved and strongly encouraged by the Church for more than a thousand years.
The polychrome wooden sculpture that decorates the cover of this issue of Magnificat is an admirable testimony to this tradition. It was produced by the Master of Saint Benedict, who was active in the early 16th century in Hildesheim (near Hanover in Germany). It is impressive in both quality and dimensions: the seated figures are depicted at full scale.
Whereas in Rome at that same time the Renaissance was triumphant with the sculptures of Michelangelo (1475–1564), this work still belongs to what is conventionally called the late Rheinland Gothic, particularly in the significant archetype of its figures and the convention of the draperies with deep shadows among the folds. But we discern developments that foretell a new style which, curiously enough, will skip over the Renaissance style, strictly speaking, by passing directly to the Baroque. Evidence of this is, for example, the tendency toward exuberance in the volume of the clothing, which at the same time starts to let us see the contours of a living body beneath the folds. Or the expression of Saint Anne, which manages to be eloquent in its very restraint.
The Old Testament ends and the New commences
Although it belongs to the same tradition, this work proves to be highly original compared to most examples of the Education of the Virgin. First, Mary is crowned here and is no longer a child. She is a young lady, as tall as her mother and seated beside her, on the same level, not seen from the perspective of the teacher who towers over the student. Next, we see that with her left hand Saint Anne invites her daughter to keep learning from the book of the Old Testament which she holds on her knees, turning the pages with her right hand. Now Mary’s face shows that she is elsewhere—not that she is no longer paying attention to the lesson, but rather that the hour has come for her to be no longer a student of Scripture but to accomplish with her inmost being what she has learned from it. And now Anne understands that this is an important moment: Suddenly her facial expression belies the gesture of her hand; she stares at the closed book that Mary holds on her knees. Her face is lit up with a gentle smile. She has understood. She will be able to close the book of the Old Testament, while by her Fiat, Mary, blessed among all women, will open the book of the New Testament: “Let it be done to me according to your word, may the Spirit and Life of Scripture be fulfilled within me; may the Word of God be brought to earth through me.”2
Thus, thanks to the genius of the Master of Saint Benedict, we have the chance to rediscover the heights to which an inspired artist dared to invite Christian mothers—and of course now, in our post-Christian civilisation, he invites grandmothers as well as mothers.
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1 Mary’s canticle, the Magnificat, is composed mainly of reminiscences from the Psalms and from the First Book of Samuel.
2 In this sense, in many comparable works from the 14th century to the 16th, the book of the Old Testament that Saint Anne carries ends with the New Testament phrase that indicates its perfect fulfilment: Et Verbum caro factum est (“And the Word became flesh”, Jn 1:14). From the 18th century on, artists dazzled by the lights of rationalism would lose the ultimate meaning of the traditional iconography of The Education of the Virgin and would depict the volume merely as an ABC book.
The Education of the Virgin, Master of Saint Benedict (c.1510–1530, attr. to), Philadelphia Museum of Art. Copyright Bridgeman Images.
The most striking particularity of this 1650 painting by Murillo is the naturalness of the composition. Mary holds her naked child standing on her lap, their cheeks tenderly caressing. Mary’s composure is quiet, confident; she looks at us straight in the eyes. There is no secret message in that gaze, whether joyous or foreboding, nothing that would need decoding. She has the transparency, the clarity of innocence. And Jesus looks just like his Mother, and also like any well-fed, well-loved one-year-old boy. His left hand rests on her bare flesh, by the shoulder. Hers rests on his back, securing the child who is at that age when he is not yet strong enough to stand without careful oversight. Nothing is contrived or ostentatious in their demeanor. If it were not for the rosary, nothing would distinguish them from any mother and child from 17th-century Spain.
The naturalness of the Virgin
This raises a serious question, one that challenges the legitimacy of Christian iconography but also the very essence of our faith in the Incarnation. Before we get to that, let us clarify our observation. The composition is “natural” in three different ways. First, the Virgin herself is natural. She is looking in our direction, or rather, in the painter’s direction, as if she had come to his studio in Seville and posed, with her child, for the painting. We know her to be the Immaculate Conception, the New Eve, the Queen of Heaven, but nothing in her attitude shows the slightest self-awareness, and certainly not the all-too-conspicuous false modesty of someone trying to hide her importance.
A Child like any other child?
That Mary should be thoroughly natural seems only fitting. Isn’t she, after all, the humble “handmaid of the Lord”? What is otherwise surprising is that she makes no effort to emphasize the identity of her son. She did not even bother dressing him for the occasion! In many such representations, Mary would dress Jesus as royalty and hold him with affected reverence, lest the viewer might fail, out of sheer ignorance, to show due respect to her divine Child. Maybe Jesus would even hold a globe or a scepter, something to unmistakenly point to his divine nature and mission. In this painting, Mary makes no such provision. She seems absolutely unconcerned by the fact that we may mistake him for a “normal” child, with nothing special about him—and if her tender and protective embrace declares him special, it is in exactly the same way that every child is special and unique in his mother’s eyes.
Now what of Murillo? He too makes no attempt to emphasize the divinity of his subject. Yes, he gives the child a rosary to play with, and he makes sure its cross falls in that little dark spot filling the hollow space between their bodies, so it would be more visible and symbolically shine as a light in the darkness. But is that enough? Holding a rosary does not identify the pair as Mary and Jesus as much as an anonymous Christian mother and child, since the rosary was introduced in the 12th century by Saint Dominic. The most astonishing omission is that Murillo did not paint the conventional halos over their heads. A few decades earlier, Caravaggio may have had a prostitute pose for his Madonna of Loreto, but he did crown the painted figure with a golden halo, to preempt any quid-pro-quo. Murillo, like Mary herself, shows no such concern.
Iconoclasm and the “peril” of the Incarnation
In the 8th century, iconoclasm spread from the belief that the representation of Jesus led necessarily to the erroneous belief that Jesus is only human. Iconoclasts advocated for the banning of iconography in favor of the word, seen as more nuanced and holistic. When Murillo painted, in the 17th century, this old fear of images had found a new vigor in the Reformation, which would be better called a deformation, since its defense of the divinity of Christ relied on a systematic defiance of his Incarnation. Religion became a way to protect us from the peril of the Incarnation. The baroque excesses of the early Counter-Reformation defied its conclusions, but often while accepting its principles: eyes rolling up to heaven, ethereal bodies, Saints and Madonnas floating among the clouds... The flesh in perpetual ecstasy is under the constant and sometimes violent, upward pull of the spirit—as if, to honor the divine, one had to keep the human in check.
There is no such theological torment in Murillo. Not only is he not afraid of the Incarnation, but he wants us to embrace its beauty—because Mary embraced it, Christ embraced it, the Father embraced it. When Jesus came back to Nazareth, those who knew him as a child were dumbfounded: Is he not the son of Joseph? They lived across the street from the Son of God and the Immaculate Conception, and never noticed anything extraordinary about him, or her. As far as they could see, they were perfectly human, perfectly natural. And indeed they were. Jesus’ divinity is not to be found above or beside his humanity, but within it. God revealed himself, not through his word only, but also through the silence of his gaze, as Murillo so poignantly understood. His infinite love for us finds a human translation in the tender contact of his flesh with the flesh of his mother, the New Eve, and in the dark, hollow space between their bodies, where the cross shines as the ultimate act of their mutual love and obedience to the Father. And through the beads of the rosary, we too get pulled into that mystery and become a link of that great, redeeming chain of love.
Father Paul Anel
Pastor of Saint Paul and Saint Agnes in the diocese of Brooklyn, New York.
September is back-to-school month, which means parish religious education programmes are about to resume. Christian mothers in particular will be requested to assume with their own feminine genius—in a way that is not exclusive but irreplaceable—the responsibility for handing on knowledge and faith that is central to their vocation. To experience this start of the school year with joy and serenity, they can find help and inspiration by reconnecting with the traditional devotions to Saint Anne, the mother of the Virgin Mary—and the patron saint of women teachers and catechists.
Wasn’t Saint Anne a good mother?
Neither the New Testament nor the apocryphal gospels tell us how Saint Anne educated her daughter, the blessed among all women. This particular devotion—which has inspired so many artists—was neither revealed nor even suggested by an ancient tradition: It sprang from a deduction which, all things considered, is quite logical. Indeed, history teaches us that among the Jewish people at the time Mary was born, mothers were the ones who educated their daughters. And in particular they taught them to read by having them learn by heart verses from the Torah and the Psalms and then decipher them. Next, by having them transcribe the verses, they taught them to write. It is legitimate to think that, from this perspective, Saint Anne was a good mother, especially inspired by the Holy Spirit to raise little Mary in a suitable way, until her ineffable vocation was completely fulfilled. And in fact, Mary, as she is revealed to us by the Gospels—a young married woman, about fifteen or sixteen years old—appears to us not only full of grace, but also thoroughly instructed, to the point where she finds in Scripture the words of spontaneous praise that she lifted up to heaven in response to the greeting of her cousin Elizabeth (see Lk 1:39-55)1. With good reason, then, the very logical devotion to Saint Anne as a model for teaching mothers and catechists has been approved and strongly encouraged by the Church for more than a thousand years.
The polychrome wooden sculpture that decorates the cover of this issue of Magnificat is an admirable testimony to this tradition. It was produced by the Master of Saint Benedict, who was active in the early 16th century in Hildesheim (near Hanover in Germany). It is impressive in both quality and dimensions: the seated figures are depicted at full scale.
Whereas in Rome at that same time the Renaissance was triumphant with the sculptures of Michelangelo (1475–1564), this work still belongs to what is conventionally called the late Rheinland Gothic, particularly in the significant archetype of its figures and the convention of the draperies with deep shadows among the folds. But we discern developments that foretell a new style which, curiously enough, will skip over the Renaissance style, strictly speaking, by passing directly to the Baroque. Evidence of this is, for example, the tendency toward exuberance in the volume of the clothing, which at the same time starts to let us see the contours of a living body beneath the folds. Or the expression of Saint Anne, which manages to be eloquent in its very restraint.
The Old Testament ends and the New commences
Although it belongs to the same tradition, this work proves to be highly original compared to most examples of the Education of the Virgin. First, Mary is crowned here and is no longer a child. She is a young lady, as tall as her mother and seated beside her, on the same level, not seen from the perspective of the teacher who towers over the student. Next, we see that with her left hand Saint Anne invites her daughter to keep learning from the book of the Old Testament which she holds on her knees, turning the pages with her right hand. Now Mary’s face shows that she is elsewhere—not that she is no longer paying attention to the lesson, but rather that the hour has come for her to be no longer a student of Scripture but to accomplish with her inmost being what she has learned from it. And now Anne understands that this is an important moment: Suddenly her facial expression belies the gesture of her hand; she stares at the closed book that Mary holds on her knees. Her face is lit up with a gentle smile. She has understood. She will be able to close the book of the Old Testament, while by her Fiat, Mary, blessed among all women, will open the book of the New Testament: “Let it be done to me according to your word, may the Spirit and Life of Scripture be fulfilled within me; may the Word of God be brought to earth through me.”2
Thus, thanks to the genius of the Master of Saint Benedict, we have the chance to rediscover the heights to which an inspired artist dared to invite Christian mothers—and of course now, in our post-Christian civilisation, he invites grandmothers as well as mothers.
--------------------------------------------
1 Mary’s canticle, the Magnificat, is composed mainly of reminiscences from the Psalms and from the First Book of Samuel.
2 In this sense, in many comparable works from the 14th century to the 16th, the book of the Old Testament that Saint Anne carries ends with the New Testament phrase that indicates its perfect fulfilment: Et Verbum caro factum est (“And the Word became flesh”, Jn 1:14). From the 18th century on, artists dazzled by the lights of rationalism would lose the ultimate meaning of the traditional iconography of The Education of the Virgin and would depict the volume merely as an ABC book.
The Education of the Virgin, Master of Saint Benedict (c.1510–1530, attr. to), Philadelphia Museum of Art. Copyright Bridgeman Images.
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