Friday, March 4, 2022

AFIRE WITH LOVE


"The Infant Saint John with the Lamb"
Bartolomé Esteban Murillo (1618-1682)


"Saint John the Baptist stands in a rocky landscape, a reference to the wilderness in which he lived as a young man, dressed in a camel-hair tunic and eating only locusts and honey.

"He embraces a lamb, a symbol of Christ’s sacrifice, and points towards heaven. According to the Gospel, when Saint John met Christ he declared: ‘Behold, the Lamb of God’. These words are inscribed in Latin on a ribbon wound around a reed cross, one of Saint John’s attributes (a symbolic object associated with him).

"The lamb is also a symbol of Christ as the Good Shepherd, who lays down his life for his sheep – as Christ is believed to have done for humanity’s salvation."  THE NATIONAL GALLERY
   

FIRE OF LOVE
"'I have come to set the earth on fire, and how I wish it were already blazing!' (Lk 12:49) In the Bible, God often appears in the form of fire. Jesus has come to light the world with the fire of God's love. Fire is a powerful and ambivalent gift: it can give light and strength, it can purify, it can destroy. God is preparing us to live a life of eternal love. His fire burns away all that cannot live in the presence of such love."  [Magnificat, August 14, 2016, page 181-2]


The Christ Child tends a lamb
in a landscape with classical ruins that allude
to the defeat of paganism.
"The Good Shepherd"
Bartolomé Esteban Murillo (1618-1682)


Love, Jeanne