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Good taste or good religion?

sacredhearts.jpg

When I was a child my family were very scornful about the “superstitious” popular Catholic pictures and statues one would see in the souvenir shops near major churches in Europe. I remember well visiting Rome with my mother and aunt when I was about 15, and how we looked down on the people who would buy such things.

I’m still not exactly a fan of the style of picture shown above, but I’m no longer scornful of the people who buy them or have them in their homes.

For one thing anyone with a picture like that is likely to be sincere, simple and without pride, and therefore vastly superior to me in the eyes of God (I can sometimes manage “sincere”, but “simple” and “without pride” are still quite beyond me).

Secondly, there is an instinct of orthodoxy associated with such pictures. They are not at all compatible with New Age religion. Nor are they compatible with creeping Protestantism. Nor are they compatible with the destructive intellectual arrogance which has so damaged the Church.

In other words, someone with a statue of the Sacred Heart of Jesus or Mary in their home is not likely to be a heretic. They may not understand the deep issues of theology but their heart and their instinct will be in the right place

And if they love the Virgin and her Son, they will love them back.

Posted on Monday, January 7, 2008 at 04:15PM by Registered CommenterSi Fractus Fortis in | Comments2 Comments

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Reader Comments (2)

I have begun to appreciate icons now. I can dwell on them and gain a lesson on the nature and virtue each time. They are a great meditative tool to me.
At times I can't get used to the blond hair, blue eyes, rosey cheeks of the statues and pictures so prevalent...like the ones of the Sacred Hearts in this post. They were Jews! and not those from the Diaspora!
We may be in for a big surprise when we see those biblical characters in heaven face to face in their glorified bodies.

January 18, 2008 | Unregistered Commenterteresa_anawim

I think it was very deliberate on God's part not to leave us with any physical description of either Jesus or Mary. That has allowed artists of all ages to represent what they mean to them with a freedom they would not otherwise have.

January 19, 2008 | Registered CommenterSi Fractus Fortis

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